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- To: socal-raves
- Subject: Ecstasy and Death
- Date: Monday, September 25, 1995 11:20AM
-
- My son, Morgan Jones, then a sophomore at UC Santa Cruz, died
- from the effects of Ecstasy (MDMA, MethyleneDioxyMethAmphethamine)
- on April 1, 1995. He had gone to a rave in San Francisco at which
- he bought and ingested two Ecstasy tables (about half an hour apart),
- at about 4:30 a.m. He began to feel sick at the rave, and then
- returned to the house of a friend in Marin County. He lost
- consciousness about 9:00 a.m. and was pronounced dead at Marin
- General Hospital at about 11:00 a.m.
-
- There are lessons to be learned from his death.
-
- You can die from a relatively low dose of Ecstasy. There were
- two autopsies performed on Morgan, one by the Marin County Coroner,
- and one by a private pathologist. The Marin County Coroner attributed
- Morgan's death to "cardiac dysrhythmia due to idiosyncratic drug
- reaction." The blood test commissioned by the Coroner found that
- there were 0.56 milligrams per liter of amphetamines in Morgan's blood,
- of which almost all (0.54 MG/L) was MDA and a very small amount
- (0.02 MG/L) was MDMA. The private pathologist attributed Morgan's
- death to "acute MDMA and alcohol intoxication." The blood test he
- commissioned found .58 MG/L of amphetamines, all judged to be MDMA,
- and .05 (units not given) of alcohol. The blood test commissioned
- by the Coroner found no alcohol.
-
- There is a great deal of variation among individuals in the
- level at which MDMA becomes toxic. Steven B. Karch, in "The
- Pathology of Drug Abuse," (CRC Press, 1993, p. 211) reports that
- "There appears to be tremendous overlap between recreational and
- toxic levels. In seven patients who died of MDMA toxicity, blood
- levels ranged from from 110 ng/mL (.110 mg/L) to 1260 ng/mL (1.26 mg/L).
- Levels in five patients who survived serious bouts of toxicity were
- from 200 to 970 ng (from .200 to .970 mg/L), while levels in five
- car-accident victims were from 50 to 340 ng/mL (.05 to .34 mg/L)."
- So one person's recreational dose can another's fatal dose. There
- is no way to find your own limit except to die.
-
- MDMA has adverse side effects short of death. The full extent
- of these is not yet known. The San Jose Mercury News reported on
- Sept. 5 that "U.S. researchers have found new evidence that the
- rave-scene drug 'Ecstasy' could cause permanent brain damage
- leading to mood disturbances, a report in the New Scientist
- magazine said Thursday. A team of scientists at Johns Hopkins
- University in Baltimore, led by George Ricaurte, found that monkey
- and rat cells damaged by Ecstasy regrow abnormally."
-
- You cannot and must not depend on biased information sites,
- such as the Web site at hyperreal.com (http://hyperreal.com/
- drugs/mdma/) for information about the risks of MDMA or of
- other drugs. The hyperreal.com site carries an incomplete
- and unrepresentative set of scholarly (medical and pharmaceutical)
- articles on MDMA and other drugs. It does not carry, for
- example, Steven Karch's book cited above. My son had had a
- prior bad experience with MDMA and was apparently worried
- about it. He sought information which from which he could
- decide whether to continue to take MDMA. He read the articles
- at hyperreal.com and other Web sites (I have a record of the Web
- sites he logged in to) and from them got a false sense of security
- about his continued use of MDMA.
-
- You should beware of immoderate or overly enthusiastic
- claims for the benefits of drugs, and you should be particularly
- skeptical of the claims of the MDMA promoters. The most venal
- of the latter, such as Fraser Clark, Bruce Eisner and Nicholas
- Saunders seem to be keeping a low profile recently, but they or
- their ilk will return. Ask what any proponent of MDMA stands
- to gain from his or her advocacy.
-
- You should try to be sophisticated and mature in looking
- for the signs of addiction or dependence in yourselves and in
- your friends. One such sign, which I have seen far too much
- of in the sfraves group, is an unwillingness to accept evidence
- about the risks of drugs. Morgan subscribed to sfraves,
- and when his mother and I went down to Santa Cruz to pick
- up his effects we found that there was waiting on his e-mail
- account a truly nauseating collection of e-mails about his own
- death. Their gist was either that the news was false, or that
- his death must have been an aberration due to some carelessness
- on his part. It was neither. He did die. He was no more care-
- less than tens of thousands of other young people who take MDMA
- regularly. He just died. The drug killed him.
-
- Interest groups such as the rave group can become clannish
- and self-congratulatory. When that happens misinformation
- is amplified and perpetuated. Seek advice and guidance from
- people outside of your own group. Get some feedback about what
- you are up to. There are lots of old hippies around, many with
- their own interesting drug experiences from the 60s, who could tell
- you a thing or two. Speak to your professor, physician or minister.
- Reach out and check things out.
-
- I am 51 years old. I think that my generation has not done
- well in teaching the next generation about drugs. I think the
- problem is that we are so worried about the dangers of drugs
- that we speak untruthfully about the attractions of drugs.
- We talk about drugs as if they were sinister, and as if whatever
- attraction they had was inconsequential or flawed or unreal
- or unimportant. From my own personal experience with drugs
- (alcohol, marijuana, nicotine, caffeine) it seems to me that the
- truth is very different. The appeal of drugs is not trivial,
- sinister or insubstantial. It is the exact opposite. The
- nicotine addict, for example, feels more centered, more true
- to himself or herself, more like the real person, when smoking than
- when not. I am sure that this sort of feeling is true of many
- other drugs: you feel more spiritual with the drug than without;
- you feel that you have found something about your deep inner
- self that you previously did not know.
-
- The main message at the hyperreal MDMA site
- (http://hyperreal.com/drugs/mdma/), attributed to Brett
- (phase@grove.ufl.edu) describes this kind of attraction very well:
-
- "Ecstasy is not a 'happy drug'. It by itself does not do anything.
- That 00 gelatin capsule you bought from this guy your good friend
- knows... with bitter crystalline power in the bottom of it... does
- not contain any warmth, joy, wisdom, or experience. It contains
- a salt of millions of rather simple organic molecules. All
- identical. The ecstasy and joy come from within YOU. That is
- your natural, instinctive consciousness when you aren't
- poisoning yourself with fears, hangups, and stress. It is a
- glimpse of the true empathy, calm wisdom and energy you possess
- when you are living HERE, and NOW... not based on the past,
- future and fear. MDMA is a chemical key to the paradise within
- each of us."
-
- I have not taken Ecstasy but from what I have read, including
- a short story by Morgan, I don't doubt for a minute that Brett's
- statement is accurate.
-
- When young people discover for the first time this sort of
- appeal in a recreational drug they feel that they have been tricked
- by their elders: the drug seems to have opened a door into a spiritual
- world, and no one told them this could be true! Their elders are
- hypocritical to have hidden this.
-
- What I wish is that my generation could teach not how bad
- drugs are but how GOOD they are; i.e., how deeply appealing they
- are. So that no young person would be surprised to find this out
- for himself or herself from personal experience. The truth will set
- you free. And the truth about drugs is that they are to be avoided
- not because they are sinister, but because their attractions come
- with truly awful risks of death, injury, disability or other
- permanent suffering.
-
- I wish for each of you what is within your grasp: the chance
- for a long and productive and spiritually fulfilling life. I hope
- that you will take some extra effort to be sure that you come to a
- well-informed, considerate and personal evaluation of just how (or
- whether) recreational drugs should fit into this life.
-
- Peter R. Jones
- peter@island.com
-
- Sept. 25, 1995
-
- =============================================================================
-
- From: bt22@cityscape.co.uk
- Date: Wed, 27 Sep 1995 11:09:44 +0000
-
- Thanks, I did get a copy and the full medical report, and this was my reply:
-
- Thanks for forwarding the report on the tragic death of Morgan Jones due to
- MDMA. My immediate reaction is to feel for his father Peter and awful that,
- as he says, I may have contributed to the death of his son by providing
- false security when he visited my site.
-
- However, I do stand by my conclusion about the relative safety of MDMA, and
- in researching my new book I have again looked at the the risks using wider
- data but reached similar conclusions: that everything you do is risky, but
- that taken sensibly and in moderation by healthy people, the risks of
- taking MDMA are no more than many other accepted forms of recreation, and
- are probably less than alcohol use.
-
- The point is that if MDMA were eliminated, potential users would not stay
- at home safely watching TV: they would be doing something else and that may
- well carry a similar risk. This may not apply to Morgan, so that his life
- may have been saved, and will be no consolation to Peter, his mother
- Katherine or anyone else connected with this or any other personal tragedy
- of those who have died through taking MDMA. It may be cold hearted, but
- statistical risk is more relevant to sensible decision making than
- closeness to a personal tragedy.
-
- In fact Morgan's death was one of the extremely rare cases of death due to
- MDMA which appaently did not involve overheating. The great majority of
- Ecstasy deaths here in Britain could have been avoided by drinking enough
- water and 'chilling out'. Some authorities such as Manchester accept that
- they have failed to prevent illicit drug use through education and police
- efforts, so they have diverted 50% of their resources towards preventing
- damage to those who use drugs in venues. To obtain licenses, venues must
- provide free drinking water, be adequately ventilated, have quiet cool
- rooms available and have staff trained to recognise symptoms of drug
- related problems who are able to give appropriate treatment.
-
- Nicholas Saunders
-
- ======================================================================
-
- From: Lamont Granquist <lamontg@u.washington.edu>
-
- [ Note added in editing: This was forwarded to one of the *raves mailing
- lists, and not sent directly to Peter Jones. It's a critique of the
- factual data presented, and I didn't pull any punches...]
-
- > There is a great deal of variation among individuals in the
- > level at which MDMA becomes toxic. Steven B. Karch, in "The
- > Pathology of Drug Abuse," (CRC Press, 1993, p. 211) reports that
- > "There appears to be tremendous overlap between recreational and
- > toxic levels. In seven patients who died of MDMA toxicity, blood
- > levels ranged from from 110 ng/mL (.110 mg/L) to 1260 ng/mL (1.26 mg/L).
- > Levels in five patients who survived serious bouts of toxicity were
- > from 200 to 970 ng (from .200 to .970 mg/L), while levels in five
- > car-accident victims were from 50 to 340 ng/mL (.05 to .34 mg/L)."
- > So one person's recreational dose can another's fatal dose. There
- > is no way to find your own limit except to die.
-
- This is no less biased than any of the information on hyperreal.com.
-
- The vast majority of individuals can take 100-200mg of MDMA and not
- have any problems. One admitted problem with MDMA is that individuals
- with pre-existing cardiac disorders can have fatal reactions to
- MDMA. This is expected due to the cardiac load that MDMA places on
- the heart. To minimize risk people should have checkups prior to
- using MDMA. And I'm particularly concerned about (primarily females)
- suffering from past or present anorexia which can cause bradycardia
- which could be exacerbated by MDMA. But there's no way of eliminating
- the risk entirely.
-
- On the other hand, such a problem could occur skydiving or playing
- tennis.
-
- > MDMA has adverse side effects short of death. The full extent
- > of these is not yet known. The San Jose Mercury News reported on
- > Sept. 5 that "U.S. researchers have found new evidence that the
- > rave-scene drug 'Ecstasy' could cause permanent brain damage
- > leading to mood disturbances, a report in the New Scientist
- > magazine said Thursday. A team of scientists at Johns Hopkins
- > University in Baltimore, led by George Ricaurte, found that monkey
- > and rat cells damaged by Ecstasy regrow abnormally."
-
- That was not new evidence. Ricuarte had previously reported that
- monkeys given 5mg/kg x 2/day x 4 days of MDMA had abormal 5-HT and
- 5-HIAA levels long after taking MDMA. This study just provided
- immunohistochemical evidence that corroborated the previous neurochemical
- evidence. The utility of extrapolating these kinds of doses of MDMA
- to human use is far from clear. Based on the human studies, I seriously
- doubt that MDMA is a human neurotoxin (see my article at
- http://www.maps.org/news-letters/v5n3/neurmdma.html). And while George
- doesn't agree with me, at least he respects my opinion on the matter --
- this is far from a settled issue.
-
- > You cannot and must not depend on biased information sites,
- > such as the Web site at hyperreal.com (http://hyperreal.com/
- > drugs/mdma/) for information about the risks of MDMA or of
- > other drugs. The hyperreal.com site carries an incomplete
- > and unrepresentative set of scholarly (medical and pharmaceutical)
- > articles on MDMA and other drugs. It does not carry, for
- > example, Steven Karch's book cited above. My son had had a
- > prior bad experience with MDMA and was apparently worried
- > about it. He sought information which from which he could
- > decide whether to continue to take MDMA. He read the articles
- > at hyperreal.com and other Web sites (I have a record of the Web
- > sites he logged in to) and from them got a false sense of security
- > about his continued use of MDMA.
-
- And you've failed to mention anything about the beneficial
- psychotherapeutic uses of MDMA. You apparently haven't read
- _Through the Gateway of the Heart_, or the reports in the
- literature. While there isn't any controlled clinical studies
- that have been done with MDMA (due to the obvious problem with its
- schedule I status), there is compelling anecdotal evidence that it
- is effictatious. You're at least as biased as we are.
-
- > You should beware of immoderate or overly enthusiastic
- > claims for the benefits of drugs, and you should be particularly
- > skeptical of the claims of the MDMA promoters. The most venal
- > of the latter, such as Fraser Clark, Bruce Eisner and Nicholas
- > Saunders seem to be keeping a low profile recently, but they or
- > their ilk will return. Ask what any proponent of MDMA stands
- > to gain from his or her advocacy.
-
- You shoud also beware of statements by those who have, unfortunately,
- been harmed by drugs. They have a tendency to overgeneralize their
- experience at belideve that everyone suffers the same level of harm.
-
- > You should try to be sophisticated and mature in looking
- > for the signs of addiction or dependence in yourselves and in
- > your friends. One such sign, which I have seen far too much
- > of in the sfraves group, is an unwillingness to accept evidence
- > about the risks of drugs. Morgan subscribed to sfraves,
- > and when his mother and I went down to Santa Cruz to pick
- > up his effects we found that there was waiting on his e-mail
- > account a truly nauseating collection of e-mails about his own
- > death. Their gist was either that the news was false, or that
- > his death must have been an aberration due to some carelessness
- > on his part. It was neither. He did die. He was no more care-
- > less than tens of thousands of other young people who take MDMA
- > regularly. He just died. The drug killed him.
-
- He died of an irregular heartbeat. If he'd been playing tennis at
- the time, would you be so quick to blame tennis for the problem or
- would you accept it?
-
-