Pubdate: Thu, 21 Dec 2000 Source: Shepherd Express (WI) Copyright: 2000 Alternative Publications Incorporated. Contact: http://www.shepherd-express.com/ Author: Doug Hissom TAKING THE E TRAIN Ecstasy: A Fast Drug For Fast Times? "A most unbelievable surge of energy and gentle warmth rushed through my body. It was so brutally intense, all I could do for several minutes was inhale and let the breath come out as one long howl of indescribable joy. Many around me joined in. It seemed as though half the stage was just hollering in joint ecstasy." - -A first-time ecstasy user In the late '60s and early '70s when flower power ruled the scene, the spiritual drug of choice for rebellious teens, besides pot, was LSD. Since then, with the advent of a technological society, our drugs have become increasingly technical, too. More formulas have created more drugs that can pinpoint and treat specific ailments, or for abusers, have distinct effects. Enter MDMA-methylenedioxymethamphetamine-the speedy so-called hallucinogenic club drug of the new millennium, or under its street names: E; X; XTC; Ecstasy; and rolls. "Everybody wants to do E," observes Terry Martorano, captain of the Waukesha County Metro Enforcement Drug Unit. Martorano also works security at Carroll College and Alpine Valley Music Theater. "It makes you feel awesome," says a Milwaukee-area suburban high-school teen who has taken the white pill, each having a distinct logo. For anywhere between $15 to $35 per pill, good feelings apparently can be bought. "You love everything and everyone. It's a heightening of your brain and of your mind. It sucks when it ends." The '60s flower children would say that the effects of Ecstasy are something like a combination of mescaline and speed. Fast drugs for fast times. "If you're at a rave you probably want it speedy, but sometimes you can just chill out and listen to music if it's not," says a young user we talked to. "Human be-ins" have given way to the rave party. Techno music is the new acid rock, replacing the mellower tones of the incense-filled rooms of yore. Even Timothy Leary had hosted rave parties held by his son. The elder Leary called them "high-tech acid tests." Whippets (nitrous oxide, also known as laughing gas) are still around, as is pot, but Ecstasy is the drug of choice for a weekend gathering of the teen rave-dance set. Like LSD users of the past, those "rolling on E" are generally from white, middle-class suburbs, outside the usual stereotypes and police spotlights of inner-city crack users. And that seems to make for fewer headlines, despite Ecstasy's growing popularity. A national survey of 45,000 students in grades 8, 10, and 12, released last week, found that Ecstasy use rose significantly in all three grade levels from 1998 to 1999. The 2000 Monitoring the Future Survey shows Ecstasy use up 82% among 8th graders; 44% among 10th graders and 46% among 12th graders. Heroin, cocaine and LSD use decreased. Among all kids surveyed in those three grades, however, the percentage of those who use Ecstasy is still in the single digits. Alcohol still remains teens' drug of choice-about 34% purport to be regular drinkers and about 22% smoke pot, according to a 1999 Wisconsin Youth Risk Behavior Survey-but Ecstasy is gaining a following. Perhaps it's because of the reportedly feel-good uninhibited feelings it creates, or the increased touch and sound stimulation. "Everybody's doing it," says one West Side teen. "Most people at my school have done it." That statement could be chalked up to a wide-eyed youth's idea of clique acceptance, but "even a few honor students are doing it," we're told. While teachers may not know entirely what's happening in the schools, and certainly parents can't make that claim, cops say that the drug's popularity is definitely rising. "We're arresting people with 600 hits, 2,000 hits. We're buying it by the thousands," Martorano attests. "There's a lot of it coming up from Chicago. The stuff is easy to move." Perhaps reflecting its suburban appeal, the Milwaukee County Metropolitan Drug Enforcement Unit seized about 1,418 Ecstasy tablets this year through late August, according to a report in the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. That's about enough pills to fuel one night of parties in the area. The unit made 10 arrests so far this year, the last on Nov. 8. Those arrests were mostly males in their early 20s who lived outside the city. "It's at all the rave parties," one source says. "It cuts across all age groups," Martorano says. "I've seen it with the very young, 12-, 13-year olds, to 40-year-olds." Ecstasy-also commonly called MDMA-made the rounds with no legal interference until it became extremely popular. As recently as 1985, Ecstasy could be found at yuppie parties in big-city high-rise condos. Back then, it was touted mainly as "the love drug," and serving bowls filled with pills were the norm. On July 1, 1985, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency outlawed MDMA, and it was put into the most restrictive of controlled substances categories. MDMA was actually first patented as a diet pill in 1913 by the German company Merck, but because of the side effects, it was never marketed that way. By 1953 the U.S. Army had gotten ahold of the formula and was testing it for military use. Rumors were that it was for a "truth" drug. Psychotherapists finally took a look at MDMA, and the University of California-Berkeley's Alexander Shulgrin- "the stepfather of MDMA," as he calls himself-touted its use in that arena. Shulgrin is best known for his autobiography, Phenethylamines I Have Known and Loved. One psychotherapist, thrilled with MDMA's ability to open up patients' inhibited thoughts and emotions, called it "penicillin for the soul." After it became illegal in the States, MDMA made its way to Europe where it took on its current status as the "fun drug," becoming a staple of all-night dance parties, which it now is back in the States some 15 years later. But while some comparisons with LSD can be made regarding Ecstasy's emotional and hallucinogenic effects, Ecstasy can kill you. It affects the serotonin metabolism in the brain, which, researchers say, is what likely leads to the higher body temperatures, blood pressure and pulse rates that are regularly reported from users. Users we talked to realize this, and say they are conscious about taking only one pill at a time. That wasn't true for one north shore youth in September, whose kidneys failed after she combined several Ecstasy pills with LSD in a short period of time. "We would never have thought that would have happened," says a friend of that youth. "She almost died." That group of friends says they swore off the drug after the incident. Madison police say 16-year-old Brett Zweifel died Sept. 11 from an overdose of Ecstasy after attending a rave party at the Barrymore Theater. After a 29-year-old overdosed at a rave party held in Madison's Alliant Center, officials there say no more parties will be booked. When all goes well, after the drug wears off, the person is tired and wants to sleep. "You feel like absolute crap," is the consensus of a group we talked to. "But it's worth it." Studying long-term effects of MDMA are a relatively new science, but a report released last month by Swiss MDMA researcher Alex Gamma rehashed 13 other studies looking into the effect MDMA has on memory. Gamma concluded that heavier, long-term use leads to some memory loss and recall ability. "I think the safe conclusion to draw is that being an Ecstasy user is a risk factor for having worse memory performance," he writes. When it is combined with the intense dancing at rave parties, it can cause dehydration and raise the body temperature. That's why most rave parties and partiers are well-equipped with water for sale. Some advice offered in Ecstasy Internet chat-rooms sound similar to the old amateur offerings for acid trips. Do's: Trip with good friends; get some daylight hours in your trip; listen to music; go to a place with natural stimuli; talk with your friends. Don'ts: Don't take it when you're sleepy; get impatient; rush to take it if you're unsure; take it with alcohol; mix it with other speedy drugs; take more than one. Like the memorable announcement at Woodstock that some bad acid was being sold at the show, there are fakes in the MDMA business, too. A South Milwaukee man was arrested for selling what he said was Ecstasy but were actually sleeping pills; one youth we talked to says a friend did the same thing at a rave party and got away with it-like in the cult rave film Go, where the protagonist's journey starts after buying Ecstasy for some friends, but ends up selling fakes at a rave party instead. One fake has been exposed: Word is out that users should avoid the three-diamond Mitsubishi-logoed pills, since they contain what's known as PMA, instead of the ecstasy drug, MDMA. PMA has been responsible for three suburban Chicago deaths this spring, and in fall, two men near Orlando died from using it. PMA is a cranked-up speed that burns out the central nervous system, with body temperatures reaching 108 degrees. Organ failure comes next. According to the Journal of Analytical Toxicology, PMA shares the hallucinogenic qualities of mescaline and ecstasy, but the first sign of impending death is a soaring temperature. After an hour, stupor can set in because of widespread bleeding of the brain and organs. Emergency medical attention doesn't guarantee survival, says the journal. A Chicago Drug Enforcement Agency spokesperson called the difference between MDMA and PMA "like making angel-food cake and coming up with chocolate-chip cookies." Waukesha County's Martorano says they haven't confiscated any PMA in Waukesha. "All of our stuff has tested out to be what MDMA consists of. But you never can be sure what's mixed in with this stuff." Customs officials think that more altered MDMA is coming into the country because their drug-sniffing dogs, which are trained to sniff out MDMA, can't detect additives that may cover up MDMA. Customs seized about 5 million Ecstasy pills during the first four months of the year. One of our sources says there hasn't been word of PMA in Milwaukee. Needless to say, no one's checking on the purity of what they're eating. Various educators see Ecstasy on the school scene from different angles. Sharon Wisniewski, an educational consultant for health and safety in schools and communities among 44 school districts in southeastern Wisconsin, says "we're always watching for it," but she hasn't heard any first-hand reports of students using it. "We are really aware that it's out there. It's the topic of discussions in meetings." A conference for educators-"The Training on Club Drugs, What You Need to Know"-is sponsored by the U.S. Attorney's office and is scheduled for Jan. 13 at UW-Milwaukee. Milwaukee Public Schools drug prevention specialist Dave Kucej says Ecstasy is better known in white middle-class schools than in MPS. "I haven't heard anybody really talk about it." He says MPS was more concerned about the highly potent, extremely pure, black heroin that came to town this year. So far, it has been blamed for 15 deaths statewide. As for confronting students with the reality of drugs, "we try to focus on health, prevent peer pressure, and look at the positives of health realization and resiliency-that you can change thoughts and feelings without chemicals," Kucej says, adding a cautionary note of drug education. "What we found out is that when we teach what the drugs do, the kids become fascinated and try doing it themselves. We focus on the parents with that information." One of our suburban high-school sources agrees with Kucej's assessment. "They just tell us what it does and that it isn't good for us." Kucej and Wisniewski offer this for skittish parents: "The majority of students are not on drugs," Wisniewski says. "Most kids believe more kids are using drugs than really are," echoes Kucej. - --- MAP posted-by: GD