Pubdate: Mon, 13 Aug 2001 Source: American Medical News (US) Copyright: 2001, American Medical Association Contact: http://www.ama-assn.org/public/journals/amnews/edlet.htm Website: http://www.amednews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1235 Author: Susan J. Landers CLUB DRUGS MORE AGONY THAN ECSTASY FOR YOUNG PATIENTS Physicians are urged to offer guidance, information about the dangers of the illegal drug Ecstasy. Washington -- Physicians should be aware that ever-increasing numbers of their young patients are using illegal "club drugs" such as Ecstasy, a synthetic, psychoactive drug that many users consider to be relatively harmless. But the drug is far from harmless. "It's a dangerous drug," said Michael Miller, MD, secretary of the American Society of Addiction Medicine, "with both stimulant and hallucinogenic properties." Patients tend to place Ecstasy in a different category from other illicit drugs, said Stuart Gitlow, MD, medical director of Nantucket (Mass.) Behavioral Services. "When we question people about using drugs they say no, but when we ask them if they are using Ecstasy they say yes," he said. Ask young patients how they spend their leisure time, suggests Dr. Miller. Ask them if they attend concerts or all-night dance parties and what experiences they've had with people using club drugs. Such conversations could lead to discussion about the patient's own drug use. Physicians in New England have seen a huge increase in Ecstasy's use over the past two years, said Dr. Gitlow. And the same is true in Wisconsin, where Dr. Miller practices. "Now that the marketing of the drug is being revved up," said Dr. Miller, "we can expect to see Ecstasy in every corner of the nation and in every size community." Young people 12 to 27 years old are the primary users of Ecstasy, which has been around for at least 30 years. The drug also bears the ponderous name, methylenedioxymethamphetamine, or MDMA. While the use of Ecstasy has not yet reached epidemic levels, it is rising, National Institute on Drug Abuse Director Alan Leshner, PhD, told scientists, drug counselors and policymakers who gathered last month in Washington, D.C., for a conference,"MDMA/Ecstasy Research: Advances, Challenges, Future Directions." "In the short term, Ecstasy can cause dramatic changes in heart rate and blood pressure, dehydration and a potentially life-threatening increase in body temperature," said Dr. Leshner. "In the longer term, research shows that Ecstasy can cause lasting changes in the brain's chemical systems that control mood and memory," he noted. Ecstasy and several other drugs have gained notoriety because of their use at popular, all-night dance parties, or "raves," that are attended by young people. The burgeoning use of the drug has also inspired a wave of violence across the nation as drug dealers entered the picture. Ecstasy is distributed in pill form that is inexpensive to manufacture and can reap a large profit for those trafficking the substance. Complicating the picture is a claim by some that Ecstasy holds therapeutic powers for treating mental ills and is a safe, nonaddictive drug. Those claims, said Dr. Miller, "are tragically comical notions." The claims are reminiscent of those made for the drug LSD (lysergic acid diethylamide) in the 1960s, he noted. Conference findings The fact that many users of Ecstasy also use several other drugs at the same time makes it difficult to tease out the effects of Ecstasy, noted researchers at the NIDA conference. Among some other findings presented at the conference: Patricia Case, ScD, director of Harvard Medical School's Program in Urban Health, reported that preliminary findings of studies in Boston and New York indicate that Ecstasy use has increased among men who have sex with men. Participants in Dr. Case's study reported having unprotected oral and anal sex when using Ecstasy, particularly in conjunction with the use of the drugs ketamine hydrochloride and methamphetamine. Robert G. Carlson, PhD, a professor at Wright State University School of Medicine in Dayton, Ohio, reported that research in central Ohio revealed that the use of Ecstasy is no longer limited to the rave scene or dance clubs but has moved to concerts, parks and house parties and is increasingly popular among high school and college students as well as among young people not in school. Jean J. Schensul, PhD, executive director of the Institute for Community Research in Hartford, Conn., found that Ecstasy use is not limited to suburban youth but is being widely used among teens in Hartford. Dr. Miller compared the rising use of Ecstasy with past epidemics of drug use in the nation. "What has happened with Ecstasy is exactly what happened with cocaine in the 1980s and will happen again with an unnamed agent 10 or 20 years from now," he said. "It's part of a cycle, and people need to be wary about these trends and how seductive they are." ADDITIONAL INFORMATION: Weblink ClubDrugs.org, a National Institute on Drug Abuse club drugs resource site (http://www.clubdrugs.org/) DanceSafe, nonprofit organization that promotes health and safety for those attending raves (http://www.dancesafe.org/) American Society of Addiction Medicine (http://www.asam.org/) - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom