2006年VOA标准英语-Methamphetamine Use a Danger to Oral Health(在线收听) |
By Carol Pearson
----- Federal authorities announced a methamphetamine bust valued at $50 million last month in the southern U.S. city of Atlanta, Georgia. The arrests of meth users and producers often leave members of the community stunned. Earlier this year an Arkansas elementary school teacher was arrested and charged with making methamphetamine in a shed behind her house. The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration reports global users of methamphetamine outnumber cocaine and heroin users combined. Authorities are finding that even countries such as China, that used to be merely transit points for illegal drug trade, are now consumers as well.
"It's very uncomfortable," she says. "I can't eat anything I want to eat because the teeth are broken off and sensitivity and abscessing from the meth. There were times when I would do a little bit of meth and my jaws would just start swelling up from the infection."
Methamphetamine also can totally destroy the tooth structure, making removal the only solution. Some video courtesy: American Dental Association |
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2006/9/34429.html |