Pubdate: Tue, 23 May 2000
Source: Sydney Morning Herald (Australia)
Copyright: 2000 The Sydney Morning Herald
Contact:  GPO Box 3771, Sydney NSW 2001
Fax: +61-(0)2-9282 3492
Website: http://www.smh.com.au/
Forum: http://forums.fairfax.com.au/
Author: Wayne Hall, Iain McGregor and Brendon Boot
Note: Professor Wayne Hall is executive director of the National Drug and
Alcohol Research Centre. Dr Iain McGregor is a senior lecturer in psychology
at the University of Sydney. Brendon Boot is a PhD student at the University
of Sydney.

RHAPSODY SO BLUE, THE DOWNSIDE OF ECSTASY

Research Suggests Designer Drug May Cause Brain Damage, Write Wayne
Hall, Iain Mcgregor And Brendon Boot.

THE past week has been an important time for both those who study the
effects of the drug ecstasy and for those who take it.

A British study reported that long-term ecstasy users have poor
memories. A German research group has suggested that even infrequent
use of ecstasy may be enough to decrease your memory and reasoning
ability. On Saturday, the respected medical journal The
Lancetpublished a review of the scientific evidence about this drug.
In it, we - a group of Sydney researchers - argue that ecstasy use is
a much more hazardous activity than many users realise.

The real hazards of ecstasy use have little to do with the rare
fatalities which we read about in newspaper headlines. Ecstasy users
have largely discounted these sensationalist warnings about "death on
the dance floor".

They have good reason: in terms of the risk of death, taking an
ecstasy tablet is safer than riding a horse. Indeed, among users,
ecstasy has a reputation as a safe drug because it does not produce
the craving caused by heroin and cocaine.

The real hazard of ecstasy use is that it is neurotoxic, which means
it can damage nerve cells in the brain that contain the chemical
serotonin. Evidence that ecstasy can be neurotoxic has emerged over
the past decade. While there are methodological difficulties in such
research, the consistency of findings raises a strong suspicion that
ecstasy is damaging the brains of some users.

It is essential to point out that these results may only apply to
long-term, high-dose users of the drug. Whether occasional use of low
doses of ecstasy causes damage is not yet known.

We are concerned that more and more ecstasy users are using the drug
in a way that increases the risk of these neurotoxic effects. The risk
factors include: using two or more tablets of ecstasy at a time, using
fortnightly or more often, using ecstasy for 24 hours or more at a
time, overheating the body (for example, by dancing for hours at a
time) and snorting or injecting ecstasy.

Almost all respondents to a survey of 329 Australian users identified
one or more of these risk factors in their use, yet 94 per cent
believed that their pattern of use was safe.

If ecstasy does damage serotonin nerve cells in humans, what effects
should we expect? Firstly, it is important to note that neurotoxic
damage can occur in the absence of symptoms: ecstasy users may damage
their nerve cells without realising it. Nevertheless, symptoms are
evident in some users. Research shows that a poorly functioning
serotonin system is most often linked to depression and memory
problems. So it is not surprising that some ecstasy users report
irritability and depression that are related to how often and how much
ecstasy they use. Nor is it surprising that there are now seven
studies reporting memory problems in users.

Ethical reasons prevent researchers from doing definitive studies to
test the effects of ecstasy on human brain function. But we should not
let this blind us to the wide array of evidence which raises a strong
suspicion that ecstasy can produce neurotoxic effects in some
recreational users.

If we had the same type of evidence of harm from a pesticide or a
pharmaceutical drug it would be withdrawn from the market.

Current and potential users of ecstasy need to be informed of these
risks by peers in the dance party milieu and through the media they
use, such as videos and the Internet. Sensationalism and paternalistic
finger-waving by researchers and the media only serve to alienate
those to whom we wish to provide information.

Thus, non-alarmist and accurate information is required that
acknowledges uncertainties about the risks of occasional use of low
doses of ecstasy, while emphasising the clearer risks that heavier and
more frequent ecstasy users probably face. 
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