home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
-
- [Typist's Note: This is my best shot at an exact transcription of
- the original article. Any spelling errors are probably mine. The
- writing style is NOT mine -- thank goodness! This is easily the
- most balanced and objective article I've seen on the subject
- recently. Kudos to Ms. Pike and the editors of the Boston Phoenix.
- (In spite of the run-on sentences and dangling clauses. :-) )]
-
-
-
- THE BOSTON PHOENIX
-
- May 1, 1992
-
- JUST SAY YES AND NO
-
- HOW PAST DRUG USE MAY (AND MAY NOT)
- HAVE ADDLED YOUR BRAIN.
-
- by Rose Pike
-
-
- Copyright 1992, The Boston Phoenix. Reproduced without permission.
-
- Elaine took her first toke of marijuana as a 15-year-old high-school
- student -- "We got it from older hippies," she says -- and went on
- to use acid, peyote, alcohol, and other substances, natural and
- chemical, from the late 1960s to the early 1970s. "I was going to
- do it forever," she remembers, "I thought my kids would, too. I was
- going to be real mellow. What was the slogan? Turn on, tune in,
- drop out?" She had some bad trips, but continued down the flower-
- child path because "I thought it would make me part of something."
-
- Now a counselor in a drug-abuse program, Elaine says she wonders
- "what I would be like if I hadn't done it." She attributes her
- later drinking problems (she is now a recovering alcoholic) to
- youthful use of illegal substances, and contends that her memory and
- learning ability were adversely affected. "In the real world", she
- believes, "you'll see people who are fried on acid right and left,
- just not all there."
-
- A quarter-century after the Summer of Love, Elaine and some other
- erstwhile flower-children look back on their early chemical
- indiscretions with worry and regret, both for themselves and their
- kids. They didn't pay much attention at the time, but now recall
- the old cautions and link them to present physical and emotional
- problems.
-
- The predictions _were_ scary. GENETICISTS WARN OF LSD PERIL TO
- CHROMOSOMES, blared a typical 1967 headline. The article, a report
- on a March of Dimes conference, went on to say that "a panel of
- experts in human genetics advised that no one in his or her
- reproductive years should take . . . LSD unless there was a very
- good medical reason for doing so." Similarly, a New York physician
- claimed that "chromosome damage has been unequivocally demonstrated
- on those who tried LSD, even in some who have only had one dose."
-
- That same year, an official of the Federal Bureau of Narcotics
- asserted that his agency's files were "punctuated with murders and
- atrocities committed under the influence of marijuana." In
- addition, the bureau maintained that "evidence shows that the drug
- is dangerous, that many heroin addicts began by smoking marijuana."
- According to a Greek researcher, two marijuana joints a day meant
- almost certain "adverse personality changes . . . and damage to the
- brain and other organs."
-
- Some of the scare stories turned out to be all sound and fury,
- laughable in retrospect. Remember the federal investigation into
- "mellow yellow" -- smokable dried banana peels -- following a
- _Berkeley_Barb_ story touting the fruit's euphoric potential?
- Bananas turned out to be neither a natural hallucinogenic panacea
- nor a menace to the national morality.
-
- The threat to human genetics was also much overblown, in part
- because the field of human genetics was in its infancy and
- scientists did not clearly understand some of the microscopic
- abnormalities they were seeing. "To this day," says March of Dimes
- national spokesman David Leavitt, "we get questions from women about
- whether their own or their husband's past LSD and marijuana use
- carries any risk for their present pregnancy." That idea may
- persist in popular lore, but the specter of LSD-linked chromosomal
- damage was long ago laid to rest by science. Leavitt now tells
- callers with confidence, "There is no known risk." And although
- it's true that chronic pot-smoking can dampen male fertility, for
- those who stop smoking, sperm counts usually return to normal.
- Several studies in the past decade seem to show a link between birth
- defects and marijuana smoking during pregnancy -- a fetal drug
- syndrome similar to fetal alcohol syndrome -- but even that
- connection remains tenuous and controversial, says Leavitt.
-
- According to University of Washington pharmacologist Lawrence
- Halpern, who frequently testifies in trials in which crimes are held
- to be drug-related, "In terms of clinical syndromes, we haven't seen
- anything like longtime adverse effects from LSD. The drug police
- were out [in the 1960s] and you couldn't believe a word they said."
-
- Similarly, drug-enforcement professionals still frequently cite the
- so-called "gateway" or "steppingstone" effect -- that experiment-
- ation with MJ will inexorably lead to harder stuff and addiction --
- even though research has shown that not to be the case for the
- majority of users. But in a study presented at a 1983 meeting of
- the American Psychiatric Association, researchers from the
- University of Kansas reported that approximately one in nine
- marijuana users develops a dependency on the drug -- about the same
- rate as for alcohol.
-
- Indeed, negative medical and psychological repercussions of that era
- have turned out to be subtle and difficult to attribute with
- certainty to any particular factor. There's a tendency among baby-
- boom patients, say some who specialize in the treatment of chemical
- dependency, to attribute a variety of present emotional problems to
- past use of illicit pharmaceuticals. "I encounter people who feel
- that the somehow broke their brains in the '60s," says University of
- Washington professor and psychiatrist Albert Carlin, but he's
- skeptical of the connection. "The notion of the person who fried
- his brain tends not to be borne out clinically," he says, though he
- hastens to add that "of course, anyone who was reduced to a raving
- maniac as a result of drug use is not around to study."
-
- In the '70s, Carlin worked on a project that sought to determine if
- certain illegal drugs caused brain damage. "The ultimate answer,"
- he recalls, "was yes and no. In a group of multiple-, heavy-drug
- users, a significant portion were impaired, but we couldn't pin down
- drugs as the specific cause. When we began to look at childhood and
- other social factors, it wasn't so clear." He also cites the
- "cracked vase" phenomenon, meaning that there were "people who were
- vulnerable already and whose vulnerability was highlighted by
- drugs." Paradoxically, Carlin points out, some studies of marijuana
- use have shown a higher level of overall functioning in those who
- smoked than in those who didn't.
-
- BEYOND THE SUMMER OF LOVE
-
- Much of the movement away from the drug culture came as the result
- of uncommon, though sometimes severe and tragic, drug reactions,
- rather than from any fear instilled by the drug nay-sayers. Before
- those losses of health and life occurred, the nation -- at least
- that part of it that was the baby-boom bulge -- had fallen under the
- spell of Haight Ashbury's mellow hippies. Every city had a drug-
- laced rock-and-roll scene.
-
- Grass was smoked and acid savored in an atmosphere etched with
- adolescent rebellion and fearlessness and with an intensely naive
- spiritual and intellectual curiosity. For a while, it seemed that
- chemical euphoria might provide an answer to the dilemmas of our
- post-assassination, Vietnam War-era lives.
-
- As the scene degenerated, a flurry of perilous chemicals hit the
- streets and sent casualties to emergency rooms: PCP (phencyclidine,
- an animal tranquilizer also called "angel dust", "crystal", and
- "peace pill"); the amphetamine DOM, known on the streets as STP
- (Serenity, Tranquility, Peace), guaranteed to produce a three-day
- high; and DMT, the so-called "half-hour" hallucinogen. The Summer
- of Love segued into a season of bad trips and came to an abrupt and
- sobering end with the tag line "Speed kills."
-
- LSD also killed, by triggering suicides in a small number of people
- (the well-publicized delusional leaps from windows or high places).
- Also for a few, acid was the spark that ignited full-blown schizo-
- phrenia, though the consensus among psychiatrists is that some other
- substance or event would have done the trick sooner or later in
- susceptible individuals.
-
- Even in the highest of high times it was clear that those who
- strayed from dope-smoking or an occasional, sacramental hit of acid
- to shooting up were at much greater risk. "The vector for getting
- into trouble," recalls a participant in the '60s scene who also ran
- a drug-crisis clinic, "was speed rather than marijuana or acid. It
- was the speed freaks who got into difficulty, especially the ones
- who crossed the line of putting needles into their veins."
