Pubdate: Wed, 11 Aug 2004 Source: Southland Times (New Zealand) Copyright: 2004, Southland Times Company Ltd. Contact: http://www.southlandtimes.co.nz/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1041 Author: Chalpat Sonti Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/nitrous+oxide LAUGHING GAS NO JOKE: POLICE It is known as laughing gas but the trend by Invercargill's young to get a quick high from nitrous oxide canisters was no joke, police and medical professionals said yesterday. Invercargill raid squad member Constable Todd Utteridge said packets of the 10cm-high Hungarian-made canisters were being bought mostly by students and teenagers. "They're using them as a party drug. The high lasts about 10 minutes (from each canister)." The canisters were sold in packets of 10 and were supposed to be used for whipping cream or in soda siphons. However, they were sold in stores that did not sell the cream bomb canisters to go with them, Mr Utteridge said. "Anyone using these things on a commercial basis is going to go to a wholesaler, not a corner dairy, to get them." An Invercargill dairy owner told him the nitrous oxide canisters were sold mainly on Friday or Saturday nights, Mr Utteridge said. The dairy owner was unable to be reached for comment yesterday. Mr Utteridge said nitrous oxide was used in dentistry and anaesthesia but it was mixed with air and was not 100 percent pure laughing gas like those being sold. Police had found large quantities of empty canisters in Invercargill outside the Feldwick Gates, where it was believed they were used by boy racers. An incident in Nelson in February highlighted the dangers of nitrous oxide use by drivers. A 20-year-old man drove a car containing five people into a river minutes after inhaling the gas. The driver, who was said to have gone "stiff and quiet" seconds before the car plunged into the river, was killed. The canisters could not be sold to people under 18 in Australia but there was no such law in New Zealand, Mr Utteridge said. However, an Invercargill City Council bylaw meant police could prosecute anyone for solvent abuse. If convicted, they faced a fine of $500. There had yet to be any convictions under the bylaw for those inhaling nitrous oxide, Mr Utteridge said. Rhanna Clinic nurse Allan Travis said short-term effects of using pure nitrous oxide included immediate loss of motor control and disorientation. Anyone using more than one canister a session would develop fixations, Mr Travis said. "They'll go into a dream state and be well within themselves. The driver (killed in Nelson) was in one of those states and is likely to have taken three or four (canisters) before the accident." Those who used it on a regular basis risked brain disorders, numbness in their hands and feet, and lung damage, Mr Travis said. There had been no recorded deaths from long-term nitrous oxide use in New Zealand but it was believed some had occurred overseas. Mr Travis said he ran education programmes in schools about the dangers of drug abuse and was sent people "every day" on court-ordered substance-abuse programmes but he declined to say whether any nitrous oxide abusers had been referred to him. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake