Pubdate: Sat, 28 Apr 2007
Source: New Zealand Herald (New Zealand)
Copyright: 2007 New Zealand Herald
Contact:  http://www.nzherald.co.nz/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/300
Author: Jeremy Laurance

LATEST DRUG CRAZE IN BRITAIN'S CLUBS ALARMS DOCTORS

A teenage clubber who collapsed in Britain after taking a dance drug
marketed as a "safe" alternative to Ecstasy was lucky to survive,
doctors say.

But manufacturers of the drugs claim 20 million pills have been
consumed in New Zealand with no deaths or significant harm.

The 18-year-old girl took benzyl-piperazine, or BZP, at a London
nightclub last May. Shortly after swallowing five tablets, she
collapsed and suffered a seizure lasting 10 minutes.

Hospital doctors said her pupils were dilated, her heart was racing at
156 beats a minute and her body temperature and blood pressure had
plummeted. They gave her a heavy dose of tranquillisers to calm her
pulse. After 12 hours under observation she made a full recovery and
was discharged.

She was one of seven patients admitted to the same emergency
department with similar symptoms that night.

Writing in the Lancet, specialists say the case highlights the dangers
of the drug, which is becoming increasingly common among young
clubbers but which many doctors are unfamiliar with.

Until last month it was legally available over the counter in
Britain.

The active ingredient in BZP is piperazine, which was developed in the
1950s as a worming medicine for veterinary use. It has a similar
chemical structure to amphetamine, a stimulant, and has become an
increasingly popular alternative to Ecstasy and amphetamines, being
sold under names such as Pep Twisted, Legal E, Nemesis and Euphoria.

Last month Britain's medicines regulator, the Medicines and Healthcare
Products Regulatory Agency, made its unlicensed sale illegal.

Dr David Wood and colleagues from the poisons unit at Guy's and St
Thomas' Hospital say manufacturers of the drugs claim 20 million pills
containing piperazine have been consumed in New Zealand with no deaths
or significant harm.

Doctors are sceptical about these claims since a study in New Zealand
found 80 people had been treated in emergency departments for symptoms
similar to those caused by ampheta-mines including nausea, vomiting,
rapid heartbeat anxiety and agitation.

In 15 cases, the drug takers suffered seizures after eight hours and
three patients had repeated seizures which doctors said were life
threatening.

The authors pointed out that urine-testing kits designed to detect
recreational drugs might miss piperazine. Doctors could be lulled into
a false sense of security by the lack of cases in which harm was
attributed to the drug, because it had not been identified or had been
wrongly identified.

"Clinicians should be aware of the potential presenting features of
piperazine toxicity, particularly because commercially available urine
toxicological screening kits for drugs of abuse may not detect
piperazines," they wrote.

In an accompanying commentary, Dr Roland Staack, from Munich in
Germany, said the low number of reported cases of piperazine poisoning
might be due to confusion with amphetamines.

"Piperazines and amphetamines are similarly marketed, consumed by the
same population, and show similar pharmacological symptoms. Therefore
a piperazine poisoning can easily be wrongly diagnosed as an
amphetamine poisoning."
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