-
- In fact, the connection between past use and present impairment is
- clearer for street-manufactured amphetamines than for any other
- illegal drug. Speed was perilous -- still is -- and it left some
- victims permanently panicked and paranoid. "Certainly," says Dr.
- Peter Roy-Byrne, of the University of Washington's Anxiety Disorders
- Program, "long-term amphetamine use had been reliably associated
- with paranoia. The same is true for cocaine." Both types of drugs
- produce "a 'kindling' phenomenon in the brain. The brain becomes
- more sensitive over time to smaller doses." Dr. Roy Clark, a
- clinician who specializes in the treatment of chemically dependent
- patients who've failed in other programs, reports another ampheta-
- mine-related difficulty: "We are beginning to see a number of
- individuals who were involved with speed on its initial run and are
- now seeking treatment for chronic depression."
-
- CHRONIC POT USE
-
- Marijuana, of course, was the most widely used and at the time the
- mildest of the illegal substances; to date, 68 million Americans are
- said to have tried marijuana, as compared with 10 million who've
- tried LSD. Like those who stopped smoking cigarettes years ago,
- people who gave up pot or became moderate, occasional tokers are
- probably off the hook in terms of health effects.
-
- The biggest single problem associated with past pot use, however, is
- that some people never stopped, and at some juncture realized they
- couldn't. According to Roger Roffman, a University of Washington
- psychologist who is well known for his studies of chronic marijuana
- users, "Many people come into our program saying, 'If only I could
- take it or leave it the way I used to.' They find that if they have
- access to it, they smoke grass compulsively and get very anxious if
- there's none around."
-
- Some chronic dopers have been smoking every day for 20 or 30 years
- and have difficulties much like those of the problem drinker. The
- average person in Roffman's program is male (three-quarters of those
- enrolled), middle-class, employed, and in their 30s or 40s. Many of
- those who applied to be part of the latest round of studies were
- dependent on more than one drug concurrently -- alcohol and pot, for
- example.
-
- Marijuana (and hashish, another derivative of the _Cannabis_sativa_
- plant) has been used recreationally in various cultures for
- centuries. But it was not until the mid '60s that scientists in
- Israel were able to isolate Delta-9 THC, the ingredient that
- produces a high. Just three years ago, National Institutes of
- Mental Health scientists described the was in which cannabis
- receptors work in the brain (though the treatment or policy
- implications of that finding aren't clear at this point).
-
- Unlike LSD, marijuana has grown more potent over the years; street
- pot not contains about five percent THC (although this figure can go
- as high as 20 percent), compared with the one percent average of 25
- years ago. As a result, some chronic dope-smokers are finding it
- more difficult than ever to moderate their intake, and it's
- possible, say some experts, that the new breed of dope may rope in a
- higher percentage of chronic users.
-
- Back in the '60s, even before the discovery of THC, scientists
- observed that heavy hashish users sometimes experienced an
- amotivational syndrome, becoming the classic picture of the
- stuporous, slow-moving hash head. A version of that syndrome is not
- commonly seen in low-dose, chronic marijuana users; Roffman
- describes people in his program who worry about "procrastination,
- feeling out of control, wishing they had better thinking and memory
- capacity."
-
- While some chemical-dependence professionals tend to write off
- complaints of memory loss due to drug abuse in the distant past as
- "aging hippie syndrome" (we all have a tendency toward forgetfulness
- as middle age creeps up), a report in the British medical journal
- the _Lancet_ in 1989 outlined evidence that chronic cannabis use
- seems to cause short-term memory deficits.
-
- Another hazard for chronic, heavy dopers is lung damage. "The net
- respiratory burden of particulates was approximately four times
- greater during marijuana smoking than during pot smoking," wrote a
- UCLA research team in the _New_England_Journal_of_Medicine a couple
- of years ago. Though a person would have to smoke an unlikely four
- joints a day to equal the harm caused by one pack of cigarettes, the
- finding nonetheless is significant for those who indulge in both
- tobacco and pot or those with a predisposition to chronic lung
- diseases such as asthma and bronchitis.
-
- Perhaps more troubling is a recent finding that the world's finest
- cannabis may contain significant amounts of mercury. "The best-
- quality marijuana," according to a study done at the University of
- Hawaii and reported in the journal _Bioscience_, "appears to come
- from areas known to have rich mercuriferous soils, such as Hawaii,
- California, and parts of Mexico." Mercury inhaled through the lungs
- in pot smoke is absorbed at a rate 10 times higher than mercury
- traveling through the digestive tract in food. Bio-accumulated
- mercury, moreover, is known to precipitate many of the same
- neurological symptoms associated with chronic marijuana or hashish
- use: forgetfulness, irritability, tremors, and paranoia.
-
- LSD AND LONG-TERM RISKS
-
- Compared with the brain damage that some scientists now believe a
- small minority of LSD users may have incurred, the signs and
- symptoms associated with chronic cannabis use are relatively easy to
- discern. Impairment related to pas LSD use may be so subtle -- on
- the level of biochemical "scarring" -- that we don't yet have tools
- sophisticated enough to measure it. Recent research using
- electronic devices such as the BEAM system (the Brain Electrical
- Activity map, which creates colored "virtual" maps of brain
- centers), seems to be breaking through the mystery of lysergic acid
- diethylamide, a substance that has been the subject of fascination
- since its debut, in the 1940s.
-
- Originally manufactured by Sandoz, the Swiss pharmaceutical company,
- LSD (the initials come from the German chemical name) first captured
- the attention of the medical community as the world's most powerful
- hallucination-inducing compound. A byproduct of ergot, a fungus
- that grows on rye, LSD was thought to have potential as a treatment
- for mental disorders, but that promise was never realized.
- According to UCLA neuropsychiatrist Lewis West, who has studied the
- drug since the 1950s and once took a hit as part of his training,
- "It was going to be the royal road to the unconscious, like having
- patients dream while they were awake." But despite LSD's auspicious
- pedigree as a legal drug and our considerably greater understanding
- of brain chemistry 50 years after its discovery, "we still don't
- know how LSD works," says West. "There's a change in the brain
- chemistry that's reversable in most people, but not in others."
-
- Dr. Henry Abraham, a Harvard research psychiatrist who works out of
- Boston's St. Elizabeth Hospital, investigates LSD's neurological
- sequelae in both past and present users. Acid's complications fit
- into three categories, he explains: bad trips, flashbacks or "free
- trips", and the relatively rare phenomenon of prolonged psychosis.
- The bad trip -- acute panic or temporary psychosis soon after
- ingestion -- usually goes away with time and treatment, though there
- is speculation that some LSD users eventually develop chronic panic
- disorder related to the original bad trip. If so, Abraham and his
- colleagues suspect that the mechanism that triggers panic attacks is
- similar to the kindling effect associated with other stimulants.
-
- So far, brain abnormalities that might cause an LSD kindling effect
- aren't nearly as well documented as those associated with
- flashbacks. A few years ago, Abraham identified a syndrome called
- post-hallucinogen sensory disorder, in which patients see
- "continuous visual disturbances of an abstract nature, such as
- flashes of light, auras, patterns of dots vibrating in the air,
- trailing, after-imagery. These things can go on forever. Post
- hallucinogen syndrome occupies a spectrum -- some people react
- occasionally, some every few seconds."
-
- Imagine viewing the world as a sort of psychedelic Georges Seurat
- painting from which you can't turn away, or seeing a perpetual
- migraine-type aura around everything. One post-hallucinogen
- sufferer endures a light like a flash bulb that goes off in front of
- his eyes every few seconds; another notices auras around objects
- only occasionally, for example, when he's tired at the end of a day.
- The syndrome, which can also involve greater sensitivity to glare,
- is treatable in some (with Valium and related drugs), not in others.
-
- Using the BEAM method, says Abraham, "we've done brain-mapping and
- found that these people have visual-field disturbances in the
- temporal lobes." The maps show abnormalities similar to those found
- in temporal-lobe epilepsy, a malady that also causes visual and
- auditory hallucinations and personality changes (unlike people with
- epilepsy, post-hallucinogen sufferers don't have seizures). The
- temporal lobes are instrumental in the processing of visual, aural,
- and tactile data, and they also play a part in the synthesis of
- emotion and memory. It's possible, then, that some past users of
- LSD might have damaged these segments of the brain in such a way
- that, as one researcher put it, they may be "seeing sound and
- hearing color".
-
- The other long-term acid complication that concerns Abraham is the
- prolonged psychotic reaction that strikes about one user in 1000.
- "These people can be very sick, they can be daunting. We're
- reviewing the old data on psychotic breaks. The common story is the
- kid who tripped once and enjoyed it, the second time got into more
- trouble, and by the third time had permanent problems." In addition
- to pursuing the temporal-lobe/LSD connection, Abraham and his
- colleagues are looking at LSD-experiment data (including the
- notorious US government experiments) from the '50s and '60s for
- clues to acid-related syndromes that might have been overlooked by
- past researchers.
-
- As far as currently non-using veterans of '60s drug culture are
- concerned, Abraham says, "I don't think we're looking at a
- generation of brain-damaged individuals". Nonetheless, he frets
- about the current resurgence of interest in acid (which,
- incidentally, is consumed today in much lower doses -- 100
- micrograms as opposed to the 250 micrograms or more in the '60s).
- "There are folks who can eat this stuff like popcorn and stay out of
- trouble," says Abraham. "They should count their lucky stars
- they're not one of the wounded. Then there are people who are
- biochemically vulnerable, and for them it's like having Scud
- missiles in your head."
-
- TODAY'S GENERATION: NEW DANGERS
-
- So it would seem that except for those few who permanently rewired
- or disconnected segments of their brains, the vast majority who
- participated in the drug culture of a quarter of a century ago
- escaped unscathed. In fact, many fortysomethings wax wistful about
- their acid trips or the first time they tried hash in a bar in
- Amsterdam, in much the same tone as an ex-jock might boast about a
- championship season in the distant past.
-
- What's genuinely confusing for many middle-age former drug users,
- who ran the gauntlet and emerged whole, is how they should regard
- illegal-drug use now. As a new generation stumbles upon LSD and
- marijuana, Drug Enforcement Administration officials report that
- acid confiscations in the District of Columbia alone rose from 14
- doses in 1990 to 5600 in 1991 (due in part to a more concerted
- effort by the agency). But there are differences in the current
- drug scene. Acid is weaker now, pot packs a wallop more like
- hashish used to (and costs 10 times what it used to), and the
- average age of first drug use is dropping almost into the single
- digits.
-
- "For someone who's 25, to smoke dope periodically is not all that
- toxic," Ries says, "but you take the same exposure with someone
- who's 12 and it has a very different effect. Your brain is not
- developed and you quickly get in trouble with thinking." Unlike the
- mostly college-age group that experimented with drugs in the Vietnam
- War era, many of the kids trying LSD today are in junior high or
- high school and have not yet reached physical maturity. Crack, too,
- with its terrible legacy of permanently addicted babies born of
- addicted mothers, is often used by very young teenagers.
-
- Indeed, the drug problems that draw our attention in the '90s differ
- dramatically from those of the '60s. What _hasn't_ changed is our
- addiction to scare tactics as a means to abate the "epidemic" of the
- moment. The "reefer madness" of the 1920s and '30s became the
- "genetic peril" of the '60s. For the past decade or so, we've been
- assaulted with the latest version. "This is drugs," begins the
- public-service announcement, showing smoking butter in a hot
- skillet. "This is your brain on drugs," is the famous follow-up
- line as an egg is broken into the pan, where it fries furiously.
-
- But reefer madness never happened, genetic peril remains
- unsubstantiated, and that fried-egg line probably wouldn't deter a
- genuinely troubled teenager from jumping into the frying pan. Scare
- stories about drugs, especially when the old ones are regularly
- debunked, didn't work back then to stop young people from testing
- the limits, and they still don't work today.
-
-
- --
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
- Bad things happen to bad people, too. But we don't care as much.
- Nico of Elbows
-
-
-