Pubdate: Sat, 22 Apr 2006 Source: Daily Times, The (MD) Copyright: 2006 The Daily Times Contact: http://www.delmarvanow.com/customerservice/contactus.html Website: http://www.thedailytimesonline.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/116 Author: James Fisher, Staff Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) SIX PEOPLE TREATED FOR POSSIBLE LACED DRUG REACTION SALISBURY -- The Department of Health and Mental Hygiene is conducting tests to see if heroin used by six people who ended up at Peninsula Regional Medical Center on Thursday was laced with a substance even more dangerous than the drug itself. The tests followed an unusual day for Wicomico health officials, who were notified of the rash of hospital cases that afternoon. Dr. Judith Sensenbrenner, director of the county's health department, said six people with similar symptoms arrived at the hospital between 1:30 and 3:30 p.m. Thursday, with difficulty breathing and unconsciousness. Heroin use appeared to link their cases, Sensenbrenner said, and medical workers suspected that a foreign substance in the drugs they used had caused the symptoms. Sensenbrenner said she was advising drug users specifically not to use heroin. "Drug use is bad any time, but it's even more dangerous here because people are not expecting the kinds of reactions they're getting," Sensenbrenner said. She said the DHMH tests had not yet identified if the heroin had been laced with something else. No deaths among the six cases were reported Friday, and the problem appears to be limited to Wicomico County. A spokeswoman for Atlantic General Hospital in Berlin said the health center had not seen any comparable cases in recent days, and the Worcester County health department concurred. Heroin is an illegal substance which is used mostly by men, a National Institute on Drug Abuse report states. It can be injected into users' veins with needles or snorted as a powder. A 1995 federal report on drug trafficking in Maryland said high-grade heroin was about five times more expensive than low-purity heroin. Dr. James Isaacs, who works with people seeking treatment for drug addiction at Salisbury's Hudson Health Services Inc., said some of his patients have reported the heroin they bought on local streets in recent months is stronger and more potent than what they are accustomed to. That could be the result of drug dealers tapping a new source for their product, Isaacs said, and heroin users have no assurances the drugs they buy illegally are not tampered with or altered. "The FDA recalls drugs when they have problems with products, and even if they have quality problems," Isaacs said. "People, they're not asking quality-control questions when they buy it. It's really an honor system with people that I'm not sure are necessarily very honest." He said emergency room doctors often had difficulty diagnosing why opiate users with dangerous reactions to drugs were being affected, and the problems could not always be traced to impurities. "With a bad reaction, it can go the other way -- that someone's got really pure heroin," Isaacs said. Heroin use in Maryland is concentrated in its western region, where about 2.6 percent of the population uses illicit drugs other than marijuana, according to federal studies, compared to 2.3 percent of the population in central and eastern Maryland, an area that includes Baltimore and all of the Eastern Shore. Cocaine use is higher in central and eastern Maryland, however. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman