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- Message-ID: <052314Z17091993@anon.penet.fi>
- Newsgroups: alt.drugs
- From: an13187@anon.penet.fi (H-Man)
- Date: Fri, 17 Sep 1993 05:16:50 UTC
- Subject: Weil: LSD and Chromosomes
-
- Hey all! I just read THE NATURAL MIND by Andrew Weil. Although it dealt
- with ACID and MARIJUANA too much for my tastes, I typed up some EXCERPTS
- that I thought you'd like.
-
- |--########>-- H-Man --<########--|
-
- pp. 44-46:
-
- Retrospective studies are risky ways of framing hypotheses; they are fraught
- with logical traps known to the ancients, and it is remarkable that men of
- science still fall for them.
-
- The saga of LSD and chromosomes is a case in point, for much of the evidence
- was of this retrospective sort. The initial hypothesis, first reported in
- 1967, was based on the observation that LSD users seemed to have a higher
- frequency of broken chromosomes in certain white blood cells (lymphocytes)
- than "normal" persons (1). The _New England Journal of Medicine_ gave this
- observation great prominence in an editorial titled, "Radiomimetic Effects
- of LSD," suggesting that the drug mimicked radiation in its damaging effects
- on genetic material. Evidence that was more circumstantial then appeared:
- LSD was shown to affect chromosomes of cells growing in test tubes; a few
- mothers who had used LSD gave birth to deformed babies. The scientific and
- lay press gave all these findings front-page attention. The National
- Institute of Mental Health eagerly seized upon and disseminated the new
- information in a propaganda campaign against LSD. And, for a few months,
- use of the drug appeared to decline.
-
- But throughout this campaign, a number of facts were overlooked. First was
- the total absence of any prospective studies supporting the hypothesis. No
- one had tested the hypothesis in a legitimate way -- by looking at
- chromosomes before exposure to the drug, giving the drug in a controlled
- fashion, and then keeping watch on chromosomes. Second was the known fact
- that many things affect chromosomal integrity, among them such common drugs
- as aspirin and chlorpromazine (Thorazine) and recent viral infections. No
- effort was made to control for these other factors in the clinical cases.
- Third was the general problem of tissue-culture studies: cells growing in
- test tubes do not behave the way cells do in the body. In addition, the
- doses of LSD that caused visible changes in chromosomes of tissue-culture
- cells were far higher than the doses living cells get when a person takes
- an acid trip. Fourth, chromosomal breaks are seen in cells of all people;
- the arguments turned on a statistical difference in frequency, not an
- all-or-nothing difference, and the frequency of chromosomal breaks in
- lymphocytes seems to correlate more directly with laboratory technique than
- with other variables. (The technique of preparing lymphocytes to make
- chromosomes visible is complicated and likely to produce factitious
- changes.) Fifth, the lymphocyte is one of the only cells in which human
- chromosomes can ever be seen under the microscope. Even if the changes were
- real, they said nothing about the state of chromosomes in other cells (such
- as reproductive cells). In fact, through the whole controversy no one
- showed _why_ it was bad to have broken chromosomes in your lymphocytes. It
- sounds bad, certainly, but one cannot say that it is bad without making a
- number of shaky assumptions.
-
- All of these logical flaws in the medical arguments against LSD were obvious
- in 1967. They do not mean that the hypothesis should never have been
- published, but surely it should not have been promoted by the medical
- profession, the press, and the National Institute of Mental Health without
- more thought. And it is significant that these logical flaws were first
- pointed out in the _Berkeley Barb_ and other underground newspapers at least
- eight months before the _New England Journal of Medicine_ voiced similar
- doubts. The necessary prospective studies were not published until the end
- of 1969 (2). Not surprisingly, they failed to demonstrate any relationship
- between LSD use and chromosomal changes. They generated very little
- national publicity.
-
- This episode ought to be profoundly embarassing to journal editors and
- government scientists. At one stroke it created an irreparable gap between
- users of drugs and drug experts. Since 1968 I have not met a single user of
- hallucinogens who will believe any reports of medical damage associated with
- drugs, and the use of hallucinogens has never been higher.
-
- (1) M. M. Cohen, K. Hirshhorn, W. A. Frosch, "In Vivo and in Vitro
- Chromosomal Damage Induced by LSD-25," _New England Journal of Medicine_ 227
- (1967), p. 1043.
-
- (2) J. H. Tjio, W. N. Pahnke, A. A. Kurland, "LSD and Chromosomes: A
- Controlled Experiment," _Journal of the American Medical Association_ 210
- (1969), p. 849. For a recent review of the whole field, see N. I.
- Dishotsky, W. D. Loughman, R. E. Mogar, W. R. Lipscomb, "LSD and Genetic
- Damage," _Science_ 172 (30 April 1971), p. 431.
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