Pubdate: Thu, 3 Apr 2008 Source: Chattanooga Times Free Press (TN) Copyright: 2008 Chattanooga Publishing Company, Inc. Contact: http://www.timesfreepress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/992 Author: Jacqueline Koch Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?159 (Drug Courts) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) METH ADDICTION HARD TO KICK Betty Bomar began using drugs at age 11, raiding her parents' medicine cabinet to get her fix. "I remember the first time I used, I knew I was in love," she said. Her 32-year affair with drugs and alcohol included a tryst with making and abusing methamphetamine, a highly addictive stimulant that creates an energy surge for the user. When she entered treatment, she was experiencing emotional claustrophobia, she said. "I felt like if I didn't die or didn't get help, my sanity was literally going to snap and I wasn't coming back," she said. After engaging in intensive treatment, Ms. Bomar, 48, has been in recovery for five and a half years. But parting ways with the drug is not easy. More than 90 percent of meth users who kick the habit relapse, according to the Governor's Task Force on Methamphetamine Abuse. Ms. Bomar thinks her treatment at the Council for Alcohol and Drug Abuse Services in Chattanooga, where she now works, was successful because she received a lot of information about addiction as a disease and the relapse process. Treating meth addiction is challenging because users often are as addicted to making meth as they are to taking it, said Judge Seth Norman of the Davidson County Drug Court in Nashville, which has run a long-term rehabilitation program for the last two and a half years. "In the first experience with meth, you hit this terrible rush and great high," he said. "Now they're trying to manufacture something to get them back up to that original feeling." Meth makers also try to one-up each other, hoping to concoct the best meth in their area, he said. The Nashville program, known as the Davidson County Drug Court Developing Character During Confinement, has had zero patients relapse, though Judge Norman said it is too early to determine relapse rates. The program focuses on a 12-step method to help users ignore triggers that may make them think of the drug and to build self-esteem and teamwork. A drug court in Hamilton County, known as the Hamilton County Recovery Court, celebrated its two-year anniversary in October. Meth's addictive nature makes it harder to kick than other drugs, said David Brown, director of transitional housing for CADAS. The euphoria it elicits can last anywhere from eight to 12 hours. "The high lasts so long," Mr. Brown said. "The memory of it is so powerful, it's quite an addiction." Taken in its oral form, meth stimulates brain cells, enhancing a person's mood, wakefulness and physical activity while decreasing appetite, according to the U.S. National Institutes of Health. But meth also causes increased heart rate and blood pressure, which lead to irreversible damage of blood vessels in the brain and can cause strokes, irregular heartbeats, cardiovascular collapse and even death. Brain cells are damaged by the increased release of dopamine, eventually reducing the amounts available to the brain and causing symptoms similar to Parkinson's disease, severe depression or both. Mr. Brown said the longer the treatment period, the greater the success rate. About 55 percent of all clients who enter CADAS for addiction treatment remain sober after six months outside the program, he said. Those who stay active in programs for a year experience an 80 percent success rate. Users in uncontrolled environments can have even more trouble giving up meth. Larry C. Black, commander of the Lookout Mountain Judicial Task Force, said those who are sentenced to prison for meth offenses struggle when they leave the judicial system. "Once they've served their sentences and are released not in a controlled environment, they're back to using it again," he said. [sidebar] SHORT-TERM EFFECTS OF METH USE Increased attention Decreased fatigue Increased wakefulness Decreased appetite Euphoria Increased respiration Rapid, irregular heartbeat Hyperthermia EFFECTS OF LONG-TERM METH USE Anxiety Confusion Changes in brain structure and function Insomnia Mood disturbances Violent behavior Paranoia Visual and auditory hallucinations Severe dental problems Delusions Source: National Institute on Drug Abuse - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake