Pubdate: Fri, 14 Apr 2006 Source: Onalaska Community Life (WI) Copyright: 2006 Onalaska Community Life Contact: http://www.onalaskalife.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4135 Author: Randy Erickson, Editor Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) AGENT OFFERS GLIMPSE INTO DRUG NIGHTMARE Back when Tim Schultz was in high school, drug abuse education tried to diminish the "high" that drugs offered a user, painting it as an experience that could easily go from lark to a nightmare. That has changed. When Schultz, a state drug agent, told a crowd of at least 60 people at Onalaska High School about methamphetamine, he played it straight. The high a person feels the first time using meth, he said, is unlike any other. A person high on meth feels boundless energy and feels no need to either sleep or eat. "We have a drug that's the American dream," he said. "There's no better weight-loss drug out there than methamphetamine." Meth triggers the release of dopamine, which Schultz called "the molecular happy face." It's the brain chemical that gives a person the sensation of pleasure. Without chemical abuse interfering with the brain chemistry, the dopamine is released in pleasurable situations in amounts that correspond with the situation. When a person uses meth, especially when it's taken by smoking it or injecting it, the meth basically tells the brain to dump all its dopamine at once. "Your brain is dry-heaving dopamine," Schultz said. The dopamine levels at the peak of that first meth high are about 40,000 times higher than the levels experienced in the best natural high. And unlike a high from marijuana that lasts a few hours or one from cocaine that lasts 20 minutes, a meth high lasts 10 to 12 hours at first. "Now do you know why meth is becoming so popular?" Schultz said. "That first time is as high as you'll ever get, and you'll never get there again." That won't stop most people from trying to get there again. Schultz cited an addiction expert who said that of 100 people who try meth twice by smoking or injecting, 90 will become addicts. That compares with eight of 100 who will become alcoholics after three weeks of drinking or 14 of 100 who will become addicted to cocaine after a comparable use period. "Everybody who uses drugs thinks they can become a recreational drug user," Schultz said. "There is no such thing as recreational meth use." The problem is the methamphetamine triggers the massive dopamine release, then doesn't allow the brain to recycle it as it normally does. Before long, the brain can no longer make dopamine, and Schultz said it will only recover about a third of its ability to produce dopamine and that's only after four years of not using meth. "You destroy your brain's ability to create dopamine," Schultz said. "Now the only way you can feel pleasure is to use methamphetamine." Meth users soon begin to hallucinate and experience paranoia. One meth user Schultz talked to said that every night she would look out her window and see police with night-vision goggles on the roof across the street giving her the finger. Another guy thought the squirrels in his back yard were bionic informants, with cameras implanted behind their eyes so police could spy on him. "I talked to a 20-year-old kid who was going to commit suicide because the tree people wouldn't stop laughing at him," Schultz said. Methamphetamine first hit Wisconsin in 1995, Schultz said, and has since exploded - literally in too many cases. The meth labs used by home cookers combine a toxic and volatile stew that includes anhydrous ammonia, acetone and sulfuric and muriatic acid, among other ingredients. Wisconsin should see a large drop in the number of labs - as much as 80 percent, Schultz said - thanks to restrictions on the sale of a key ingredient: pseudoephedrine, a chemical found in common decongestants such as Sudafed. The problem is the home meth labs account for only about 5 percent to 10 percent of the meth consumed in Wisconsin. The rest comes from the Mexican drug cartel. "We are not even going to see a dent in the amount of meth," Schultz said. Part of the attraction of meth, Schultz said, is it's relatively inexpensive. The less potent form, which he called Mexican light, goes for $100 per gram, which is enough for 10 doses for a normal person. A person in the throes of meth addiction could go through as much as 8 grams a day. A more potent form commonly called "glass" or "shards" goes for $200 per gram. In addition to the effects on the brain, meth use also takes its toll on the body. Meth addicts develop rotten teeth in a condition known as "meth mouth" because meth robs the body of calcium, decreases saliva production and changes the pH of the mouth. Users of meth - which also is known as "crank" and a few hundred other nicknames - also develop sores that can become major problems because they tend to pick at them constantly. To meth users afflicted with "crank bugs," it feels as if there are bugs under their skin trying to get out, and they do whatever they can to help them get out. The scalp is one of the most common places to feel the crank bugs, and Schultz said one meth user he knows of peeled back his scalp with a screwdriver and poured kerosene on his head in an attempt to kill the bugs. It didn't work. Coming down off a meth binge can be very dangerous. Sometimes the body just shuts down suddenly and the user is dropped right in his tracks. Schultz said one meth addict he heard about collapsed and slept for several days on the floor, lying on his arm so that the circulation was cut off. He lost the arm. It would be one thing if meth addicts just stayed shuttered in their homes trying to slay their bugs, but they don't. Long-time meth addicts have a very hard time keeping a job and need an awful lot of meth to stay high, so they turn to crime to pay for their habit. Schultz estimated that 90 percent of the crime in some Wisconsin counties can be directly attributed to methamphetamine. There was at least one person in the audience who had experienced meth-related horror: Beth Massman of Holmen, whose son, Tyler Amann, took his own life last August after coming down from a weeklong meth binge. Massman didn't know anything about meth until after her son's death, but Schultz told the crowd at OHS that they would be in a select minority of fully informed citizens by the end of his 90-minute presentation. "I guarantee you you will have more information about methamphetamine than 90 percent of the people in the country," he said. Schultz said he gives his meth presentation about 100 times per year in an attempt to get people - young and old - up to speed on the dangers of meth. He will give two presentations next week to Holmen students, one at at the middle school and one at the high school. Even if a newspaper article could touch on every aspect of Schultz's talk, it still wouldn't have the power of his presentation, thanks to his use of graphic, disturbing images. Schultz shows a series of before and after pictures of meth addicts, and he shows images of people, including children, killed or scarred by meth use. He usually tones it down for younger audiences, but the scary graphic images have a way of getting his message across that can't be done talking about brain chemicals. "Kids don't remember the dopamine, but they remember the graphic stuff," he said. It's important for as many people as possible to be informed about the meth menace, Schultz said, because it's not something the police can handle alone. "This isn't a law enforcement problem," Schultz said. "This is a community problem." - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D