Pubdate: Sun, 17 Apr 2005 Source: Columbia Chronicle (IL Edu) Copyright: 2005, Columbia Chronicle Contact: http://www.ccchronicle.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2727 Author: Amy Wooten, Contributing Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) METH USE WREAKS HAVOC IN CHICAGO Money gone, credit cards maxed and most of his relationships ruined, Mike M.'s priorities shifted toward a drug that presented a soulless existence: crystal meth. All he could concentrate on was the selfish satisfaction the drug gave him. Convinced he had a skin infection that was causing ingrown hairs, the resident of Chicago's North Side Lakeview neighborhood pulled out most of the hair on his body; easily spending six hours in one sitting tweezing out his eyelashes and eyebrows, along with the hair on his arms, legs, head and pubic region. When he first started using crystal methamphetamine, a synthetic drug that acts as a powerful stimulant on the central nervous system, Mike was more social, more alert and more active. Everything he did was done faster and with more intensity. Feeling strong and invincible at 27, he was able to study longer for his MBA and work harder at his job. He was even happy. Downward spiral Just weeks after his first taste, he lost his ability to make appropriate judgments. Feeling invincible and powerful, he engaged in unprotected sex, which became his number one priority. Within a few months he was using meth daily, and by the time he checked himself into rehab on his 30th birthday, he was an emotionless zombie. In a way, Mike M. considers himself lucky. Now 34 and sober, he realizes that he walked away from the drug without getting infected with HIV-AIDS. Mike, who is unable to give his last name as a member of the Crystal Meth Anonymous support group, thought it would be a one-time drug experience. As a former alcoholic, Mike wanted to try the drug years ago. "The drinking wasn't enough to keep the snow moving and blurring my reality," he said. Now, looking at the scars covering his body, he remembers a drug that sucked him under and nearly destroyed his life. Methamphetamine use is an increasing problem nationwide--some go as far as calling it a plague--and has hit the Midwest hard. But now, the drug is traveling from rural downstate and is reaching Chicago. The 'beast' called meth A few years ago, use of crystal meth in Chicago didn't register even a blip on the Drug Enforcement Administration's radar. Now, health officials and state police are becoming more aware of the drug's threat to Chicago. Meth puts any user at risk for HIV because the drug's euphoric component causes many users to engage in unprotected sex. David McKirnan knows from experience that Chicago has a growing problem on its hands. A researcher at Howard Brown Health Center on the city's North Side, McKirnan sees participants of his program who are in bad shape because of the influence of methamphetamine. These rehabilitation program participants undergo a lot more physical damage and intense addiction than any other user of club drugs out there, he said. The relapse rate is about 94 percent, according to a University of California study. Although McKirnan warns that methamphetamine abuse isn't just a gay problem, he admits that it has become a problem in Chicago's gay community. "Clearly, the numbers are increasing," said McKirnan, referring to a 2001 community survey where six or seven percent of participants reported any use at all, and two percent reported monthly abuse. Data collected by Howard Brown in 2004 shows that out of 500 HIV positive men, 18 percent used meth. McKirnan said these numbers indicate that in Chicago meth has climbed its way up the ladder through the years and proved itself to be one of the top gateways to HIV infection. "Crack used to be a predictor of infection. Meth is probably superseding this fact," McKirnan warned. Methamphetamine, also known on the streets as crystal, ice, meth, glass, Tina, and speed, typically comes as a white powder that easily dissolves in water. Ice or crystal meth looks like clear, chunky crystals. Brightly colored tablets are another form found on the streets. In medical terms, methamphetamine is a highly addictive "upper" that releases the chemical dopamine, which regulates pleasure in the brain. This release leaves the user with a sense of euphoria that lasts for about 30 minutes, compared with the five-minute euphoria cocaine users experience, said Bruce Leibi of the Illinois State Police. Meth can be snorted, smoked, ingested or digested, can be cooked from household ingredients, and is incredibly potent and is relatively inexpensive. "It doesn't take a rocket scientist to make it," said Stacy Bridges, head of the "Life or Meth" campaign in Chicago. There are thousands of recipes available online, according to Illinois State Police. The drug's primary danger is that it erodes impulse control. Users, or "tweakers" are "spun out of control," Leibi said. "Tweaking" is the 24-hour coming-down period after the euphoric high is finished. During this time, users can get extremely agitated and violent; many users take the drug multiple times a day to continue a state of euphoria. It is not uncommon for users to stay up for days on end. The average user Leibi met during DEA busts would stay awake 14 days straight. Chronic use can result in detrimental health problems such as inflammation of the heart lining, lead poisoning, irregular heartbeat, stroke, brain damage and lung damage, according to the DEA. Meth debuts in the Midwest Yet meth is still a fringe phenomenon nationwide when compared with other drugs such as cocaine. According to a National Institute on Drug Abuse survey on drug use and health in 2002, more than 12 million Americans at least 12 years of age, or 5.3 percent of the population, had tried meth at least once. The largest percentage of users rests between the ages of 18 and 25 in Illinois, and the drug is primarily used among whites, according to Illinois State Police. "We've seen it destroy central Illinois, parts of Wisconsin and Indiana, but Chicago, it really hasn't taken hold," said DEA-Chicago special agent Mark Warpness. Illinois State Police and the DEA see a growing amount of activity concentrated on the city's North Side in the gay nightclub scene, but that circle may be widening, Warpness said. An increasing number of arrests, reaching double digits for the first time, were made for possession in 2004 on the North Side's Town Hall police district. Two men and a woman were charged with running a meth lab in a Lake View apartment in March, the Chicago Sun-Times reported. In early November, two Chicago Public School teachers made headlines when they were arrested within one week of each other for trafficking methamphetamine. One, a Lakeview resident and fifth-grade teacher, was found in November with more than $17,000 in meth, according to the Chicago Sun-Times. HIV and meth In an era of new medicine and safe-sex awareness campaigns, meth has another frightening side-effect: skyrocketing HIV rates. Meth puts users at a much greater risk for contracting HIV, according to health officials. McKirnan said meth comes with a direct sexual connection by causing dopamine to be released into the brain, a chemical that enhances mood, self-confidence and sex drive. Many will use it because of the increased sex drive, and often have unprotected sex when high, putting people at an increased risk for disease, McKirnan said. Speaking from recovery, Mike M. said everything he did was for that moment. Anything beyond the next 30 seconds mattered very little to him. Sex had become his highest priority, to the point where he would masturbate for six to 12 hours at a time, often injuring himself. "I had no control though because the effect of the drug on my 'pleasure center' was so incredibly powerful that any negative consequences were worth that feeling," he said. "I felt more powerful and more invincible, so I'm sure I had sex with more people and was less safe than I ever would have been." See next week's issue for part two in the Chronicle's coverage of crystal meth. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek