Drug:
William Shatner et. al. using Tek as an addictive drug in the Tekwar novels. (Not a very good name) Vraxoin, a horribly addictive drug in the Doctor Who Episode “Nightmare of Eden.”
Disease: Wandering Sickness from the movie Things to Come The Blue Death, from Henry Kuttner/C.L. Moore’s “Vintage Season.”
There are plenty that aren’t listed in Wikipedia. Of course, that’s because they’re often one-shots in a TV series (thus the Wiki disclaimer that it may never fit certain completeness criteria).
For example, Law and Order does the fake drug thing all the time when they want to Rip a drug or health related Headline. The only one I remember off the top of my head is Aptril, a fictional SSRI for an SVU episode about the effects of SSRIs on juveniles and drug company sales tactics.
The Solanum Virus is the culprit that destroys most of humanity in Max Brooks’s *World War Z * (one of the best thrillers written in many years for those who haven’t read it).
Hyper from the scifi novel Mind Blast. A drug that causes a temporary increase in intelligence, typically to superhuman levels in many ways. In the process it wears the brain out, inevitably leading to death if used too long - but it’s hard to make yourself stop using when doing so makes you feel like a moron. A feeling that never goes away, since in comparison, you are.
Dreamy White from Path of the Fury; a narcotic with a 100% addiction rate, generally extracted from human brains. Which tends to leave the “donors” with massive mental retardation or death.
Algotoxin from Brightness Falls from the Air as I recall. A torture drug, it permanently stimulates pain nerves.
Ditto in Saramaga’s Blindness, which I haven’t finished so no spoilers.
In Don DeLillo’s White Noise, there’s Dylar, an experimental drug to combat the fear of death. In his Great Jones Street, there’s a street drug (unnamed, I think) that temporarily renders the user insensible to language.
There are some hilarious riffs on fake drugs in Mark Leyner’s books. I don’t have my copies handy, but I’ll transcribe some when I do. In The Tetherballs of Bougainville, there’s a whole page on nicknames for some illegal recreational drug; anther long section talks about the marketing campaigns for the drugs used for exeucutions.
Of course there are the Lensman drugs. IIRC, they were[ul][li] nitrolabe, which was injected[] hadive, which was smoked and seemed to be similar to marijuana[]thionite, a highly addictive purplish powder refined from the leaves of a plant. Kim Kinnison uses it to wipe out a space base - it causes fantasies of the instant realization of whatever you desire. I think the problem was that you were compelled to take more and more of it until you died of an overdose of sheer ecstasy. Not a bad way to go. Bentlam was the drug Kim Kinnison takes in his persona of Wild Bill the meteor miner. You first got real drunk and then chewed it. Even as a child mixing drugs like that didn’t sound like a good idea. It sent you into a coma for twenty four hours, where you had happy dreams. [/ul]The other drug was one I encountered in a series of martial arts pulp novels about Jason Stryker. It was called Kill-13. Sort of a mix between a super stimulant and steroids - it made you into a super martial artist and then killed you after a couple of years. Those who used it called themselves “demons”, and had orange eyes.[/li]
Regards,
Shodan
The video game Apollo Justice: Ace Attorney features a disease called Incuritis, which is, as the name suggests, incurable…unless you have a drug made from a special cocoon from an Eastern European country (which is illegal to import into the United States, since the cocoon can also create a deadly poison).
In their campaign for drug companies to make safer drugs, Consumer Reports gave us Progenitorivox.
In the D&D Eberron Campaign Setting, a common hallucinogenic drug is called “dreamlily”.
Back in 1995 Seattle Mariners outfielder Ken Griffey, Jr. broke his wrist and was out for quite a while. In his absence, utility man Rich Amaral filled in admirably in center field. During one three-game stretch, Rich made some amazing plays, both offensively and defensively, that directly resulted in Mariners wins. The next day, the TV guys threw up a mock commercial for a new wonder drug, with the tagline, “Amaral: It cures what ails ya!”
And who else would like to forget “death sticks” from Attack of the Clones?
[QUOTE=Shodan]
[li]thionite, a highly addictive purplish powder refined from the leaves of a plant. Kim Kinnison uses it to wipe out a space base - it causes fantasies of the instant realization of whatever you desire. I think the problem was that you were compelled to take more and more of it until you died of an overdose of sheer ecstasy. Not a bad way to go.[/li][/QUOTE]
Kinda reminds me of one from the Parking Lot is Full comic…Polytrioxolophene-12. Only less grimmly wistful.