Pubdate: Sun, 10 Jul 2005 Source: St. Paul Pioneer Press (MN) Copyright: 2005 St. Paul Pioneer Press Contact: http://www.twincities.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/379 Author: Frederick Melo, Pioneer Press Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?232 (Chronic Pain) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/oxycontin.htm (Oxycontin/Oxycodone) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) OXYCONTIN USE ON RISE IN CITIES Abuse Of Prescription Painkiller Especially Rampant Among Teens Right after he graduated from high school, a friend introduced Mark Smith to OxyContin as a way to get high. Three years later, Smith is still a prisoner to the nation's most popular prescription painkiller. More than once, his attempts to break his addiction alone have drawn him to psychiatric wards in the chilling throes of withdrawal. "It's a slow suicide," said Smith, 21, of Savage, who goes to a Minneapolis methadone clinic daily in hopes of one day piecing his life back together. "It's been a living hell on it, and coming off of it. Like riding on the tail of a dragon." Some months after barreling through her OxyContin prescription before her scheduled refill, Heidi Fredericks, 35, would inject heroin to slake her overpowering need. But the Rochester mom found that on the street, OxyContin was not only the cheaper of the two drugs -- it was stronger. OxyContin, the top-selling narcotic painkiller, has made major inroads into the Twin Cities drug culture, especially among youths as of late. Once nicknamed "Hillbilly heroin" because of its popularity in Appalachia and other rural areas, the powerful opiate has been linked in recent weeks to armed robberies at suburban pharmacies from Arden Hills to Lakeville and the death in May of an Eagan teen. A statewide poison control center notes a threefold increase in related phone calls in as many years. Methadone clinics swell with heroin users who say they use the two opium-derived drugs interchangeably. Due to a growing street trade in recent months, authorities are focusing on OxyContin dealers in undercover buy-busts. A report released last week by the National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse at Columbia University said there are 15.1 million abusers of prescription drugs and that 2.3 million of those are teens. But unlike heroin, cocaine or methamphetamine, police say there are no criminal kingpins to topple, no foreign drug cartels to target. To the surprise and alarm of many parents, the latest youth drug is readily available in their medicine cabinet. Soaring Popularity, Soaring Problems Manufactured by Purdue Pharma, OxyContin was approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration in 1995 as a treatment for moderate to severe pain lasting more than a few days. Within six years it had become the most popular narcotic painkiller on the market, with annual sales exceeding $1 billion. OxyContin today is just as likely to be prescribed by a primary care physician as a cancer specialist or pain clinic. Considered twice as potent as morphine, the pills are made up of a single compound -- oxycodone -- coated with a controlled-release buffer to allow pain relief over an extended period of time. (Drugs like Percodan and Percocet contain oxycodone in more limited amounts, diluted by other active ingredients.) "I think OxyContin is certainly a favorite among drug abusers just because there's nothing else in it," said Chris Lintner, a pharmacist with the Minnesota Poison Control System. For effect, users have learned ways of dissolving the buffer to absorb the oxycodone all at once. The drug is chewed and eaten, crushed and snorted or dissolved in water and injected for a loose, floating feeling and a euphoric, heroin-like high. Experts first noticed OxyContin addiction in rural areas, where loggers and other workers who perform heavy manual labor began getting hooked on the drug. Soon, some elderly patients and the rural poor found that selling their supply provided supplemental income, while heroin users from urban areas discovered the pills to be readily available from small-town doctors and pharmacies. By 2000, authorities in rural Maine, Kentucky, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Virginia and West Virginia were alarmed by the prevalence of OxyContin addiction, which seemed to be spreading from the Appalachian region to major cities. In a West Virginia drug clinic, as many as half the patients were hooked. Until recently, however, Twin Cities drug enforcement officials still considered OxyContin abuse an East Coast problem. Local authorities say its prevalence has grown in the past 12 to 18 months, joining a series of prescription narcotics, like Percocet and Vicodin, that are popular with young abusers. Experts say it has even made inroads at "rave" parties, where teens