Pubdate: Wed, 24 Aug 2005
Source: Journal Times, The (Racine, WI)
Copyright: 2005 The Journal Times
Contact:  http://www.journaltimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1659
Author: David Steinkraus
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/women.htm (Women)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/oxycontin.htm (Oxycontin/Oxycodone)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth)

SUBTLE POISON

No One Sees What Happens To Fetus Whose Mother Uses Drugs But The Effects 
Are There

Wisconsin's cocaine mom law was put in place to protect a fetus from the 
illegal drugs taken by its mother. That's why Rachael Lowe, a young 
Waterford woman, was detained in late April when she sought help for an 
OxyContin addiction. Her blood also showed traces of marijuana and the 
sedative benzodiazepene.

While there are certainly effects on the fetus, experts say, they are not 
what we once thought they would be, and in some cases they're just hard to 
prove because of the other factors, such as poverty, that also effect how 
children develop.

First is the danger of changing the fetus' body. That risk is usually 
greatest before the third month of pregnancy, said Dr. David Sheftel, 
director of neonatalogy for All Saints Healthcare System. "That's when the 
organs are developing."

There are other issues related to drug use; "That has to do with effects 
primarily on the brain."

Tangled Lives

Proof of drug effects is difficult to come by, he said, because so many 
drug users use multiple drugs. Nor are the families of these children 
necessarily stable, nor are they necessarily equipped to care for these 
children, he said.

People try to link attention deficit hyperactivity disorder to maternal 
drug use, too, Sheftel said, but ADHD is more likely to be genetically 
based, and people who take drugs are more likely to develop the problem.

"It's very difficult to demonstrate a clearcut effect of cocaine and, in 
her (Lowe's) case, opiates on the fetus," said Dr. Robert Risinger, a 
psychiatrist and researcher at the Medical College of Wisconsin.

Some of the initial studies on the effects of drugs have been re-examined, 
and it appears those supposed effects on children were also the result of 
poverty and poor nutrition, "probably even more to do with those than 
exposure to drugs," he said.

Some changes have shown up in children exposed to marijuana while in the 
womb, said Cecilla Hillard, who holds a Ph.D. in pharmacology and is a 
professor at the medical college. For many years a Canadian researcher 
followed the children of several women who followed a healthy lifestyle 
with plenty of natural foods, but who also used marijuana. "And the first 
few years there were no differences."

When children reach the age of 6 or 7, a part of the brain called the 
prefrontal cortex begins to operate, and children gain more self-awareness 
and control over their impulses. (This region doesn't finish developing 
until the early 20s.) The children of the marijuana users had trouble 
controlling their anger.

"It fits a bunch of things that we probably already knew, which is the 
effects of marijuana are probably very subtle," Hillard said.

Light One Up

The cocaine mom law is directed at the use of illegal drugs or the abuse of 
controlled drugs, but legal drugs are dangerous, too.

"Tobacco is about as bad as you can get," Sheftel said. "Tobacco is 
associated with a whole host of problems in the newborn, period."

Mothers who smoke experience a greater incidence of miscarriage, he said. 
Their babies tend to be smaller.

"They tend not to grow very well, and that probably has to due with a lack 
of oxygen and nutrients that get through the placenta to the baby."

These children have decreased brain growth and a greater risk for having 
low blood sugar; and a lack of oxygen in the womb may cause their bodies to 
compensate by overproducing red blood cells, which can damage the brain. 
Plus, Sheftel said, tobacco is a suspected teratogen, which is a chemical 
that can interfere with the operation of genes and cause malformation of 
the fetus.

There is evidence that adolescence is a key time in determining a person's 
propensity for later addiction, Risinger said. If a person has 10 
cigarettes before the age of 16, there's a very high likelihood that person 
will become addicted to smoking, Risinger said. "So that's what - half a 
pack. And that's scary. As a father, that is scary."

Deep In The Brain

In the medical college's new imaging center, scientists have a pair of MRI 
scanners several times more powerful than the typical medical diagnostic 
instruments. With these - paid for in part by a grant from the Office of 
National Drug Control Policy - researchers can get detailed images of what 
happens when drugs invade a body.

"Clearly they hijack the natural rewards system," Risinger said.

Cocaine, for example, affects the movement of dopamine, one of the 
chemicals that carry signals among the nerve cells in the brain. His lab 
has looked at the effects of nicotine, cocaine and marijuana, Risinger 
said, and all three activate the same parts of the brain.

One is an area called the nucleus accumbens, which is intimately involved 
in both emotion and motivation. "People have demonstrated this part of the 
brain is active when you gamble."

Also involved is the ventral tegument in the middle of the brain. It's part 
of the reward circuit.

Another area affected is the hippocampus, which processes memories. For 
addicts, the ring of a cell phone may trigger a craving because of strong 
memories of drug use, Risinger said. One of the treatments used for 
addicts, he added, is to try to replace memories of drug use with memories 
of the unpleasant consequences - jail, job loss, and divorce, for example.

This is how powerful the hijacked reward system can be. Volunteer addicts 
in the MRI scanner at the college were given low doses of narcotics and 
then shown two videos. One showed drug use; the other was an erotic film. 
People who weren't drug users were aroused by the erotic video. Addicts 
were excited much more by the drug video.

"They'd rather have cocaine than sex," Risinger said.

High doses of the drugs they've studied turn off the nucleus accumbens, he 
said, and one interpretation of this is that the normal reward system is 
being shut down. People who are very addicted to cocaine show such 
behavior, he said; they lose interest in eating, sleeping, and other normal 
behaviors.

So cocaine inhibits people's ability to control impulses and make 
decisions, Risinger said. Research subjects asked to stop themselves from 
pressing a button while in the MRI scanner have to activate parts of the 
brain affected by cocaine, and they can't stop.

"What's wrong with, 'Just say no'? They can't," Risinger said.

Deeper Still

Researchers in Texas have tied some addictive behavior to a gene called 
Clock which is part of the system that controls animals' wake-sleep cycle 
and also affects the ventral tegument reward circuit.

Hillard, the pharmacologist, has her sights set on another bit of cell anatomy.

Individual nerve cells in the brain don't touch each other directly. 
They're separated by a tiny gap, called a synapse, and one cell releases 
messenger chemicals which cross the gap and affect the next cell. These 
messengers bind to special receptors that fit only molecules of a 
particular shape.

Scientists have found that nerve cells make their own cannabinoids, 
molecules like the active ingredient in marijuana (tetrahydrocannabinol, or 
THC for short), and so cells have receptors for these.

If you remove this cannaboid receptor in animals, you eliminate cocaine and 
heroin self-administration, she said, even though these drugs work by 
different mechanisms.

"Cannabinoids increase the motivation for animals to do rewarding things," 
Hillard said. Turn on that cannabinoid receptor, and an animal will work 
harder for any reward.

"The marijuana-induced munchies are not just a myth."

"And from what I just said, a really logical therapeutic agent to help 
craving is an antagonist, or a blocker, for that cannabinoid receptor."

A French company already has such a drug that it intends to market as a way 
to lower lipids in the blood, she said. Certainly in five to 10 years there 
should be drugs available to intervene in the addiction process, Risinger said.

Hillard has other thoughts. She used to think the idea of marijuana as a 
gateway drug - a drug that leads people to harder drugs such as cocaine - 
was wrong, that social factors explained the link. "I think our animal data 
suggests there is really a biological mechanism by which THC makes other 
drugs more rewarding." Mostly that means stimulants such as cocaine and 
marijuana, she said.

Cannabinoid receptors may also be present in the early stage of life, in 
the fetus, she said, certainly there's evidence for this in animals. And 
the receptors are for local signaling among cells. "Now you take a fetus 
and you flood the brain, activating this receptor all at the same time in 
these different brain regions.... Do you set into motion some genetic 
program not meant to happen, or not meant to happen at that stage?"

Out In The World

When a child is born with an addiction, the process of helping that child, 
or waiting for its liver to break down drugs, may take only a few days, 
Sheftel said.

What takes more time, he said, is providing the social network and support 
services that a family will need to properly care for that child.

"I see a lot of parents worry about medications or drugs they've taken 
during the pregnancy," he said. Most medicines won't harm a fetus, but it's 
important to speak with your doctor before taking anything, even an 
over-the-counter drug.

You know now about the illegal drugs.

"The bottom line is using anything like that when you're pregnant is pretty 
stupid," Hillard said. "But ... oftentimes people don't have the 
self-control. The drugs themselves are addictive. That's the end of the story."

[Sidebar]

By The Numbers

4.3 - Percent of pregnant women ages 15 to 44 who had used illegal drugs in 
the previous month, according to national surveys on drug use and health in 
2002 and 2003.

4.1 - Percent of pregnant women who reported binge drinking.

8 - Percent of pregnant women ages 15 to 25 who used illegal drugs.

1.6 - Percent of pregnant women ages 26 to 44 who used illegal drugs.

18 - Percent of pregnant women who smoked.

Source: Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration
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MAP posted-by: Elizabeth Wehrman