how does adrenilen efect you?

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Da pyro man 999

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Aug 24, 2009
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For example, when the adrenilen goes when im really pissed off, everything goes fuzzy.(like im blacking out) and i kick arse. Then i cant rember most of it. Is it the same for other people or is it just me?
 

traceur_

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Feb 19, 2009
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My heart beats like crazy, I become focused and in control. Afterwards I get the shakes.

I remember getting in a fight before an exam, and during the exam I could still feel the adrenaline going and I focused better than ever.
 

Puzzles

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I feel like I can break anything I want to. I get incredible urges to hurt people and assert myself. Afterwards, like nikki191 I normally shake a lot.

I remember my boss was giving me shit for no reason one day, and I flipped out and started shouting at him and just saying whatever I felt like very violently. I then went and sat down, and he came to appologise (Don't ask me why he was appologising) and he said "Your shaking.", and I looked down and my fist was clenched and I was absolutely shaking with rage and the rush of power.

I would have made an alright beserker if life was an RPG.
 

Doth

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Apr 2, 2009
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How can you possibly spell adrenaline wrong?
It's spelled exactly like its pronunciation, a-dren-a-line.

On topic...

When in the bloodstream, it rapidly prepares the body for action in emergency situations. The hormone boosts the supply of oxygen and glucose to the brain and muscles, while suppressing other non-emergency bodily processes (digestion in particular).

It increases heart rate and stroke volume, dilates the pupils, and constricts arterioles in the skin and gastrointestinal tract while dilating arterioles in skeletal muscles. It elevates the blood sugar level by increasing catabolism of glycogen to glucose in the liver, and at the same time begins the breakdown of lipids in fat cells. Like some other stress hormones, epinephrine has a suppressive effect on the immune system.

/thread
 

DazZ.

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Jun 4, 2009
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Most of the time I get it skateboarding when I'm shitting myself over a handrail or something.

Say I slam on the floor it means I can get up and run up the stairs straight away without being a little ***** and laying on the floor for ages before thinking about it. Puts pain off until I've achieved what I wanted to.

Other times I get it aren't really as helpful, cliff jumping for example. Don't really need adrenaline when your swimming and it really doesn't help you climb out of the water as your just abit excited. I prefer to take my time when climbing, not getting enough grip when rushing and then falling could be fucking awful but with skating it's just getting the balls and believing you can do it.

Don't tend to get it much any more unless I'm trying something huge.
 

Cowabungaa

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I get jumpy, can't stop smiling, can't stop talking and I'm as fast as an arrow. I love adrenaline, so so so so so much. I want to ride some coasters NOW!
 

Jamash

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Jun 25, 2008
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Doth said:
How can you possibly spell adrenaline wrong?
It's spelled exactly like its pronunciation, a-dren-a-line.
Probably in much the same way you could misuse 'effect' instead of 'affect' and even then spell it wrong.

On-Topic, adrenaline affects me in much the same way is it does everybody else, I'd imagine it's quite a standard human (even mammalian) reaction.
Any variations in it's effect are probably more a condition of one's psychological make up rather than a variation of the physical effect of adrenaline on the body.
 

Vanguard_Ex

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Doth said:
How can you possibly spell adrenaline wrong?
It's spelled exactly like its pronunciation, a-dren-a-line.

On topic...

When in the bloodstream, it rapidly prepares the body for action in emergency situations. The hormone boosts the supply of oxygen and glucose to the brain and muscles, while suppressing other non-emergency bodily processes (digestion in particular).

It increases heart rate and stroke volume, dilates the pupils, and constricts arterioles in the skin and gastrointestinal tract while dilating arterioles in skeletal muscles. It elevates the blood sugar level by increasing catabolism of glycogen to glucose in the liver, and at the same time begins the breakdown of lipids in fat cells. Like some other stress hormones, epinephrine has a suppressive effect on the immune system.

/thread
Done and done. I don't see how it can affect people differently when it's the same chemical.
 

Tonimata

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Jul 21, 2008
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Vanguard_Ex said:
Doth said:
How can you possibly spell adrenaline wrong?
It's spelled exactly like its pronunciation, a-dren-a-line.

On topic...

When in the bloodstream, it rapidly prepares the body for action in emergency situations. The hormone boosts the supply of oxygen and glucose to the brain and muscles, while suppressing other non-emergency bodily processes (digestion in particular).

It increases heart rate and stroke volume, dilates the pupils, and constricts arterioles in the skin and gastrointestinal tract while dilating arterioles in skeletal muscles. It elevates the blood sugar level by increasing catabolism of glycogen to glucose in the liver, and at the same time begins the breakdown of lipids in fat cells. Like some other stress hormones, epinephrine has a suppressive effect on the immune system.

/thread
Done and done. I don't see how it can affect people differently when it's the same chemical.
I agree with this, but what I think people are aiming here is how you employ adrenaline surges. It is scientifically verified that some people can control how these affect them (hence athletes before a race, students before an exam, me playing FPS) and when focused in the right direction, it can prove to substantially increase concentration and reduce reaction time. Maybe I'm being terribly ambiguous and inaccurate, but when it's something so instinctive as preparing yourself for action, there is few other ways to describe it other than by the feelings the body experiences at the moment. In fact, and just to explorate further, some people have high adrenaline all the time, such as hyperactives, whilst other can't bear high degrees of it, like cardyopaths. It all depends on the person.
 

Puzzles

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Vanguard_Ex said:
Done and done. I don't see how it can affect people differently when it's the same chemical.
Have you ever watched different people take the same drug? Some are climbing up the walls and others are just sitting mellow and placid.

People can react very differently to the same thing, but for the most part we will all get roughly similar physical symptoms.
 

Da pyro man 999

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Aug 24, 2009
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Doth said:
How can you possibly spell adrenaline wrong?
It's spelled exactly like its pronunciation, a-dren-a-line.

On topic...

When in the bloodstream, it rapidly prepares the body for action in emergency situations. The hormone boosts the supply of oxygen and glucose to the brain and muscles, while suppressing other non-emergency bodily processes (digestion in particular).

It increases heart rate and stroke volume, dilates the pupils, and constricts arterioles in the skin and gastrointestinal tract while dilating arterioles in skeletal muscles. It elevates the blood sugar level by increasing catabolism of glycogen to glucose in the liver, and at the same time begins the breakdown of lipids in fat cells. Like some other stress hormones, epinephrine has a suppressive effect on the immune system.

/thread
I cant spell to save my life, sorry. But you seem to know what your talking about.
 

Jedamethis

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Jul 24, 2009
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I get very calm and apparently very scary, such as I will look at somebody very slowly and say 'would you mind getting the fuck out of my way?' and my friends tell me it's some scary shit....so it probably makes me look and sound different or something.
 

Florion

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Dec 7, 2008
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Doth said:
Like some other stress hormones, epinephrine has a suppressive effect on the immune system.

/thread
=O Oh, that's why I have an Epi-pen for my peanut allergy! Thanks, I... I had no idea why that worked before. o_o
 

The_ModeRazor

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Jul 29, 2009
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I get nervous. Mainly because the only time I get an adrenaline surge is when I'm about to get into a fight.
 

HentMas

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Apr 17, 2009
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i actually see things a little slower than how they are happening, one time i was driving in a 2 way highway and i tryed to pass a double trailer, when i was in the middle a car came at me, i clearly remember feeling the leap in my heart and everything slowed down a bit, i saw all options "break, steer, etc." after that i pressed the pedal to the top and managed to pass between the truck and the car by milimeters, afterwards i fell fuzzy and started to laugh out of nerves, shaking like mad hehe.