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- Newsgroups: alt.drugs
- From: an13187@anon.penet.fi (H-Man)
- Subject: MDMA article
- Message-ID: <1993Jul3.005415.4993@fuug.fi>
- Date: Wed, 30 Jun 1993 02:04:54 GMT
-
- [some bs deleted -cak]
-
- JAMA(R) 1992; 268: 1505-1506
-
- September 23, 1992 / September 30, 1992
-
- SECTION: MEDICAL NEWS & PERSPECTIVES
-
- LENGTH: 1565 words
-
- TITLE: Ecstasy -Fueled 'Rave' Parties Become Dances of Death for English
- Youths
-
- AUTHOR: Teri Randall
-
- TEXT:
- THE ILLEGAL designer drug ecstasy -- promoted by some as a safe, nontoxic
- means to "warm, loving relaxation" -- has killed at least 15 young people in
- England in the last 2 years and caused severe toxicity in numerous patients,
- experts report from that country's National Poisons Unit. In almost every
- case, a recreational dose of the drug had been taken at a dance club or
- party where crowds danced vigorously in popular, all-night dance sessions
- called "raves."
-
- In most of the serious cases reported, the users had collapsed
- unconscious or started to convulse while dancing. By the time they were
- noticed and taken to emergency departments, their body temperatures had
- soared as high as 110 degrees F (43.3 degrees C), their pulses were racing,
- and their blood pressures were plummeting. These patients with severe
- toxicity usually developed disseminated intravascular coagulation,
- rhabdomyolysis, and acute renal failure. Despite treatment, death sometimes
- ensued from 2 to 60 hours after admission, usually due to severe
- hyperthermia accompanied by disseminated intravascular coagulation.
-
- Severe or fatal reactions of this type are virtually undocumented in the US
- drug abuse literature concerning ecstasy (also known as MDMA for its
- chemical name, 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine). But this pattern of illness
- has recently become all too familiar in British medical journals (J R Soc Med.
- 1991; 84:371; J R Soc Med. 1992;85:61; BMJ. 1992;305:5,6,29; BMJ.
- 1992;305:309-310; and Lancet. 1992;339:677-678).
-
- The most recent report, published 6 weeks ago, describes seven fatalities,
- all associated with rave dances (Lancet. 1992;340:384-387). The report also
- describes seven cases of unexplained hepatotoxicity (including one death)
- attributed to a history of ecstasy use.
-
- According to the authors, the pattern of illness and the amounts of MDMA
- ingested rule out the possibility of an overdose. In most cases the user had
- taken only a few tablets or capsules. By comparison, one analytically
- documented MDMA overdose -- allegedly 42 tablets taken at home -- was
- accompanied by no symptoms other than a "hangover" with tachycardia and
- hypertension. The patient's plasma MDMA level was 7.72 mg/L, which is six to
- 70 times greater than the plasma levels measured in the fatal cases.
-
- John Henry, MD, consulting physician for the National Poisons Unit at Guy's
- Hospital, London, England, and lead author of the most recent Lancet report,
- says that prolonged, vigorous dancing (which may itself be an effect of
- MDMA) may compound the pharmacologic effects of the drug. The
- amphetamine-derived MDMA has been shown to increase body temperature in rats,
- presumably by interfering with serotonin metabolism in the brain.
-
- Higher ambient temperatures seem to intensify this effect, and the hot,
- poorly ventilated environments of some nightclubs, together with inadequate
- fluid replacement, may be sufficient to elevate body temperature to lethal
- levels in susceptible individuals, Henry suggests.
-
- The finding has relevance for the international medical community because
- the rave culture is now being exported to the United States and other
- countries (see accompanying article). Henry urges physicians to be aware of
- the drug's pharmacologic effects when it is combined with this type of
- dancing. Cases of severe hyperthermia or unexplained jaundice or
- hepatomegaly should suggest possible MDMA toxicity, he says.
-
- For the patient who is taken acutely ill, medical treatment is urgent and
- includes control of convulsions, measurement of core temperature, rapid
- rehydration, active cooling measures, and possibly use of the antispasmodic
- drug dantrolene (Anaesthesia. 1991; 47:686-687).
-
- A 'Cultural Reformulation'
-
- Of great interest to Henry is how the drug has been adopted by, and has
- perhaps even catalyzed, the new rave culture in England -- similar, he says, to
- the Acid Test parties of the 1960s and the use of LSD (lysergic acid
- diethylamide) and amphetamines. The drug's association with the rave scene has
- led to its enormous popularity in England. An estimated half-million people in
- that country have taken MDMA, he says, most of them young people.
-
- MDMA use had been widespread in both the United States and England
- throughout the 1980s, but in a much different context, and with different
- outcomes. Users usually took it while they were alone or with a small group of
- people. Ninety percent of users in one US study said the drug made them feel
- euphoric, more verbal, and closer to other individuals. Some called it the
- "love drug."
-
- In a study done at Stanford (Calif) University School of Medicine in 1987 --
- at the peak of the drug's popularity in the United States -- 39% of the
- undergraduates reported they had used MDMA at least once (N Engl J Med.
- 1987;317:1542-1543).
-
- In the late 1980s, the drug was "'reformulated,'" Henry says, "not in the
- pharmacologic sense, but in the cultural sense." The rave scene in England
- provided a "new 'formula,' a new package, a new culture." And it is this new
- cultural context that has, unfortunately, provided a real-life showcase for
- ecstasy's previously unknown lethal potential.
-
- Before this "reformulation," the handful of reported fatalities were mostly
- cardiac arrhythmias in individuals with underlying natural disease (JAMA. 1987;
- 257:1615-1617).
-
- Many users did experience adverse effects, however. In a 1986 study, 29
- volunteers were given 75 mg to 150 mg (a "recreational dose") of pure MDMA by
- psychotherapists (J Psychoactive Drugs. 1986;18:319-327). All 29 experienced
- undesirable physical symptoms: 28 lost their appetite, 22 had trismus or
- bruxism, nine had nausea, eight had muscle aches or stiffness, and three had
- ataxia. Sweating was common, and tachycardia and hypertension were recorded.
- Afterward, 23 people noted fatigue for hours or days, and 11 had insomnia.
-
- The mechanism by which MDMA elevates body temperature is still a matter of
- speculation, although experts suspect it involves the drug's interference with
- serotonin metabolism in the brain. In experimental animals, MDMA stimulates
- the release of this neurotransmitter from serotonergic neurons, particularly
- from those in the dorsal raphe. Under normal conditions, released serotonin is
- taken up into the terminal endings of the cells that released it. But in the
- presence of MDMA, this reuptake process is altered, leaving the nerve cells
- depleted of serotonin.
-
- The waters are muddied, however, when one looks at clinical experience.
- Some experts have argued that there is no clinical evidence that people who use
- MDMA develop such typical symptoms of serotonin depletion as disorders of
- sleep, mood, and sexual function (Arch Gen Psychiatry. 1990;47:288-289).
-
- Lewis Seiden, PhD, professor of pharmacology at the University of Chicago,
- Ill, conducted extensive research on the neurotoxicity of MDMA in the
- mid-1980s. When he heard of the recent reports of fatalities associated with
- the use of the drug in English nightclubs, he was reminded, he says, of a
- well-established phenomenon in amphetamine research called "aggregation
- toxicology": One solitary rat or mouse given an injection of amphetamine will
- survive. But several animals, confined in a small cage and given the identical
- dose of amphetamine, will die.
-
- Over the years, one of several proposed explanations for this phenomenon has
- been amphetamine-induced hyperthermia, Seiden says.
-
- On the other hand, one "can't make the assumption the MDMA is just a
- fancy form of amphetamine," points out Steven Karch, MD, research director
- of the Trauma Center at the University Medical Center of Southern Nevada,
- Las Vegas. "The molecules are very close structurally [figure]. But then
- again, all stimulants look roughly the same."
-
- Seiden also speculates that because MDMA is such a potent
- serotonin-releasing agent in the brain, it might also effect
- serotonin-releasing cells elsewhere in the body. Ninety percent of the
- serotonin in the body is located outside the brain, much of it in the gut
- and mast cells, he says.
-
- The Long Road to Rave
-
- MDMA has a long, controversial history that spans nearly a century, says
- Karch, who is also editor of the Forensic Drug Abuse Advisor.
-
- The patent for MDMA was initially granted in 1914 to E. Merck in
- Darmstadt, Germany, as an appetite suppressant. The compound's toxicology
- wasn't systematically studied until the early 1950s, under a US Army
- contract with a group at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. The results
- of these studies were eventually declassified and published in 1973, when it
- was revealed that MDMA is somewhat less toxic than MDA (another amphetamine
- derivative), but more toxic than the hallucinogen mescaline (Toxicol Appl
- Pharmacol. 1973;25:299-309).
-
- No pharmaceutical company has ever made MDMA, nor has the Food and Drug
- Administration approved it. A small number of psychiatrists have advocated its
- use in therapy, based on the belief that it lowers patients' defenses and
- promotes trust and confidence.
-
- In 1985, after several studies showed neurotoxicity in animals, the Drug
- Enforcement Agency classified MDMA as a Schedule I compound. Schedule I
- compounds, such as heroin and LSD, are believed by the agency to have a high
- potential for abuse and no currently accepted medical use.
-
- GRAPHIC: Figure, Structural formulas of amphetamine, methamphetamine, and MDMA
- ("Ecstasy" ).
-
- SECTION: MEDICAL NEWS & PERSPECTIVES
-
- LENGTH: 493 words
-
- TITLE: 'Rave' Scene, Ecstasy Use, Leap Atlantic
-
- AUTHOR: Teri Randall
-
- TEXT:
- THE BRITISH rave counterculture, and its liberal use of ecstasy (MDMA) ,
- has become a hot export to the United States, wrapped in a high-tech music
- and video package and supported by low-tech laboratories that illicitly
- produce the drug stateside.
-
- An August 19, 1992, article by United Press International says that a
- clamp-down on rave parties by British authorities has inspired several English
- rave promoters to move their business to the United States. Staged in empty
- warehouses or open fields outside San Francisco or Los Angeles, their parties
- are drawing thousands of young Californians on designated weekend nights.
-
- Partygoers -- attired in Cat in the Hat-hats and psychedelic jumpsuits --
- pay $ 20 at the door to dance all night to heavily mixed, electronically
- generated sound, surrounded by computer-generated video and laser light
- shows. They pay another $ 3 to $ 5 for "smart drinks" -- amino acid-laced
- beverages that reputedly enhance energy and alertness. And for another $
- 20, those so inclined can purchase an ecstasy tablet (see accompanying
- article).
-
- Many observers can't help but draw comparisons to the LSD-laced "human
- be-ins" of a quarter-century ago. The scene has come full circle, they add,
- noting that several Los Angeles raves have been hosted by Timothy Leary's son.
- The elder Leary, a former Harvard professor who advocated the use of LSD
- (lysergic acid diethylamide) three decades ago, has made several appearances at
- his son's raves, calling them "high-tech Acid Tests."
-
- Large raves also have been staged in New York, NY, and other urban
- centers in the United States. Their popularity is increasing in parts of
- India, Indonesia, Belgium, and New Zealand, and a promoter is working to
- popularize the scene in Sweden, United Press International reports.
-
- So far, there appear to be no published reports of death or severe toxicity
- caused by MDMA use.
-
- Most of the MDMA available in England is supplied by clandestine
- laboratories in the Netherlands. In the United States, the drug is made
- predominantly on the West Coast by small-scale operators, says Joseph Bono,
- supervisory chemist, special testing, Drug Enforcement Agency.
-
- The synthesis of MDMA requires minimal knowledge of chemistry. Illicit
- laboratories are often set up in kitchens, mobile trailers, or garages with
- little concern for cleanliness. Reactions may be set up in cookie jars. Solid
- products may be removed with coffee filters; and the coffee filter may be
- thrown back into the reaction vessel for a second synthesis step (J Forensic
- Sci. 1988;33:576-587). Bono detects a lot of contaminants and by-products
- in the samples that reach his laboratory for analysis.
-
- "We're not dealing with Smith, Kline, and French here. We're dealing with
- people who are just interested in turning out a product," Bono says. "If it
- assays at 50% as opposed to 100% or 95%, they don't really care. And what is
- that other 50%? Who knows?"
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