Pubdate: Sat, 20 May 2000 Source: Independent, The (UK) Copyright: 2000 Independent Newspapers (UK) Ltd. Contact: 1 Canada Square, Canary Wharf, London E14 5DL Website: http://www.independent.co.uk/ Author: Steve Boggan CITY'S ADDICTS LIVING IN FEAR OF INJECTING ANTHRAX By the time she died, Susan Black was injecting heroin into her temples. Her veins were broken and useless, she had given up eating and her legs were covered in abscesses. But it was the egg-sized sore on her stomach that killed her. Susan - not her real name - is one of 11 Glaswegian drug addicts whose deaths in the past 10 days have baffled scientists and led to the theory that anthrax may have found its way into the drug supply. At least 24 people have been treated and 10 remain in hospital with abscesses like the one on Susan's stomach, lesions more painful and much more deadly than those commonplace among heroin addicts. These sores are killing people in days, causing massive organ failure and leaving the skin around infected areas black, like anthrax or the flesh-eating disease necrotising fasciitis. Microbiologists and public health officers were so concerned that they sent tissue samples from seven victims to the biological defence laboratory at Porton Down, Wiltshire, where scientists specialising in germ warfare research tested for anthrax. Two of the samples came up weakly positive. Samples from those two victims have now been retested and found to be negative, but all new cases are still being tested for the disease and public health officials have not formally ruled it out as a cause. Susan, an addict in her late twenties, became ill after buying one-sixteenth of an ounce of Indian brown heroin with her friend, Tracey (also a false name) from a female dealer in Govanhill on the south side of the city. Tracey asked The Independent to withhold Susan's real name because some of her family had not been informed of her death. "We paid Pounds 70 for it and went to a friend's flat in Saltmarket [near the centre of Glasgow] and had a hit," said Tracey. "Susan's veins were gone and sometimes she would inject into the side of her head, her temples. She had abscesses everywhere because she used to muscle-pop, whereas I did it into a vein. That's why I'm alive and she's dead." "Muscle-popping" is the practice of injecting into tissue either by accident or because no veins can take a needle. Doctors have established that all those who died had injected into muscle, which takes longer to break down the drug than injecting into a vein. And it was during this absorption that whatever was in the heroin infected its victims. "Susan must have injected the bad heroin into her stomach at some point because she got this abscess that was worse than the others," said Tracey. "We begged her to go to hospital but she wouldn't. After a few days, she became delirious but would still not go to hospital. Eventually, some of my friends took her anyway, but she was dead on arrival." Sources say Susan was, in fact, still alive, but so ill she died within minutes. Tracey could not say why none of her friends called an ambulance sooner, but it is common for heroin addicts to avoid all contact with the emergency services if they can. "I keep asking why it was her and not me," said Tracey. "She was a good person and it always seems to be the good ones who die. So many of my friends have died in front of me. I have a history of trying to kill myself and of mental illness. I wouldn't have minded. I'd have swapped places." Despite the spate of deaths, users have not been put off the drug. Andrew Horne, manager of the Glasgow drug crisis centre, said: "The other day, I sat down with four female addicts and I asked them what they would do if I put a bag of heroin in front of them and told them that there was a 90 per cent chance they'd get anthrax from it. They all said they'd take it anyway." Mr Horne refuses to support or reject the anthrax theory."We've sent four people to hospital so far and we expect to see some more cases, even though they appear to be tailing off," he said. "But why should we be surprised if it was anthrax? This is a product from places like Afghanistan and Iran where anthrax is endemic and public health is not very well developed." Among heroin addicts, rumour over the cause of the deaths is rife. One theory has it that a former pharmacist in Govanhill is contaminating the drug because of hatred for users; others are convinced the infection derives from a bad batch of citric acid, with which heroin is diluted. Initially, there was concern that eight of the 11 dead were women, when only 30 per cent of users are female. However, a number of addicts say that was because a batch of the contaminated heroin found its way to a women's hostel in Inglefield Street. The authorities refuse to name the victims or divulge where they lived. Despite the symptoms in affected addicts, no samples of blood or tissue from dead and living victims has shown up anthrax. However, Streptococcus A, an organism carried harmlessly by some people in their nose and throat, has been found in blood cultures from three patients. Dr Syed Ahmed, consultant in public health medicine for the Greater Glasgow Health Board, said: "That is normally harmless, but if there was some irritant in the heroin that caused an infection, that could act as a focus for the Streptococcus and various other organisms that would normally not cause a problem. "We are testing for everything and, at this stage, it would be negligent if we ruled out anything, including anthrax. We were alerted to the fact that an addict in Norway had died in similar circumstances and they grew anthrax organisms from his brain. "The thing that is puzzling is that, the way drugs are manufactured in bulk and then distributed, you might expect to see cases around the world, not just this cluster in Glasgow and one in Norway." Another name might join that list in the next few days; the death of an addict in Aberdeen was being investigated yesterday. Whether that user becomes the 12th victim - and whether other cities are affected - remains to be seen. - --- MAP posted-by: Allan Wilkinson