Source: Daily Record, The (NJ) Contact: http://www.dailyrecord.com/ Copyright: 1998 Gannett Satellite Information Network Inc. Pubdate: 27 Sep 1998 Author: Jennifer F. Steil Daily Record Note: Item number 5 of 26 in the series "Heroin: A Clear and Present Danger" ADDICTS SEE DRUG AS A LOVER, NOT A KILLER Invented in an effort to cure morphine addiction, heroin has proved an even more potent opiate, its promise of immediate ecstasy luring users into a powerful and often deadly habit. "Some people have likened IV heroin to an orgasm. It's an instant feeling of euphoria," said Dr. Neal Schofield, director of the chemical dependency program at St. Clare's Hospital/Boonton Township. Heroin taken intravenously affects the body immediately, and heroin snorted or smoked takes a few seconds longer. It calms the body, relieving pain, soothing the gastrointestinal system and slowing breathing. In an overdose, the body gets so calm that it stops breathing. "You're tranquilized to death," Schofield said. The high lasts only a few hours and the drug leaves the body in about 36 hours. Heroin was invented at the turn of the century by Bayer, the aspirin company, which was trying to find a replacement for the highly addictive painkiller morphine that hooked injured Civil War veterans. The word heroin is derived from a German word meaning "heroic drug." "For a while they thought they had something, but when people got off it, withdrawal set in, much more than with morphine," Schofield said. Heroin is so addictive that users will do anything to get a fix. "You'll steal, you'll watch your buddy choke and instead of calling 911, you'll take his wallet, you'll prostitute yourself," Schofield said. Eventually, heroin replaces all relationships, said Gregg Benson, program administrator of all inpatient chemical dependency services at St. Clare's Hospital/Boonton Township. The high is so satisfying that it overrides even the fears of people normally terrified of needles, he said. Behavior around heroin use is highly ritualized. Some addicts will pump the plunger in and out of a needle in their arm to prolong the onset of the high, Benson said. "It is a very sexualized experience with what in effect becomes their lover," Benson said. Searching for the drug, finding the drug and buying the drug all prepare the brain for use of the drug, causing the addict to start feeling high on the way to a buy. "The actual use of the drug is whipped cream on the sundae," he said. This is one reason drug counselors tell ex-addicts to avoid old acquaintances and hangouts. Even hearing a familiar song or visiting the location of a drug purchase can set off a neurological response that makes the addict hunger for the drug. When heroin enters the body, blood carries it to receptors in the brain. "It's a little bit like a virus. It gets into everything," Schofield said. "That's why going off it is like being pulled apart." Users can start feeling the high just by looking at a needle, said Dr. Lee Suckno, a psychiatrist affiliated with St. Clare's Health Services. "It's association," he explained. Heroin stimulates an increased release of dopamine into the bloodstream, precipitating euphoria. "Opioids start a chain reaction when these nerve cells, which are dopaminergic, release more dopamine. Dopamine makes people feel good," Schofield said. However, if you stimulate those dopamine-releasing cells all the time, they don't have much dopamine left to release. "That's when the pleasure begins to peter out and you get very small response," Schofield said. Eventually, heroin users take it only to maintain a normal state and avoid withdrawal. The euphoria varies. Some people say they were hooked by the euphoria after the first time they took heroin, Schofield said. "Physiologically, if they have been using it a few days to a couple of weeks, they are in very unsafe territory." Even after a short period of use, withdrawal can set in. Symptoms include nausea, vomiting, muscle cramps, insomnia and sweating. With this often comes piloerection, when the body is so wired that its hair follicles stand up and it looks like a plucked chicken. Thus the expression "cold turkey." The body produces its own opiates. When it receives a drug, the brain thinks it no longer needs to produce its own painkillers. This is part of what makes withdrawal so painful. It can take months of abstinence from heroin before the brain restarts its opiate production. While physical recovery can be achieved in a few months, most people need treatment for three years, Schofield said. Withdrawal symptoms are compounded when heroin users are taking other drugs, which is frequently the case, he said. "It's like 100-fold worse if you take two drugs." Many heroin addicts also use cocaine, a stimulant. With heroin slowing the body down and cocaine speeding it up, the heart can simply shut down. Or it can pump blood faster but less effectively. In either case, the result is death. The amount of heroin in a lethal dose varies. Users lose tolerance during a period of abstinence, making it easier to overdose when they go back to the drug, Suckno said. If enough heroin is taken to stop the heart and lungs, death is swift. When the brain has been without oxygen for three minutes, its cells start to die. Death is slower if the heroin merely slows the lungs. The brain does not get sufficient oxygen and suffers damage, which can lead to disability or, finally, death. - --- Checked-by: Mike Gogulski