Pubdate: Mon, 23 Jul 2001 Source: New Zealand Press Association (New Zealand Wire) Copyright: 2001 New Zealand Press Association Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mdma.htm (Ecstasy) DANCE DRUG LINKED TO DEATH Post mortem results will today confirm whether the illegal class B drug ecstasy has claimed its fourth New Zealand life. Police are treating as drugs-related the death early yesterday morning of a 20-year-old West Auckland man, and are waiting for toxicology and post mortem results. Also known as MDMA, ecstasy has so far been linked to the deaths of three New Zealanders. Aucklander Ngaire O'Neill, 27, died in October 1998 after taking the drug while at a Karangahape Rd nightclub in Auckland. Whangarei builder Jamie Langridge, 24, died last year at a Pakatoa Island dance party after taking five times more ecstasy than Ms O'Neill had taken. And last month Nelson coroner Ian Smith ruled that Dai Gerard Bowden, 32, died in Nelson on March 18 of a self-inflicted death resulting from the use of ecstasy. Mr Bowden had been to a dance party the night before. In the latest possible ecstasy-related death, the man collapsed in a central city alleyway at 12.45am yesterday after a private party in the city. His friends told police he may have taken ecstasy. He was rushed to Auckland Hospital's emergency department by ambulance after he had a cardiac arrest, but died soon after. Ecstasy is associated with the nightclub and dance scene. Overseas medical research has found it can produce severe health problems, including overheating, irreversible brain damage, irregular heartbeat, high blood pressure, anxiety, depression and acute kidney failure. It could also aggravate existing medical conditions. Ecstasy prompts the higher than normal release of serotonin in the brain, giving users an extreme high for hours. Vigorous activity, such as dancing, often encouraged excessive water consumption. Previous advice to ecstasy users was to drink a lot of water, but that is no longer given because of the dangers of water intoxication, where the body becomes overloaded with water. This causes the brain to swell, increasing the pressure inside the skull and stopping blood flow. - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager