Our tests are dedicated to special types of drugs wish are:

Marihuane:

Marijuana is a greenish-gray mixture of the dried flowers of Cannabis sativa. Some people smoke marijuana in hand-rolled cigarettes called joints; in pipes, water pipes (sometimes called bongs), or in blunts (marijuana rolled in cigar wraps).

Marijuana can also be used to brew tea and, particularly when it is sold or consumed for medicinal purposes, is frequently mixed into foods such as brownies, cookies, or candies. Vaporizers are also increasingly used to consume marijuana.

Stronger forms of marijuana include sinsemilla (from specially tended female plants) and concentrated resins containing high doses of marijuana’s active ingredients, including honeylike hash oil, waxy budder, and hard amberlike shatter. These resins are increasingly popular among those who use them both recreationally and medically.

 

Cocaine:

 A substance derived from the leaves of the coca plant that is a bitter, addictive substance formerly used as an anesthetic. Safer anesthetics than cocaine was developed in the 20th century, although it is still used as an injectable anesthetic by some dentists. Synthetic alternatives, such as procaine, are used far more widely. Tragically, cocaine is a highly addictive and destructive street drug.

Ride more at:  https://www.medicinenet.com/script/main/art.asp?articlekey=7246

 

Cigarette;

A cigarette A tube-shaped tobacco product that is made of finely cut, cured tobacco leaves wrapped in thin paper. It may also have other ingredients, including substances to add different flavors. A cigarette is lit on one end and smoked, and the smoke is usually inhaled into the lungs. Cigarettes contain nicotine and many cancer-causing chemicals that are harmful to both smokers and nonsmokers. Smoking cigarettes can lead to nicotine addiction and can cause many types of cancer, including cancers of the lung, larynx, mouth, esophagus, throat, kidney, bladder, pancreas, stomach, and cervix, and acute myeloid leukemia. Smoking cigarettes also causes other health problems, including heart disease, stroke, and lung diseases, such as emphysema and chronic bronchitis.

 

MDMA (Ekstazi);

Methyl​enedioxy​ methamphetamine, commonly known as ecstasy or molly, is a psychoactive drug primarily used for recreational purposes. The desired effects include altered sensations, increased energy, empathy, as well as pleasure. When taken by mouth, effects begin in 30 to 45 minutes and last 3 to 6 hours.

In general, MDMA users report feeling the onset of subjective effects within 30 to 60 minutes of oral consumption and reaching peak effect at 75 to 120 minutes, which then plateaus for about 3.5 hours. The desired short-term psychoactive effects of MDMA have been reported to include:

·         Euphoria – a sense of general well-being and happiness

·         Increased self-confidence, sociability, and perception of facilitated communication

·         Entactogenic effects—increased empathy or feelings of closeness with others and oneself

·         Dilated pupils

·         Relaxation and reduced anxiety

·         Increased emotionality

·         A sense of inner peace

·         Mild hallucination

·         Enhanced sensation, perception, or sexuality

·         Altered sense of time

The experience elicited by MDMA depends on the dose, setting, and user. The variability of the induced altered state is lower compared to other psychedelics. For example, MDMA used at parties is associated with high motor activity, reduced sense of identity, and poor awareness of surroundings. Use of MDMA individually or in small groups in a quiet environment and when concentrating, is associated with increased lucidity, concentration, sensitivity to aesthetic aspects of the environment, enhanced awareness of emotions, and improved capability of communication. In psychotherapeutic settings, MDMA effects have been characterized by infantile ideas, mood lability, and memories and moods connected with childhood experiences.

Bonsai ;

The cheap synthetic drug known as “bonsai” has spread to dangerous levels in Turkey, with around 500,000 people known to be using the drug in the country, daily reported.
There are around 1.5 million drug addicts in Turkey, with approximately a third of them using bonsai, the daily reported.
The number of deaths caused by the chemical drug is also increasing, particularly among young people.
Bonsai was first produced in 2002 as a completely synthetic drug that was designed to replicate the effects of marijuana. It spread around Europe until it started to be banned starting in 2008. 
The drug was largely unknown in Turkey at the time but entered police records for the first time in the country in 2010. The number of bonsai users has sharply increased since then.
The drug is even sold online on websites which ostensibly sell fertilizers. Internet users that purchase bonsai on such sites usually receive delivery in three to seven days. 
Bonsai has spread rapidly due to its low price and large number of suppliers, according to the day . Even though it costs nearly the same as heroin, bonsai can be sold in small amounts, reducing the price for the user.

 

Note: Some test has the ability to detect the mixtures instead of urine, the patient can change the urine with other mixtures witch has the same color of the urine like (alcohol, jus …) . So in that cases our tests are able to analysis the component provided by the user or the patient.