Pubdate: Fri, 19 Mar 2004 Source: San Francisco Chronicle (CA) Copyright: 2004 Hearst Communications Inc. Contact: http://www.sfgate.com/chronicle/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/388 Author: Jennifer C. Kerr, Associated Press Writer PARENTS, DRUG POLICY CHIEF SOUND ALARM ABOUT 'HUFFING' INHALANTS When 16-year-old David Manlove left his home in June 2001, he told his mother he was going to swim at a friend's house. He didn't tell her what else they planned to do. He and a friend purchased a can of computer duster and "huffed" it while they swam. David inhaled the fumes and dove under water to intensify the high. He didn't surface. By the time his mother Marissa arrived at the pool, he was in cardiac arrest. "My beautiful boy stretched out on a gurney, paramedics frantically conducting CPR," she said Thursday, recalling the scene."The first thing I noticed is that David's feet were blue." Her son was dead. It was "the worst kind of loss that parents can endure" said Marissa's husband, Kim, choking back tears. The Manloves joined the nation's drug policy chief, John Walters, on Thursday to help highlight the problem of inhalant abuse, or "huffing" - -- when kids or adults intentionally inhale common household products such as glue, paint, shoe polish, and gasoline to get a high. Inhalants provide an instant rush for users but they have harmful side effects -- nausea, seizures, heart palpitations and vomiting. Over time, they can lead to brain damage and death. Charles Curie, administrator at the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, said inhalant abuse is a great concern because the products used are legal and therefore easy for children to get their hands on. "It's a silent epidemic in many ways, overshadowed and ignored perhaps because it's not considered a quote illegal drug," he said. The National Inhalant Prevention Coalition said it knows of about 125 inhalant deaths each year. The estimate is based mostly on the number of calls the group gets from parents or other family members. Harvey Weiss, executive director of the Texas-based advocacy group, said many more deaths likely are undiagnosed and unreported. Weiss unveiled new guidelines for medical examiners, coroners and others to help better detect and document inhalant deaths. He said the framework would hopefully aid in getting a more accurate picture on the scope of the problem. The guidelines encourage thorough crime scene searches to determine whether aerosol containers and inhalant paraphernalia, such as plastic bags, were present. Teens fill the bags with hair spray or other aerosol products and then breathe in the fumes. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek