Pubdate: Sat, 13 Jan 2001 Source: New Scientist (UK) Copyright: New Scientist, RBI Limited 2001 Contact: Reed Business Information Limited, 151 Wardour St, London W1V 4BN, England Fax: +44-20-7331 2777 Feedback: http://www.newscientist.com/letters/reply.jsp Website: http://www.newscientist.com/ Author: Claire Ainsworth ALL LOVED OUT Popping Es Could Club Your Sex Life To Death THEY call it the love drug, but in reality ecstasy dampens passions, say psychologists. It appears that people who use the drug frequently lose their appetite for sex. And the damage could persist long after they stop taking the drug. Andy Parrott and his team at the University of East London collected anonymous questionnaires from 768 young people in Rome, Padua, London and Manchester. As people rarely take just ecstasy, the team wanted to find out how using combinations of drugs affects mental health. The team divided the returned questionnaires into six groups, based on different drug-taking patterns. They ranged from people who took no drugs, those who consumed cigarettes and alcohol, to "heavy" ecstasy users who had taken it on over 20 occasions, as well as those who used drugs such as cannabis and cocaine. People who took a lot of drugs reported more psychological problems such as agoraphobia and anxiety. But it was heavy ecstasy users who had most problems with sex drive, and were nearly three times as likely to report a loss of libido as nonusers. "It's ironic," says Parrott, because ecstasy has the reputation of heightening sexual pleasure. The drug produces a warm, euphoric high that can last for a few hours. It works both by boosting the production and reducing the breakdown of the key neurotransmitter serotonin, which is linked to mood. People coming down from E have depleted levels of serotonin, and can hit their lowest point days after the original hit-hence the "Suicide Tuesday" hangover experienced by many Saturday-night pill-poppers. These feelings of sadness, depression and anti-sociability normally fade within a week. But the longer-term effects of ecstasy are now emerging. Regular use of ecstasy could be damaging the neurons that make serotonin, says Parrott. His team was the first to show that heavy ecstasy use can impair memory, and other groups have found that these effects can linger for up to a year after people stop taking the drug. No one is sure whether damage to neurons is permanent. "The worry is that it may well be doing that - we're not sure," says Parrott. Permanently low levels of serotonin are linked to clinical depression, anxiety and loss of libido. People who find they have to up their dose of ecstasy should be very concerned, says Parrott, as this could mean that the neurons making serotonin are becoming insensitive to the drug. The average age of ecstasy users in the study was only 23. "It's really quite worrying," adds Parrott. "It certainly isn't a safe drug." Although no one has yet proved that ecstasy damages these neurons in people, researchers have shown that it does so in rats, says Mary Forsling, professor of neuroendocrinology at the Guys', King's and St Thomas's School of Medicine in London. "There's always the concern that this may be happening in humans," she says. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk