Pubdate: Thu, 31 Jan 2002 Source: Inquirer (PA) Copyright: 2002 Philadelphia Newspapers Inc Contact: http://inq.philly.com/content/inquirer/home/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/340 Author: Jake Wagman and Joseph A. Gambardello Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) THREE COLLAPSE IN SCHOOL AFTER TAKING LIQUID DRUG They took a drug known as GHB before classes at Gloucester County's Williamstown High, police said. All were hospitalized. Three Gloucester County teens were hospitalized yesterday after drinking a designer "date-rape" drug before arriving at school in the morning, police said. Officials at Williamstown High School in Monroe said the male students had appeared ill and had vomited before passing out in separate homeroom classes about 7:30 a.m. Two of them, ages 17 and 18, were kept overnight at Virtua-West Jersey Hospital Berlin, where they improved from serious condition to fair condition. A 15-year-old who had been in critical condition was discharged yesterday afternoon from Kennedy Memorial Hospitals-University Medical Center/Washington Township. Monroe police said they had found between one and two ounces of gamma-hydroxybutyrate - a colorless liquid known as GHB or Liquid X on the street - in a soda bottle in the car that the students had driven to school. Police said last night that lab tests confirmed the substance was GHB. Drug charges against the students are pending, police said. It was the second time this month that students in the region have been hospitalized after taking drugs and falling ill. On Jan. 8, 28 students at Roberto Clemente Middle School in North Philadelphia were treated after taking powerful doses of the prescription antianxiety drug Xanax. Like ecstasy, GHB is one of the so-called rave or club drugs meant to produce a fast, cheap high. Its knockout effect also puts GHB in a league with other "date-rape" drugs, such as Rohypnol. "I have never heard of this stuff before," said Vincent Tarantino, assistant superintendent in the Monroe Township School District. "It must be the new drug of choice." GHB, once sold over the counter, is an addictive central nervous system depressant that can be bought illegally over the Internet or brewed at home using a mix of paint stripper and drain cleaner, which are neutralized in the cooking process. Sometimes the drug is sold as "nail polish remover" or "CD cleaner" on Web sites seeking to avoid detection by authorities, said Trinka Porrata, a former Los Angeles narcotics detective who is one of the nation's top experts on GHB. "How many women do you know would pay $60, $80 or $100 for a bottle of nail polish remover?" Porrata asked. GHB also is known as "liquid ecstasy," "G," "Gamma-Oh," "Georgia Home Boy," "Easy Lay," "Grievous Bodily Harm," "Great Hormones at Bedtime," "Soap," "G-Riffick," and "Cherry Meth." The Williamstown case caused enough anxiety among some parents to prompt them to take their children home before school ended. Parents said they had exchanged phone calls after hearing that students had been kept in their first-period classrooms and that helicopters were hovering over the 1,400-student high school. "With 9/11, that school bus driver taking the kids to Maryland, those kids in Philadelphia getting sick - it made me nervous," said Julia Johnston, who has a son and daughter at Williamstown High. "You never know what to expect." When Johnston and other parents arrived at the school, they saw that the helicopter was from a local news station and that the students had been kept in the school for about an hour until officials could assess the situation. Sophomore Katie Grimmer, 16, said that she had seen one of the students shortly after he passed out, and that he had been "pale and sweaty." Standing with friends in the parking lot after school, Grimmer said that although Liquid X is not as common as ecstasy in pill form, it is not hard to get. "Nobody sells it at school," she said, "but if you ask somebody for it and they ask enough people, you can get it." Monroe Superintendent Charles M. Ivory sent a note home with students, telling parents that it is "imperative that we remain steadfast in our efforts to prevent our children from becoming involved in substance abuse." "I encourage you to speak directly to your children about this matter," his note said. "This is an appropriate time to pause and reflect on the dangers our children face today." Outlawed by Congress two years ago, GHB emerged in health stores in the late 1980s in products intended to promote sleep, to slow aging, and to build muscles. Christopher D'Amanda, head of addiction services at St. Joseph's Hospital in Philadelphia, said he had no anecdotal evidence to indicate GHB use was on the rise in the area. But, he said, many doctors and hospitals are not aware of the drug or its effects. "GHB is a poorly understood designer drug," D'Amanda said. Those he has treated, he said, have been muscle builders or "hot on the dance scene." "The common thing about them is they didn't know a damn thing about addiction," D'Amanda said. "They don't know what is happening to them." GHB is often mixed with alcohol so users can get higher with fewer drinks. But GHB comes in varying strengths, and taking the drug is like playing Russian roulette, said Porrata, a consultant who works with a nonprofit Web site, www.projectghb.org. She said GHB has a "steep dosage curve" in which a drop or two can double or triple the effect of an original dose. "A little bit can make a huge difference between being drunk or unconscious, dead or alive," Porrata said. "A capful is a tremendous amount." The federal Drug Enforcement Adminstration counted 73 deaths from GHB in the five years before Congress made the drug a controlled substance in early 2000. Porrata said she had counted more than 200 deaths since 1990. "We know there are deaths that have been missed," she said. Federal statistics show that the number of emergency-room visits attributed to GHB nationwide grew from 55 in 1994 to 4,959 in 2000 - --- MAP posted-by: Josh