Pubdate: Sun 29 Aug 1999 Source: Daily Telegraph (UK) Copyright: of Telegraph Group Limited 1999 Contact: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/ Author: Jacqui Thornton, Health Correspondent and Mark Gould TAKING COCAINE LINKED TO HEPATITIS GOVERNMENT scientists fear a sharp increase in hepatitis cases as new research links the virus with snorting cocaine. Researchers have shown that the risk of hepatitis C infection, which can cause fatal liver damage, rises fivefold with cocaine use. Cocaine is being used increasingly by affluent professionals, who consider it a "clean" drug because it is not injected. Now drug agencies are putting specific warnings on their leaflets. The virus can be passed by sharing straws or rolled banknotes which contain infected droplets of blood. Snorting cocaine causes tiny blood vessels in the nose to burst. The research by the National Institute of Health in Maryland, published in the New England Journal of Medicine last week, showed that nearly 20 per cent of people aged 40-59 with hepatitis C had used cocaine. Dr Mary Ramsey, a Government medical adviser who works for Britain's Public Health Laboratory Service, said: "We are really still targeting the sexually active, those who share needles or have had a transfusion or injection. But we would need to keep our eye on the straw or banknote users, because we don't know how 25 to 30 per cent of those reported infected got the infection. "We are very concerned that we do not see another increase of the sort we had in 1984 when around 2,000 people were infected with hepatitis B." A total of 400,000 people in Britain are infected with hepatitis C. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea