Pubdate: Sun, 24 Oct 2004 Source: Montgomery Advertiser (AL) Copyright: 2004 The Advertiser Co. Contact: http://www.montgomeryadvertiser.com/customerservice/letter.htm Website: http://www.montgomeryadvertiser.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1088 Author: Bill Poovey, The Associated Press Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) Note: Letters from the newspaper's circulation area receive publishing priority 'APHRODISIAC' EFFECT PART OF METH'S DECEPTIVE CHARM CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. - Doctors and government officials don't like to talk much about it, but there's an obvious reason people get hooked on methamphetamine: sex. The drug eventually destroys the sex drive, but doctors say for a short while meth can boost sexual appetite and performance -- in a way that's much stronger than stimulants such as cocaine. Assistant U.S. Attorney Paul Laymon said he has interviewed hundreds of meth users, and a startling number -- men and women -- say the drug enhances sexual performance and desire. "Who wouldn't want to use it? You lose weight and you have great sex," Laymon said recently at a meeting of Tennessee's meth task force. For obvious reasons, government officials, facing an epidemic of meth abuse in rural Appalachia, want to focus on the misery meth causes and not its aphrodisiac effect. But Dr. Mary Holley, an obstetrician who runs a Mothers Against Methamphetamine ministry across the state line in Albertville, said sex is the "No. 1 reason" people use the drug. "When you first start using this stuff it makes you want sex all the time," Holley said. The effect doesn't last long. "After you have been using it about six months or so you can't have sex unless you are high," Holley said. "After you have been using it a little bit longer you can't have sex even when you're high." Dr. John Standridge, an addiction specialist with the Council for Alcohol and Drug Abuse Services in Chattanooga, said meth and other stimulants initially "rev up the dopamine nervous system in the brain. They rev it up and burn it out." Meth users can never recapture the feeling of that initial high, but they keep trying in "a vicious downward spiral," Standridge said. "It's the same way with sexual arousal. At first, users report greater sexual arousal and prolonged stamina, and if they are of the right personality they get into compulsive sexuality." Its sex appeal is part of why meth is so hard to fight. Holley, who has interviewed men and women addicted to the drug, said it stimulates the "pleasure center" in the brain. "Methamphetamine makes a direct hit on the nucleus accumbens with its favorite chemical, dopamine," she said. "The effect of an IV hit of methamphetamine is the equivalent of 10 orgasms all on top of each other lasting for 30 minutes to an hour, with a feeling of arousal that lasts for another day and a half." Holley said the body "doesn't have enzymes to metabolize this stuff, so the dopamine high lasts for 20 hours. That is 10 times longer than cocaine." - --- MAP posted-by: Derek