Pubdate: Sat, 21 Jan 2012 Source: Alaska Highway News (CN BC) Copyright: 2012 Glacier Interactive Media Contact: http://www.alaskahighwaynews.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/716 Author: Brianne Zwambag Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mdma.htm (Ecstasy) TAINTED BATCH OF ECSTASY LEADS TO DEATHS After a rash of ecstasy-related deaths throughout the province, both Northern Health and the B.C. Coroners Service are warning people to think twice about popping one of the little pills at a party. Over the past six months, six deaths have been linked to ecstasy tainted with paramethoxy-metamphetamine (PMMA) and another thirteen have been linked to ecstasy not containing PMMAs. The danger with ecstasy is the fact that it is a manufactured drug that isn't always made correctly =96 by accident or on purpose. It's a synthetic drug, so it=92s manufactured and it's illicit. So basically, it=92s manufactured in somebody's garage or bathtub and at best someone's home chemistry lab,=94 said Barb McLintock, spokesperson for the B.C. Coroners Service in the North. =93You have no idea what's going in. You may have people illicitly adding [chemicals] to it or you may just have them not being very good chemists who are putting bad stuff in them.=94 Due to the nature of manufacturing the drug, McLintock pointed out that users can never be sure of what they are truly taking. Investigations in to the death are aiming to answer many questions surrounding the contaminants found in the drug, one of which asks whether the PMMAs are being added to make the drug more addictive or if they are showing up by accident. PMMAs could be added to increase strength or it could be that people just aren't making it correctly =96 we don't know,=94 said McLintock. The challenge with ecstasy-related emergencies is that reactions are not necessarily related to dosages and doctors struggle to treat cases in which they don't know exactly what compounds have been taken. They're obviously going to treat for the most basic problems of ecstasy, the most common of which is a hyperthermia where you get a really high fever. But they have to blood tests really fast at the hospital to see what else might have been in this pill,=94 said McLintock. Ecstasy is a drug that is not necessarily a dose-response drug either, according to McLintock, and users may have idiosyncratic reactions that are similar to allergies after only one pill. You can still have bad reactions from one pill if you don't know your own tolerance to it. The Fort St. John RCMP said in a previous interview that ecstasy is prevalent in this region, and ranks in popularity after cocaine and marijuana. The drug is a known party drug that is often not taken out of habit, but rather as a social drug at a rave, house party or nightclub. People see it, because it's not usually used as a drug of addiction, as a recreational drug that you do at a party on a Saturday night. So it's not seen as being as dangerous as some of those other drugs, but it is,=94 said McLintock. =93Don't think of this as a benign, harmless drug. It's too risky for that.=94 McLintock pointed out that the rash of recent deaths proves that, but deaths are happening every year through the region and the province because of this drug. In total, the northeast has seen 10 ecstasy-related deaths since 2006 according to a B.C. Coroners Service report. One of those happened as recently as 2011 in Dawson Creek. The PMMA tainted batch that has been responsible for many of the recent publicized deaths seems to have not made it's way out of the Lower Mainland at this point, but McLintock suspects it will make its way to the Northern region at some point. Ecstasy is always dangerous=85. But it appears to be more dangerous than ever right now. This is not a good recreational drug. =94 - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom