Pubdate: Tue, 23 Nov 2004 Source: Daily Times, The (TN) Copyright: 2004 Horvitz Newspapers Contact: http://www.thedailytimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1455 Author: Iva Butler Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) Series: http://www.mapinc.org/source/Daily+Times,+The+(TN) RECOVERY A ROCKY ROAD Methamphetamine, known on the street as the poor man's cocaine, wrecks lives quickly if addicts don't get treatment. Twenty years ago, when Dennis Collett was a young man working third shift at a factory in the Cincinnati and Hamilton, Ohio, area, he got hooked on the drug. Collett, who is now a utilization review director with Cornerstone of Recovery on Topside Road in Louisville, recalled his journey into amphetamine addiction. He was already using marijuana and abusing alcohol when he ``noticed changes in many of the peer group I ran with. I noticed some of the group had a lot more energy, didn't get sleepy, were more animated and speedy. I found out they were using crystal meth, also called ice. They were getting it by mail order out of Texas. It was only $100 for a half-ounce, where coke was $100 a gram,'' Collett said. ``Three or four of us would order an ounce or half-ounce and we would sell it and use it,'' he explained. Fast adverse effect Meth affects the body quickly. ``In three to four months, it started having an adverse effect on me. When using it regularly it would keep me up 12 to 16 hours at a time. I began to eat almost nothing ... maybe one meal a day. I'm 6 foot, one-inch, and weighed 185 pounds then. In three months I was down to 145 or 150 pounds,'' he said. ``It made me paranoid. I felt people were watching me. I felt I had to get more because of how bad I felt without it,'' Collett said. ``I seemed to have visual hallucinations, not just from the effects of the drug, but due to staying up. I'd get three or four hours sleep every couple of days. After six months using regularly, I sought help. That was my first time in treatment,'' he said. ``Guys around me who were using it changed completely. Some went to jail for breaking into places and domestic violence. One guy quit work and was just dealing. He disappeared and we didn't know what happened to him,'' Collett said. ``It was adverse to everybody. That's been 20 years ago. Since then with the Internet and the information you have at your beck and call, you find people using now who are much younger. A survey found that 3 to 4 percent of some junior high kids admitted to using at least once.'' Information on how to build meth labs can easily be found on the Internet. The ingredients needed are readily available at any grocery store. ``I think it's one of the most dangerous drugs out there because of how cheaply it can be made and the adverse effect on users mentally and physically,'' he said. Needed not to feel bad ``It was one of the hardest drugs for me to get away from because you felt so badly about yourself when you're not doing it. I needed it not to feel bad.'' Collett said a doctor told him that the brain makes dopamine just to make you feel normal and feel good. When you take any kind of amphetamine drug it replaces the drug the brain produces and the brain quits the production. Once off the meth, it then takes the brain a while to start up again,'' Collett said. ``Cocaine is the same way,'' he added. ``In treatment our biggest problem is to tell the person they will not feel good for a while. That's probably why people leave treatment early on. There is a real high rate of relapse. The drug is highly addictive,'' Collett stressed. Normally, meth users don't have to undergo detox like those abusing drugs like alcohol. The addiction is mental. People have to get back in a pattern of eating and sleeping regularly, he explained. ``While the time varies for a person to become chemically dependent, a person could become psychologically addicted in two or three uses because of the intense euphoria the drug produces in people,'' Collett said. ``It causes the brain to stimulate pleasure zone areas. It's almost like the brain has a orgasmic feel from using the drug and the first time you use is the most intense. You can't quite get that high again. That's why the amount of the drug used increases. You chase it, but you can't get it back because the first time is more intense,'' Collett said. Addicts snort, smoke, inject or take meth orally. Smoking and injecting are the most dangerous. He said that if a person has heart problems or some other type of illness, like diabetes or asthma, the drug acts quicker. ``I'm sure meth has induced heart attacks because it is very hard on the heart.'' He also said people on meth do not take their medication as prescribed, which is another danger. There is a higher than usual suicide rate, partly due to the depression caused when people quit taking the drug. Part of it may also be psychotic due to the fact you don't sleep for days. ``You start to believe things that aren't true.'' Cornerstone of Recovery, located on Topside Road in Alcoa, had an explosion of admissions for meth addicts in 2001 and 2002, especially in young people 17 to 24, but admissions are not now as high as two years ago. Problem is growing However, ``the problem is growing in the area. Also cooking it is very dangerous, and may result in fires and explosions.'' Collett never was involved in producing meth so has no experience in cooking the drug. It is the Cornerstone belief that an extended treatment plan is needed for six months to a year in a half-way house if not in-patient treatment, he said. Wednesday: Methamphetamine addiction is more of a mental rather than physical dependence. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin