Pubdate: Tue, 28 Apr 2009
Source: Edmonton Journal (CN AB)
Copyright: 2009 The Edmonton Journal
Contact: http://www2.canada.com/edmontonjournal/letters.html
Website: http://www.edmontonjournal.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/134
Authors: Elise Stolte and Ben Gelinas
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mdma.htm (Ecstasy)

ONE DOSE OF ECSTASY CAN CAUSE BRAIN DAMAGE

Despite three deaths and several close calls this year, deaths 
directly attributed to ecstasy are rare, says an Edmonton 
toxicologist. Some years, the medical examiner's office won't see 
any. But each individual reacts to the drug differently, and a dose 
that would be harmless in one user can kill the next, said Graham 
Jones, chief forensic toxicologist at the medical examiner's office.

"These effects are not very well correlated with dose."

In March, Leah House, 14, and Trinity Bird, 15, died from overdoses 
of ecstasy on the Paul Band reserve.

Cassandra Williams, 14, died Saturday, after taking the drugs at the 
Galaxyland amusement park in West Edmonton Mall. Her best friend took 
the same number of pills, bought from the same dealer. She has 
recovered and been released from hospital.

Young women seem to be the most common victims of ecstasy overdose, 
but the experts don't know why, said Jones. "It really isn't clear."

An overdose of ecstasy can cause death in at least three ways, he said.

Because amphetamine-type drugs stimulate the heart, they can increase 
blood pressure until a blood vessel breaks. This usually occurs in 
the brain, where bleeding can be fatal.

The drug can also cause hyperthermia, or an increase in body 
temperature, to the point of death. And it can cause fluid retention, 
which causes the brain to swell and leads to brain damage, said Jones.

The pills are homemade, and some he has seen were five times stronger 
than others.

Martin Davies, a pharmacologist at the University of Alberta, said 
most beginners might try half a tablet and get a feeling of euphoria. 
That normally won't be life-threatening, although there have been 
cases where people have died from one dose.

"Ecstasy tablets can have all sorts of other drugs in them," he said. 
"That's part of the reason they're so dangerous. Some ecstasy tablets 
can contain no ecstacy whatsoever."

Even with casual use, the drug kills neurons in the brain, Davies said.

"Many drugs don't do that. Even taking it once can cause irreversible 
damage to your brain."

The medical examiner's office is still investigating the March deaths 
on Paul Band, 60 kilometres west of Edmonton, but so far, said Jones, 
there is no evidence the drugs the girls took were laced with 
anything other than ecstasy.
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