once favored recreational drugs like Ecstasy over narcotics. "The majority of cases that we've got are still meth," said Sgt. John Grant, the agent in charge of the Dakota County Drug Task Force. "But we're seeing more and more OxyContin cases. It's becoming the drug of choice." Police say the street market is still largely driven by individual users, who are selling OxyContin at $1 a milligram -- or $20 to $40 for a pill -- in order to fund their own OxyContin use. According to the drug task force, in 2003, when OxyContin was separated from other prescription drugs for counting purposes, there were 47 pills seized. In 2004, that number had doubled to 94, and already in 2005, 86 pills have been seized. "We're seizing more OxyContin through search warrants and buy-busts. Not just the kids, but the adults, too," Grant said. "All of a sudden we're getting people who are saying, 'Hey, I can deliver 50 to 100 units of OxyContin.' It's actually becoming the target." Authorities and medical experts say typical users might be teenagers or someone in their early 20s who began using the drug recreationally. While study findings vary, experts say addiction among prescription users who take the drug as directed is relatively uncommon. "It's intended to be used by people in pain under a doctor's supervision, for people in a specific type of pain," said Jim Heins, spokesman for Stamford, Conn.-based Purdue Pharma. Heins noted that the company has worked with several states to establish prescription drug monitoring programs. "In patients taking it as directed, the incidence of addiction is low." A Youth Problem But its popularity among young people is clearly growing. A national survey conducted recently by the Partnership for a Drug Free America found that teens, for the first time, are now more likely to abuse prescription painkillers than illicit drugs. The survey found that 18 percent of students in seventh through 12th grades had tried Vicodin to get high and 10 percent had abused OxyContin, while 9 percent had used cocaine, crack cocaine or Ecstasy. Shana Hunsucker, 18, of St. Paul first heard about OxyContin eight months ago through a friend. Since then, she said, the drug has grown into a popular new draw within St. Paul's youth drug culture. She saw a friend descend so far into addiction he sold his belongings, stole from his roommates and was forced from his home. "Most people are buying it from people who are stealing it from their parents," said Hunsucker, who believes the pills are easier for young people to acquire than methamphetamine. Brian Sturgeon, an investigator with the Dakota County Drug Task Force, said that many older abusers are getting the drug legally from their physicians, or buying or stealing it from people who have prescriptions. "Sometimes they will have five, 10 different doctors issue prescriptions," Sturgeon said of users' practice of "doctor shopping." "Sometimes the smaller dealers will steal it from relatives or (through) burglaries." As its popularity increases, so do consequences. In the metro area last year, there were 475 hospital emergency department reports involving oxycodone, according to the Hazelden Foundation, which runs addiction programs in the Twin Cities. "Kids are really of the mistaken belief that if it's a pill, it's somehow safe," said Carol Falkowski, who monitors drug abuse trends in the Twin Cities for Hazelden and the National Institute on Drug Abuse. She notes that about 5 million school-age children take pills daily for behavior disorders. "They learn at a young age that pills are a relatively safe proposition, because so many of their friends take them." "But really, with prescription narcotics, even one-time use in a high dose can be fatal," Falkowski said. "And it's not as if these pills come in their original packaging (on the street). Kids don't really know what they're getting." Daniel Kaschner believes his son didn't know. Christopher Kaschner, 17, was found dead in his bedroom by his twin brother on the afternoon of May 1. The Eagan teen had stopped by a friend's house that Friday evening and taken a number of pills from an OxyContin bottle that had been left out on the kitchen table by the friend's father, a cancer sufferer, Kaschner said. Christopher slipped into bed early Saturday night, complaining of a headache. His brother went to his door that night to invite him outside for a cigarette, but decided not to bother him after hearing him snoring unusually loudly. Kaschner now knows that sound was a likely sign of respiratory distress. During an OxyContin overdose, the part of the brain that controls breathing is impaired, drawing the victim into a light coma. Kaschner and his wife, Vicky, who left early Sunday morning on vacation, received the news of their son's death later that day at their hotel. "I wish people were made more aware about