Pubdate: Tue, 16 Apr 2002 Source: Reuters (Wire) Copyright: 2002 Reuters Limited Author: Maggie Fox, Health and Science Correspondent 'HUFFED' SOLVENTS ACT LIKE COCAINE ON BRAIN-STUDY WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The fumes from glue, lighters and other solvents that children and young adults inhale go straight to the same brain regions that are stimulated by cocaine and other drugs, researchers said on Monday in a study that shed light on the appeal of "huffing." Brain scans show that chemicals such as toluene move very quickly to pleasure centers -- then move out to other brain cells, causing the damage that can make sniffers lose their memory, suffer vision problems and eventually develop serious mental defects. "It's the first time we've ever shown it," neuroanatomist Stephen Dewey of Brookhaven National Laboratory in New York, who helped lead the study, said in an interview. "We have known it from behavioral studies -- people will report euphoria and they will report highs. But we have never known this class of chemicals, these toluenes, go to the dopamine centers of the brain, much like cocaine." Sniffing or huffing is of special concern because children like to do it. Unlike illegal drugs such as cocaine, solvents are everywhere and easily accessed by youngsters who quickly learn they can give a cheap high. "Like rubber cement -- you could roll it on your desk into a ball and then sniff it," said Dewey, who works in his local schools to discourage children from using drugs. "I get questions from fourth, fifth, sixth graders. They huff butane lighters," he said. "The most striking latest statistics suggest that one in five eighth graders have done it." Writing in the journal Life Sciences, Dewey and colleagues said they injected toluene -- the chemical that causes the "high" from sniffing - -- into baboons and then did PET scans of their brains and bodies. "The images were really striking. None of us expected to see what we saw," Dewey said. The chemical went straight to clusters of brain cells that produce dopamine -- a neurotransmitter or message-carrying chemical associated with pleasure. "Then we watched it redistribute to the white matter in the brain. And it goes to the kidneys just as quickly," he said. This could explain the toxic side-effects of huffing or sniffing. "What you see is over time is you get cortical atrophy, characterized by changes in cognition, disorientation," Dewey said. Vision becomes blurred and victims can become uncoordinated. The team next plans to recruit adults who admit they sniff or huff inhalants and do PET scans of their brains as they do. "There is never a shortage of volunteers," said Dewey. He expects the chemicals, when inhaled, will work even more quickly than when injected. The team chose toluene because it is one of the most common industrial solvents, found in paints, glues, and other products favored by huffers. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh