She was out of commission for roughly 72 hours and months later still not back to normal, according to what she told me.
Described three similar but more recent case studies of massive LSD overdoses. Notable in two cases are longterm positive psychological effects that the subjects attributed to the experience.
Popsci write-up here: https://edition.cnn.com/2020/02/27/health/lsd-overdoses-case...
Summary: 8 people snorted lines of pure LSD by mistake, resulting in coma, respiratory arrest, blood clotting problems, and other life-threatening symptoms. All were normal after 12 hours and discharged from the hospital after 48 hours. Followup over a year showed no residual problems.
It's pretty surprising that one can take thousands of doses of LSD without lasting effect. Most drugs would kill you long before a 1000x overdose. I'm also a bit surprised that they didn't get shot or something for wasting maybe $100,000 worth of LSD.
You're high by roughly an order of magnitude. LSD is only $1-2 per 100ug (one "tab"/"hit").
Eight people * 1000 tabs/person * $1.5/tab = $12,000 over everyone; $1,500 per person.
getting down voted for no good reason so I will explain.
Chubby Emu is a youtube channel from a doctor who explains in medical detail cases like this, weird overdoses and such.
The other one was the story of a guy who had taken so much LSD he thought he'd turned into a glass of orange juice. Couldn't lie down or he'd spill, couldn't go outside or he would evaporate. I wonder if it has any basis from a real story.
I lost my internal monologue, and found my universe replaced with an infinite, bright wide void. I slowly made out vaguely shadowy humanoid forms, and massive, infinitely tall monolithic structures arranged in rows.
As I studied them I realized it was people walking through aisles. I heard some vague noise slowly rising in volume but couldn't understand it. As I looked through these "aisles", I noticed aisle signs hanging above them. The words on these signs turned out to be sets of words which fractally related to some "essence" of a thought I was having.
For each parallel thought I was experiencing, I could see an aisle containing these semantic markers which broke the thoughts down into individual words representing some aspect of the thought. This went on as far as I could see. There was again no accompanying inner monologue like there normally would be, these thoughts were felt and understood silently through these semantic markers, experienced as I read them.
The noise became loud enough and I realized it was a woman over a PA system describing my thoughts. My inner monologue had dissolved and re-emerged as a disembodied voice which told me what I was thinking and seeing and feeling at the moment I felt it, or even before. Every thought I had was not my own, but instead I found myself a passive observer to a physical space representing my mind. Complete ego death.
It was quite meta, as I listened to her first describe my experience of being confused and then slowly understanding what I was seeing. At a point of inflection, she began describing the experience of me listening to her describe me listening to her, and how it made me feel. It's hard to describe what this felt like.
This lasted for what seemed like a very, very long time. The experience was enough for me to never touch the stuff again. The memory is viscerally burned into my head and will never leave.
There's something of the glass delusion about it (eg my legs are made of glass and will shatter if I move, or I swallowed a glass piano as a child and if it shatters it will puncture my organs). The similarities in the thought processes suggest it could be real.
It sounds like a documentary waiting to happen. Imagine spear fishing in paradise on a few hits of sunshine, in the sunshine? I’d go.
Is it possible the body’s reaction to the high does protected it? Maybe the brain shut down in a way where it reduced the uptake? Did the cocaine compete? Some if them went into comas?
Those were the gastric concentrations. Blood concentrations were about 2 to 25ng/ml.