how lethal this drug is. I don't think doctors tell you to keep it away from children. They should say, 'Lock it up,' " Kaschner said. "I'm not saying that it's bad. But I think it needs to be controlled much more than it is. Doctors are writing out more and more prescriptions for back pain. That puts it on the streets." Kaschner believes his son, who sometimes swallowed several ibuprofen at a time to help him sleep, took four to six OxyContin pills under the mistaken impression they would help his headache. Since his son's overdose, he has learned that regular users build up a gradual tolerance to painkiller narcotics over time. A cancer patient might find comfort taking the same dosage that would be fatal to someone else. "For somebody who is young and not used to narcotics, three pills might be enough to cause toxicity, or even death," said Dr. Carson Harris, a toxicologist at Regions Hospital in St. Paul. Harris estimates the hospital's emergency room treats at least six or seven cases of OxyContin overdose a year, with summer and fall being the peak months. "Chris was a good kid. He had a big heart," said Kaschner, recalling how his son posted poems on the Internet and hoped to study electronics at a local community college. "He wasn't your 'sit downstairs in the dark' druggie. You think of two things when you think of accidental overdose. I've had people ask me, 'Was it a suicide?' No. No, ifs, ands or buts about it." OxyContin And Heroin Gregory Carlson directs a Minneapolis methadone program that serves 600 narcotic addicts daily, most of them heroin users. "Almost everybody that we've admitted in the past two years has used OxyContin when they could get it," said Carlson, director of addiction medicine at Hennepin Faculty Associates, a unit of the Hennepin County Medical Center. OxyContin, said Carlson, helps heroin users stave off the difficult symptoms of withdrawal while providing a high of similar, if not greater, intensity. "There's nothing on the street that you can get as high with, that would also suppress withdrawal as long," he said. "And those are the two things addicts are looking for." But if many heroin users are turning to OxyContin as an alternative, some OxyContin users are also turning to heroin. It's a familiar story for Mark Smith, who was just out of Burnsville High School when a friend brought him OxyContin pills pilfered from his mother's medicine cabinet. Smith, a social drinker in high school, had never considered himself a hard-core drug user. "From the moment I started, I was on a three-month binge," said Smith, who turned to heroin when the pills weren't available. "I couldn't get out of bed unless I had it. It's bad news." Heidi Fredericks was in training to become a department store manager when her doctor put her on OxyContin for chronic back pain in 2002. "He said there's a new drug, OxyContin, and he put me on eight 80- milligram tablets a day," she said. Fredericks said the prescription was far too strong -- so strong, in fact, some pharmacists refused to fill it. Fredericks, who watched her career crumble while spending the past three years in and out of addiction centers, blames her doctor for getting her hooked. "It's like being in a coma, a waking coma. You don't sleep. You don't eat," said Fredericks, who also injected heroin at the height of her OxyContin addiction. On OxyContin, days blurred together and she lost all sense of the passage of time. She remembers being asked to leave a grocery store after shopping for six hours; to her, it had felt more like minutes. Both Fredericks and Smith said as their tolerance grew, their OxyContin use provided little of the initial euphoria. Instead, they craved it as a way to avoid the powerful sickness that accompanies withdrawal from the drug. They are both enrolled in treatment programs in hopes of defeating their addictions. "I think there is this moral model that addicts are these weird people trying to get high all the time," said Carlson. "That's not the case. They're normal people trying to feel normal. When you ask an addict to give up his drug, you're not asking him not to get high. You're asking him to tolerate the symptoms of withdrawal." [Sidebar] About OxyContin Authorities and teens say OxyContin abuse has grown in the past 12 to 18 months. Considered twice as potent as morphine, the painkiller fetches $1 per milligram on the street, or between $20 and $40 a pill. The pills are swallowed, snorted or injected for a euphoric, heroin- like high. National surveys show 10 percent of teens have abused OxyContin to get high. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved OxyContin for moderate-to-severe pain in 1995, and within six years it had become the most popular narcotic painkiller on the market, with annual sales exceeding $1 billion. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth