Pubdate: Mon, 20 Jun 2005 Source: Muskogee Daily Phoenix (OK) Copyright: 2005 Muskogee Daily Phoenix Contact: http://www.muskogeephoenix.com/customerservice/contactus.html Website: http://www.muskogeephoenix.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3319 Author: Pamela Brogan and Larry Bivins, Gannett News Service Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) METH GETS STRANGLEHOLD WASHINGTON - Whether it's smoked, snorted, swallowed or injected, methamphetamine is more addictive and more damaging to the brain than cocaine, heroin and most other illegal drugs. It's also unusually efficient at ruining lives, ensnaring entire families and turning parents and children into addicts fixated only on their next euphoric high. "If the adults use it, the kids are going to be around it and get roped in," said Dr. William Haning, director of the Addiction Psychiatry Residency Program for the University of Hawaii's medical school. "As crazy as this sounds, the parent won't necessarily see this as a bad thing." Many recovering methamphetamine addicts say they were hooked after using the drug just once. They say meth took over their lives, destroying their ability to work and to function as parents "If you want to lose everything in your life, just try meth," said Paula Cook of Muskogee, whose addiction cost her a job as a police dispatcher and custody of three of her six children. It takes meth addicts between 12 months and 24 months to fight back from their habit, longer than it takes cocaine or heroin addicts to recover. And recent studies show meth does more damage to the brain than other drugs. A 2004 study by UCLA researchers, for example, showed meth causes "severe gray-matter deficits" in the brain - comparable to the damage apparent in the early stages of dementia. "It erases all your feelings and rational judgments because it is so addictive," said Cook, 41. "It is not a recreational drug but a progressive disease." Meth addiction is facilitated by a misconception - that it's safe to use because amphetamines have legitimate medical uses as weight-loss aids or to treat sleep disorders or attention deficit disorder in children. "People claim that it helps them work better," Haning said. "It's sometimes easier for the family to legitimize usage." But he and other experts warn that there's nothing safe about meth. The drug causes large increases in the brain's production of mood-enhancing dopamine, in some cases permanently damaging dopamine cells. "It is one of the most toxic drugs to the brain, ranking high with gasoline inhalants," said Dr. Nora Volkow, director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse in Washington. "It lasts in your brain much longer than cocaine." Bonnie Roller, 42, of Sparta, Mo., said that when she began using and making meth at home, she was determined to keep her teenage son away from it. But her addiction quickly destroyed any control she had over her own life and his. Her son also ended up hooked. Both were arrested in 2001, Roller said, as they tried to buy ingredients to manufacture more meth. "Meth will eat up your mind," said Roller, now recovering from her addiction. "I wanted to be a good mother. It breaks my heart that I wasn't." Such stories have become increasingly common as the meth epidemic continues to sweep from west to east across the country. "The threat associated with methamphetamine trafficking and abuse has increased sharply since 2002 and now exceeds that of any other drug," according to the National Drug Intelligence Center. Meth's harmful side effects include psychotic and aggressive behavior, hyperactivity, paranoia, disturbed sleep patterns, irritability, shortness of breath, involuntary muscle movements, malnutrition and severe depression with suicidal tendencies. "People hear voices, they become suspicious and can get extremely violent," said Rick Rawson, associate director of the UCLA Integrated Substance Abuse Programs, one of the nation's largest substance abuse research groups. "Domestic abuse and neglect is a big problem." Psychotic symptoms can persist for months or years after a meth addict has stopped using the drug, according to the Office of National Drug Control Policy. Unlike cocaine or heroin, meth can be "cooked" at home using recipes found on the Internet. The ingredients used to make the drug can be purchased cheaply at a local pharmacy, although some states have restricted access to those ingredients in an effort to combat the meth epidemic. Jody Gentry, 36, of Reed Springs, Mo., became so dependant on meth in 2000 that he abandoned his wife and moved into her car. That allowed him to spend all his time looking for remote places in the woods to set up his portable lab, cook meth and get high. "All I cared about was me and my habit," said Gentry, now recovering from his addiction. "Once I tried it, I was hooked and thought about it every day." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth