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Student Notes for Drug Abuse Substance (Drug) Abuse PERIOD ONE What is “Substance Abuse”? Substance abuse’ ( 物 質 濫 用 ) is a very general term. It is too broad, particularly in Chinese. People may have difficulties in grasping the meaning and message. In this block, the discussion shall focus on certain drugs/chemicals that affect behavior. These are the chemicals that are most commonly abused in Hong Kong (HK). Drug abuse is not confined to behavior-modifying drugs only. Other drugs can be abused. For example, some people may take an aspirin or Panadol to relief ‘general’ discomfort unrelated to pain and temperature, even though they know very well that they are painkillers and antipyretics (fever-reducing drugs). Besides those mind-altering drugs/chemicals, there are at least two other types of drugs that are often misused – steroids (particularly testosterones) and ‘weight-reducing’ drugs. The former is mainly used by body-builders and weight-lifters to enhance their performance through the increase of muscle mass and strength. Such abuse may lead to unpredictable incidences of uncontrolled aggressive behavior, or even heart attacks. Other alarming and dangerous side effects may include feminization in men (such as atrophy, or decreasing in size, of the testes), masculinization and temporary infertility in women, liver damage and clogged arteries. Common features of the female athlete using steroids are leathery skin, bulging muscles and dense facial hair. Recently, the use of weight-reducing drugs by ‘over-weight’ or ‘obese’ people to lose weight without exercise is a fashion in HK. Some of these drugs achieve weight-reduction by facilitating water-excretion and/or reducing appetite. Some even contain ‘illegal’ and/or harmful substances. [Please note that the more effective ways of losing weight are to eat less ‘high-calorie’ foods and do more exercise, as described in other lectures of this module. Also, these substances are very harmful when misused, and 71 Student Notes for Drug Abuse should be avoided. These two types of drugs/chemicals shall not be discussed in this block because of time limit.] [Also note that drugs prescribed by your doctors are normally used for short-term only and this use does not usually cause abuse/addiction and long-term harmful effects.] Drug/chemical abuse is a worldwide problem. Among the drugs/chemicals being abused, psychotropic substances/drugs are most commonly. The table in the next slide shows the amount confiscated. Psychotropic drug seizure in different region Recently, psychotropic substance abuse has become a pandemic (world-wide) issue. In the past, psychotropic substance abuse was mainly confined to opiates (opium, morphine and heroin). From 1990’s onward, the substances in the list include amphetamines (there are many types of amphetamine), cocaine, marijuana, ketamine, sleeping pills (e.g., Valium [安 定], etc). The upward trend is most striking in Asia. 72 Student Notes for Drug Abuse Some reasons for studying drug abuse Drug abuse is an important social problem:Causes heavy financial loss in society. A large sum of money has to be spent to provide treatments for addicts. Not to mention the loss in work production. 2. Rapid increase in drug abusers recently. Drug abusers usually have poor family and peer relationships. This creates many social problems. 3. Related to organized crime or triad society activities. Some triad societies obtained their money supply by operating illegal drug trades. Scientific issues: 1. How do drugs affect behaviour? Behaviour is controlled by the brain. In this block we shall briefly introduce some parts of the brain that participate more actively in the regulation of behaviour. 2. What are the effects of drug abuse? We have been told that these drugs are harmful, but why? And how do they produce these effects? In this block, we shall introduce the mechanisms involved. 3. Why do some people use drugs? There are many reasons, and some of the more important/common ones shall be discussed in this block. 4. Do abusers display any abnormal signs of habits? The answer is “yes”. Some abusers have the false belief that no one will know they take drugs as they do so in “secret places”. This is wrong. Drug abusers have some easily recognizable signs. [Try to think of other important reasons to supplement this part.] 73 Student Notes for Drug Abuse Number of people arrested for drug offences This table below gives a recent picture of drug-related offences in HK. Major offences: trafficking, possession of large quantity, manufacturing etc. Minor offences: possession of small quantity, taking, etc The point to be stressed is that drug abuse is still a problem in HK despite of much government efforts. The number of psychotropic drug abusers increased rapidly in recent years. Two Major reasons: more young people attend rave parties and these drugs are “readily available” in nightclubs and bars. [Some of these illicit drugs, e.g., ice, ketamine and sleeping pills, are from Mainland China.] 74 Student Notes for Drug Abuse Reasons for Drug use The table below provides some reasons for taking drugs. Reasons for drug use Reason Percentage Peer influence /to identify with peers 45.7 Avoid discomfort of its absence 45.7 Curiosity 27.5 To seek euphoria or sensory satisfaction 23.2 Relief of boredom/depression/anxiety 21.4 For self-medication 4.3 Under influence of the partner 1.4 Other reasons 2.5 (Central Registry of Drug Abuse) [Can you think of some other important reasons?] What is drug? Definition. A drug is a chemical, other than food, used in the diagnosis, prevention or treatment of diseases. This is a comprehensive description of a drug. (For most people, drugs are medicines that can cure or arrest, relieve symptoms, ease pain, and provide other medical benefits. Defined in this way, the term ‘drugs’ include essential vitamins and minerals that may be given to correct deficiency diseases.) The other parts of the definition are to broaden students’ understanding of a drug. [Can you tell the differences between a food and a drug?] Drugs can be very simple and common compounds. For example, glucose and sodium chloride can be used as drugs. 1. Diagnosis (a) Glucose is used to diagnose diabetes. How? Patients are asked to drink a cup of glucose solution then the amount of glucose in the blood or urine will be determined after a certain period of time. If a large amount of glucose is found in the blood or urine, the patient is likely to be suffering from diabetes. (b) Sodium chloride, with or without other salts, the solution is administered to patients who lost a lot Student of water Notes (dehydration) e.g., in for Drug Abuse cases of diarrhea (di-ar-rhea) as a salt replacement. 2. Prevention 75 An example that drugs used in the prevention of diseases is vaccination, (e.g., BCG for tuberculosis). This part shall be discussed in the ”Treatment & Disease” block. 3. Treatment Aspirin and Panadol are common painkillers and antipyretics. Antibiotics are effective drugs used to treat bacterial infections. This part shall be discussed in the ”Treatment & Disease” block. Concept map on types of drugs Drugs Medicinal Abused [Please see “Treatment & Disease” for detail.] Socially accepted e.g. caffeine, alcohol, nicotine (cigarette smoking) Stimulants e.g. cocaine, amphetamines, caffeine, nicotine Opiates e.g. opium, morphine, heroin, methadone Hallucinogens e.g. marijuana, LSD Depressants e.g. alcohol, barbiturates, sleeping pills, ketamine Side effects of drugs In addition to their therapeutic effects, most drugs have one or more undesirable effects, and they are: 1. Adverse effects of drugs They are effects other than the aimed therapeutic effects: Examples: a. Aspirin is acidic and too much may cause stomach discomfort and bleeding (ulcer) b. Too much Panadol (more than 2 g per day) may result liver Abuse Student Notes forinDrug damage. c. Taking antibiotics indiscriminately may cause bacteria to become resistant to antibiotics. (See “Treatment & Diseases for detail.) 76 2. Overdosage toxicity Examples: Taking too much Panadol may cause damages to the liver. Another example is too many sleeping pills may cause death because extremely high doses may suppress brain functions and respiration. 3. Allergic reactions Most drugs are “foreigners” and our body’s immune system may produce antibodies to attack them, and one the most common reactions is the appearance of rash over our body. Examples: Some people are allergic to penicillin. Why do some people develop an allergic reaction after taking a drug while others don’t? It is likely that some people are just more sensitive than others. 4. Tolerance This is a situation developed where patients take a larger dose of a drug in order to achieve the therapeutic effect. Why? It is likely people become adapted to the dosage or effect of the drug. For example, after prolonged (chronic) use of aspirin, some people may have to take a larger dosage in order to have a painkilling (analgesic) effect. 5. Addiction It is the misuse or harmful use of a drug especially for non-therapeutic purposes. Certain drugs are often or generally misused because they alter mood or behavior. Thus, an understanding of their properties is important to an understanding of their abuse. However, drug abuse does not depend entirely on the pharmacological properties of a drug as NOT everyone uses the same drug to the same extent. There are two major reasons for drug abuse: “habituation” and “addiction”. a. Habituation is mainly due to psychological dependence. Alcohol, the most commonly misused drug, is abused because it is freely available in our society. To some, it relieves anxiety and facilitates 77 Student Notes for Drug Abuse participation in social situations. Because of these and other reasons, some people believe that alcohol abuse is mainly a “bad” habit. However, prolonged use may lead to addiction and the situation is – “alcoholism”. b. Addiction develops because of tolerance and psychologic as well as physical dependence. Definition of Addiction: “Addiction” is a disease process characterized by the continued use of a specific drug (particularly a psychotropic substance) despite physical, psychological or social harm. References: http://mentalhealth.about.com/library/sci/0201/blgenedrug201.htmhttp://hom eworktips.about.com/library/blantidrug.htm http://www.addictionscience.net/ASNprimer.htm Sequence leading to addiction 1. Experimental use. Most drug abuse begins with experimental or exploratory use. After which the person may either reject the use of the drug or progress to one of the patterns of use given below. 2. Social use. Some drugs tend to be used with a group of “friends”. Social users do so because individuals form attitudes and react as members of the group. The attitudes and problems of their group will condition their use of drugs and their reaction toward people who choose to use drugs. One common example is alcohol. The danger of social use of drugs is that it increases the chance of those individuals who are vulnerable to a more serious and destructive pattern of misuse. 3. Episodic abuse. This is a pattern where an excess amount of drugs is used, either when the individual is with his/her friends or even alone. The major difference between experimental use and social use is that the amount of drug used is much larger. 78 Student Notes for Drug Abuse 4. Tolerance. A person needs to increase the dosage of a medication over time in order to receive the same therapeutic benefits. [Studies show that the majority of people with anxiety disorders do not increase their benzodiazepines (a kind of anti-anxiety/sleeping pill) dosages over time; in fact, most lower their dosages. However, in drug abuse, tolerance often develops. The point to be stressed that ‘proper medical’ use does not cause addiction.] 5. Addiction. The major difference between this type of abuser and those of above is that addicts (compulsive abusers) have difficulty giving up their habits when given maximal assistance. Example: some smokers cannot perform their jobs properly with a cigarette in hand. Also, alcoholics don’t eat at all without alcohol. Misconception of ‘hard’ and ‘soft’ drugs 1. These terms – ‘hard’ and ‘soft’ do not reflect their textures or forms. 2. 3. 4. Drugs that are subject abuse were divided into ‘hard’ and ‘soft’. It was believed that soft drugs were not or less harmful and addictive drugs. These sayings are now considered to be wrong and unfound. Those ‘soft’ drugs are so called possibly because some of them are prescription drugs e.g., diazepam (a sleeping pill), so, the false belief arose that they were less harmful. [Note that long-term use of a drug in large quantity can lead to addiction.] Also, the penalties for possessing ‘soft’ drugs are less harsh than those of ‘hard’ drugs, e.g., morphine or heroin. Besides being classified as ‘hard’ and ‘soft’, drugs are often categorized into ‘socially acceptable’ and ‘socially unacceptable’, ‘legal’ and ‘illegal’, ‘pharmaceutical’ and ‘recreational’. Depending on their use, some drugs may fall into a number of categories. What are club/party drugs? Besides the unscientific classification of drugs into ‘hard’ and ‘soft’, some drugs are called club/rave drugs. They are relatively trendy terms. They are drugs mainly used in parties, bars and entertainment places. What are they? Most of them are mind-altering drugs. 79 Student Notes for Drug Abuse Why are they abused? These people believe that they can produce ‘high’ feelings. Because most of the people attending these events/functions are teens and young adults, and they are the group of people who are likely to seek something ‘new’ and excitement - ‘high feeling’. Also, these drugs are usually in pill or powder forms so they can be easily carried to these places and that they dissolve in drinks readily. Examples: GHB, Valium (a sleeping pill), and ketamine are predominantly central nervous system depressants. In low doses, they can suppress shyness. Ice, ecstasy and cocaine are stimulants, and people become more talkative after taking these drugs. Some characteristics of those drugs: Colorless Tasteless Odorless Can add to beverages and ingested unknowingly Some of them are called “date rape drugs” because they have the above characteristics. How are psychoactive substances taken? The main purpose is that by knowing the routes/ways of abuse one can tell whether some one is a drug abuser. 1. Like most drugs, psychoactive substances are taken orally. Examples: amphetamines, sleeping pills, cough syrups, etc. 2. Morphine, heroin and other clinically used psychotropic substances are usually taken by injection. This route of administration gives a very quick response to the drug(s) administered. However, this route is also the most dangerous one as it readily causes overdose toxicity or even death. Why? This is because most of the street-drugs (a) contain impurities; and (b) package dosages vary with sources, illegal supply and price. Moreover, it is also the major cause of AIDS and hepatitis (a serious inflammation of the liver) as well as other dangerous infectious diseases. 80 Student Notes for Drug Abuse 3. Inhaling or sniffing is used for taking marijuana, cocaine, nicotine (smoking), paint thinner, model glue etc. This is also elicits fast responses, as soon as substances are inhaled, they enter the blood stream through the lungs then travel to the brain. This route of taking drugs may cause damage to the nose, respiratory tract and lungs. 4. Substances that are fat-soluble, e.g. paint thinner can be absorbed through skin contact. The amount absorbed through this route is very small and the response generated is very mild. This route is rarely used. 5. Regardless of the routes of administration/taken, these substances finally enter the brain to exert their mind-altering affects. This is the reason why an understanding of structure and function of the brain is essential. The central nervous system The figure below describes the structure and function of the central nervous system (CNS). The CNS is composed of the brain and the spinal cord. The point to be remembered is that the brain or the central nervous system is the most important organ in our body that controls our behavior. 81 Student Notes for Drug Abuse Function of the brain Some of the major functions of the nervous system are: 1. Organize and direct behaviour – speech, reflex, etc 2. Minot the outside world – with our eye, ears, nose, etc. 3. Learning and memory – improve our quality of life, survival, etc 4. Thinking – generates ideas, develops personality, etc. The major point to be remembered is that “different areas of the brain perform different functions”. The concept that different brain areas perform different function is important for you to understand why certain psychoactive substances have multiple effects on behavior. The answer is that these substances can affect one or more neurotransmitter system(s) in different areas of the brain. 82 Student Notes for Drug Abuse Functions of Neurons This part introduces the basic concept of (chemical) neurotransmission, i.e., how are signals from one neuron passed to another by using chemicals known as neurotransmitters. The reason for including this is to inform students that psychoactive substances affect neurotransmission to achieve behavioral changes. Neuron is one of the major cell types in the nervous system. The other is glial cell. Glial cells may be considered as supporting cells in the nervous system as they do not participate directly in neurotransmission. Unlike liver cells and red blood cells, neurons have many shapes. [Please consult a senior form biology textbook for diagrams and details.] Their function is to transmit signals. They do so by using different neurotransmitters. Neurotransmitters are chemical ‘mail carriers.’ At present, there are at least 50 neurotransmitters known. Structures of a neuron The figure below is a schematic drawing of a neuron. Schematic drawing of a neuron 83 Student Notes for Drug Abuse The major points to be noted are: 1. 2. 3. At one end (left-hand side), the cell body where the nucleus is, the nerve cell (neuron) serves as an antenna. It receives signals from adjacent neurons. At the terminal (right-hand side), the signal is relayed to the other adjacent nerve cell. The axon is just a cable where signals pass from one end (cell body) to the other (the nerve terminal). The two adjacent neurons are NOT in direct contact with one another. This leads to the question of how signals pass from one neuron to another or neurotransmission. The process involved is known as ‘chemical neurotransmission’. Briefly, signals pass from one neuron to another by causing neurotransmitter 4. 5. release at the nerve terminal, the neurotransmitter released at the synaptic cleft binds to specific receptors situated on the plasma membrane of the postsynaptic cell. Repeating the above processes would enable signals to pass to another neuron. At present, there are more than 50 neurotransmitters known. For simplicity, you may equate ‘neurotransmission’ to the ‘mail delivery system’, and ‘neurotransmitters’ to ‘letters’ delivered to different addresses written on the envelope. As the contents in the letters are different, the messages delivered are also different. If this mail delivery system goes astray, the situation will become chaotic. Mind-altering drugs affect brain functions by interfering the mail delivery system – neurotransmission, in the brain. Psychotropic drugs What are psychotropic drugs? Psychotropic drugs are substances that possess the ability to alter mood, anxiety, behavior, cognitive processes or mental tension. Commonly abused mind-altering drugs may be arbitrarily and broadly divided into three groups: 1. Therapeutic drugs, i.e., drugs with clinical applications (e.g. benzodiazepines, ketamine, morphine, etc) 2. Socially accepted drugs/chemicals (e.g. alcohol and tobacco) 3. Drugs of abuse, i.e. drugs with little or no clinical applications (e.g. heroin, amphetamines, cocaine, LSD and marijuana). 84 Student Notes for Drug Abuse In this block, these drugs are classified in a more scientific way into five categories, according to their clinical applications, actions and effects. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Narcotic analgesics Depressants Stimulants Hallucinogens Antipsychotics Some examples and how they affect the central nervous system are described later in this block. Commonly abused drugs of all people in Hong Kong The most commonly abused drug in Hong Kong is still heroin. It had been so for many years. This may be related to the history that opium was the first mood-altering drug used in HK in the Ching Dynasty. At present, most of the heroin abusers are older than 21, and the number of heroin abusers are decreasing compared to a few years ago. One of the reasons may be due to the effectiveness of the Government’s anti-drug campaign and rehabilitation programmes. On the other hand, psychotropic drug abuse is becoming more popular. Psychotropic substance abuse has been on the rising trend in North America and Europe in recent years, and perhaps HK people are just following. Amongst the drugs, ketamine, ice, sleeping pills and ecstasy are some ‘popular’ drugs. Commonly Abused Drugs by Persons of All Ages in HK (2001) Drugs Percent* 71.8 Heroin (海洛英) 15.7 Ketamine (氯胺酮) 14.5 Ecstasy (忘我) 6.3 Cannabis (大麻) 5.4 Ice (冰) *Total > 100% as some abusers use more than one type of drug Source: Central Registry of Drug Abuse 48 th Report (2001), Narcotics Division, HKSAR 85 Student Notes for Drug Abuse Commonly abused drugs by person under 21 in Hong Kong Abuse of psychotropic drugs in HK is getting more popular in persons under 21. The reason is not very clear. One possible reason may be due to American and European influence. Another possible reason might be due to the misconception that they are ‘soft’ drugs and this creates the false belief that they are less harmful. In HK, the most ‘popular’ drugs are ecstasy and ketamine. These and other psychotropic drugs are easily available in the black market or certain entertainment places. Commonly Abused Drugs by Persons Under 21 in HK (2001) Drugs Percent* 56.6 Ecstasy (忘我) 56.4 Ketamine (氯胺酮) 14.3 Cannabis (Marijuana, 大麻) 14.2 Heroin (海洛英) 10.6 Ice (冰) *Total > 100% as some abusers use more than one type of drug Source: Central Registry of Drug Abuse 48 th Report (2001), Narcotics Division, HKSAR Sources of drugs in Hong Kong As drugs are neither planted nor manufactured in HK, all illicit drugs (chemicals) seized locally are smuggled into HK. Smuggling by land is the means by which most heroin and ice reach HK. Heroin, which is produced in the Golden Triangles, is infiltrated into the Mainland via its land borders, stored in Guangdong Province then shipped to HK. Ice is similarly conveyed to HK across the land border. Bulky drugs, e.g., cannabis, are smuggled by maritime routes. 86 Student Notes for Drug Abuse Sources of Drugs in Hong Kong Heroin: Golden Triangle Mainland China* HK MDMA (Ecstasy): Europe HK Methylamphetamine (Ice): Mainland China* HK Cannabis (Marijuana): Golden Triangle & Cambodia Mainland China* HK Cocaine: South America HK Benzodiazepines (sleeping pills) & ketamine: Local dispensary operators, medicine brokers & unscrupulous medical practitioners*Mainly through Guangdong Province End of Period 1 87 Student Notes for Drug Abuse PERIOD TWO Narcotics analgesics (Opiates) Definition: Opiates are compound that have clinical properties similar to morphine, i.e., they have analgesic effects. There are four major forms of opiates: 1. Heroin 2. Morphine 3. Opium 4. Codeine (found in cough syrups) Heroin is processed from morphine, a naturally occurring substance extracted from the seedpod of the poppy plant Papaver somniferum (this Latin name means “the poppy that makes you sleep”. Among them, heroin (diacetylmorphine) is the most potent and highly addictive opiate, and is the major abused substance in HK. The presence of the two acetyl groups make heroin more fat-soluble and thus enters the brain more readily. In the manufacturing of heroin, acetic anhydride is required to convert morphine to heroin (diacetylmorphine). This explains why possession of acetic anhydride is unlawful. Street/Other namesHeroin is typically sold in the black market as a white or brownish powder. Street names for heroin include ‘smack’, ‘H’, ‘skag,’ and ‘junk’, •白粉, 粉, 灰,四仔, 港紙 (純度約 15-65%), 美金 (純度約 7090%) Codeine : MB, 高甸, 止咳水, 囉囉攣 Methadone: 美沙酮, 蜜瓜汁 Most street heroin is “cut” (diluted) with other drugs or with substances such as sugar, starch, powdered milk, acetaminophen ( 必 理 痛 ) or quinine. Because heroin abusers do not know the actual strength of the drug or its true contents, they are at risk of overdose or death. 88 Student Notes for Drug Abuse Clinical uses of Opiates Opiates and their synthetic counterparts (commonly called synthetic opiates) are used in modern medicine to relieve acute pain suffered as a result of disease, surgery, or injury; in the treatment of some forms of acute heart failure; and in the control of moderate to severe coughs (codeine) or diarrhea. Among them, morphine is commonly used for relief of severe pain in the care of the terminally ill. How is it abused? 1. Heroin is usually injected, sniffed/snorted or smoked. 2. Intravenous injection provides the greatest intensity and most rapid 3. 4. 5. 6. euphoria. This is because it enters the brain most rapidly and completely. Intramuscular injection produces a slower onset of euphoria and that of sniffing and smoking is slower. Like other street psychoactive substances, purities and concentrations of heroin from different black market sources create dangerous problems that can be fatal. Opium appears either as dark brown chunks or in powder form, and is generally eaten or smoked. Researchers have confirmed that all forms of opiate when used regularly and in large doses are addictive. Short-term effects 1. After an injection of heroin, the user reports feeling a surge of euphoria ("rush") accompanied by a warm flushing of the skin, a dry mouth, and heavy extremities. Following this initial euphoria, the user goes into an alternately wakeful and drowsy state. 2. Mental functioning becomes clouded due to the depression of the central nervous system. Morphine and other opiates have depressive effects on respiration. At high doses of opiates, respiration may become so slow or irregular as to be life threatening and result in death. Pupil constriction and constipation are some common symptoms of opiate abuse. 3. Heroin addicts are at very high risk for contracting AIDS, hepatitis and other infectious diseases. This is because heroin addicts may share or reuse injection needles and syringes with infected individuals. 89 Student Notes for Drug Abuse 4. In addition to the effects of the drug itself, street heroin may have additives that do not readily dissolve and result in clogging the blood vessels that lead to the lungs, liver, kidneys, or brain. This can cause infection or even death of small patches of cells in vital organs. Long-term effects 1. Long-term effects of heroin appear after repeated use for some period of time. Chronic users may develop collapsed veins, infection of the heart lining and valves, abscesses, cellulitis (inflammation of connective tissues), and liver disease. 2. Pulmonary complications, including various types of pneumonia, may result from the poor health condition of the abuser, as well as from heroin's depressing effects on respiration. 3. With regular heroin use, tolerance develops. This means the abuser must use larger doses of heroin to achieve the same intensity or effect. As higher doses are used over time, physical dependence and addiction develop. With physical dependence, the body has adapted to the presence of the drug and withdrawal symptoms may occur if use is reduced or stopped. Withdrawal, which in regular abusers may occur as early as a few hours after the last administration, produces drug craving, restlessness, muscle and bone pain, insomnia, diarrhea and vomiting, cold flashes with goose bumps ("cold turkey"), kicking movements ("kicking the habit"), and other symptoms. Sudden withdrawal by heavily dependent users who are in poor health is occasionally fatal. Effects on pregnancy Heroin abuse can cause serious complications during pregnancy, including miscarriage and premature delivery. Children born to addicted mother are at greater risk of suffering from ‘sudden infant death syndrome. Treatment: There is a broad range of treatment options for heroin addiction, including medication as well as behavioral therapies. 90 Student Notes for Drug Abuse Methadone, a synthetic opiate medication that blocks the withdrawal effects of heroin for about 24 hours, has a proven record of success when prescribed at a high enough dosage level for people addicted to heroin. References: http://www.nida.nih.gov/ResearchReports/Heroin/Heroin.html http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/heroinabuse.html Depressants/Sedative hypnotic compounds These substances can depress central nervous system (CNS) neuronal activities and are capable of inducing sedation, sleep (hypnosis) and behavioral alterations, so they are known as ‘depressants’ or ‘sedative hypnotic’ compounds. Some of them are prescribed to treat insomnia (sleeping pills), anxiety (benzodiazepines) and epilepsy (barbiturates) [For simplicity, these drugs are grouped under “depressants” in this block.] What are CNS Depressants? Depressants are chemicals (or drugs) that can slow down normal brain function. Clinically, some depressants are useful drugs in the treatment of anxiety and sleep disorders. Depressants to be discussed include alcohol, Inhalants (organic solvents & cigarette lighter fluid), gamma hydroxybutyrate (GHB), ketamine and Valium. The last three are used clinically. In this block, psychoactive substances belonging to this class are simply called (CNS) depressants. Alcohol and inhalants are general depressants as they slow all nerve activities in our body, while others exert their actions mainly in the brain, therefore known as CNS depressants. 91 Student Notes for Drug Abuse A. Ethyl alcohol Ethyl alcohol is a nonselective CNS depressant because it affects all parts of the CNS. Alcohol and cigarette are the most commonly abused chemicals. Frequently Asked Questions A. Does food slow alcohol absorption? Yes. Food in the stomach slows alcohol absorption for two reasons: 1. By diluting the alcohol and covering some of stomach membranes through which alcohol would be absorbed. 2. By prolonging the emptying time. Thus, blood levels of alcohol will increase much faster in an individual who has fasted than in someone who has just eaten a heavy meal. However, in either case, the alcohol will be completely absorbed; it is only that the absorption is delayed in the well-fed individual. B. What is ‘wood alcohol’? Why is it toxic? Methyl alcohol (wood alcohol; sometimes found as an adulterant in illegal liquors) is toxic. The lethal dose is 2-8 oz (~60-220 ml). 1. Methyl alcohol enters the brain more rapidly than ethyl alcohol. Upon metabolism (in the liver), it is converted to formic acid and 2. 3. 4. 5. formaldehyde. Formic acid causes acidosis (decrease in body pH and this can be fatal). The optic nerve (the nerve that connects the eye to the brain) is most sensitive to acidosis and this may result in blindness, [Blindness or impaired vision may be permanent.] Other effects include: headache, dizziness and nausea. One treatment for methyl alcohol toxicity is to give ethyl alcohol. The rationale is that both methyl and ethyl alcohol use the same set of metabolic enzymes, thus taking ethyl alcohol would reduce the formation of formic acid and formaldehyde. 92 Student Notes for Drug Abuse Relationship between blood alcohol concentrations & pharmacological effects The table below provides an idea that the severity of alcohol intoxication increases with the amount of alcohol ingested. Blood alcohol (mg/100mL) 50 60 80 100-150 200-300 300-350 355-600 Effects Euphoria and minor motor disturbances Nystagmus and increase errors on simple teat Impaired driving ability and brain wave changes Gross motor incoordination Amnesia for experience Coma May cause death Blood alcohol concentrations (BACs) and driving: Blood alcohol concentration (BAC) is the amount of alcohol in the bloodstream. It is measured in percentages. For example, having a BAC of 0.10 percent means that a person has 1 part alcohol per 1,000 parts blood in the body. The drink driving legislation was first introduced in Hong Kong in December 1995. The prescribed legal limit of BAC was 0.08% (80 mg of alcohol per 100 ml of blood). In response to the community's concern over drink driving and having reviewed the effectiveness of the legislation, the HKSAR tightened the legal limit of BAC in October 1999 from 80 to 50 mg of alcohol per 100 ml of blood (i.e. 0.05 percent), same as in places like Germany, Australia and Japan. Major reasons for lowering the legal limit of BAC are based on studies of alcohol-related traffic accidents, reaction time, tracking ability, concentrated attention ability, divided attention performance, information process capability, visual functions, perceptions, and psychomotor performance. Impairment in all these areas was significant at blood concentrations of 0.05 percent. These studies found that impairment first appeared in many of these important areas of performance at BAC of 0.02 percent, substantially below the legal limit in the HKSAR. Note that deterioration in driving skills progresses rapidly with rising BAC. Student Notes for Drug Abuse Effects on alcohol 93 Depending on the amounts ingested, alcohol can cause various effects. 1. Psychomotor performance (see information listed above). 2. Malnutrition. Chronic use and in large amount, alcohol replaces a part or most of the normal diet. The calories derived from alcohol are unaccompanied by vitamins and protein and this results in malnutrition. 3. Chronic use causes degenerative changes in the nervous system that is characterized by poor memory in recent events. 4. Chronic use and large consumption causes permanent liver damage. For example, fatty liver because alcohol ingested is converted to fat which deposits in the liver. The fatty changes are reversible, but they may lead to hepatitis and liver cirrhosis. B. Inhalants What are inhalants? Inhalants are volatile substances that producing chemical vapors that can be inhaled to induce psychoactive, or mind-altering, effects. [Although other abused substances can be inhaled, the term "inhalants" is used to describe a variety of substances whose main common characteristic is that they are rarely, if ever, taken by any route other than inhalation.] Inhalant abuse refers to the intentional breathing of gas or vapors with the purpose of reaching a high feeling. 94 Student Notes for Drug Abuse Because there are a large number of chemicals that can produce vapors at room temperature, a precise categorization of inhalants is difficult. One classification system lists four general categories of: 1. 2. 3. 4. Volatile solvents (see below for details) Aerosol, e.g., spray paints, deodorant and hair sprays Gases, e.g., medical anesthetics (ether, chloroform, halothane, and nitrous oxide, commonly called "laughing gas.") Nitrites-based on the form in which they are often found in household, industrial, and medical products. [Nearly all inhalants are highly inflammable substances and misuses can easily cause fire hazard. Abuse of aerosols, gases and nitrites-based inhalants are rather uncommon in HK, and their abuses will not be further discussed.] Volatile solvents Volatile solvents are liquids that vaporize at room temperatures. They are found in a multitude of easily available products used for common household and industrial purposes. These include: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Paint thinners and removers, Dry-cleaning fluids, Degreasers, Gasoline, Glues, Correction fluids, Felt-tip marker fluids, and Cigarette lighter fuel. How are inhalants used? Inhalants are usually taken by sniffing. Short-term effects At low doses, inhalants produce disinhibition (high feeling, euphoria etc.) at early stage. The reason is that low concentrations of inhalants inhibit the inhibitory neurons in the nervous system. 95 Student Notes for Drug Abuse At high doses, they depress most neuronal activities, vital organ functions and in severe cases, death. In most cases, respiration is slowed. Long-term effects Inhalant abuse has been shown to cause liver, kidney and brain damage and these harmful effects can also occur in the fetus. They cause these long-term effects, as inhalants are fat-soluble substances so they can stay in the body for a relatively long time. Effects on pregnancy Similar to other substances of abuse, inhalants also affect the developing fetus because they dissolve and accumulate in fatty tissues. Moreover, a "fetal solvent syndrome" can occur has been suggested. Because of their potential serious effects, pregnant women should avoid exposure to solvents. Treatment The general treatment of withdrawal from solvents is similar to that for alcohol - calm reassurance in an area of low-level sensory stimuli, and drug treatment is not usually required. Detoxification from solvents, however, takes much longer than from alcohol: short term detoxification requiring from 2 weeks to 30 days. This is because they are rather fat-soluble and can accumulate in fatty tissues. For details, see: http://corp.aadac.com/drugs/beyond/Solvents.asp C. Ketamine What is ketamine? Ketamine is a depressant and an anaesthetic, which has hallucinogenic action. Ketamine abuse grew through the 1980s and 1990s, and recently ketamine, together with GHB (gamma hydroxybutyrate) and Valium (a kind of sleeping pill), are ‘popular 'date rape’ drugs in the US. In Hong Kong, it is one of the popular 'club drugs'. 96 Student Notes for Drug Abuse Street/Other namesSlang terms of ketamine include, ‘K’, ‘Special K’, ‘Ketaset’, ‘Ketalar’, ‘Vitamin K’, ‘Lady K’, ‘Super K’, ‘OK’, ‘KO’, ‘Ket Kat’,‘Make-Her-Mine’, 氯胺酮/K 仔 etc. ‘Kid Rock’, Appearance In undiluted form it looks like an off-white powder, in diluted form it looks like slightly cloudy water. Clinical usesKetamine is an anaesthetic used primarily in surgery. How is it used?Although it is manufactured as an injectable liquid, in illicit use ketamine is generally evaporated to form a powder that is snorted or compressed into pills. Ketamine is used recreationally primarily as a snorted white powder and for therapeutic and psychedelic use it is often injected intra-muscularly. Ketamine is odorless and tasteless, so it can be added to beverages without being detected, and it induces amnesia (loss of short-term memory). Because of these properties, the drug is sometimes given to unsuspecting victims and used in the commission of sexual assaults referred to as "drug rape." Short-term effects The most common effects include: Hallucinations Confusion Euphoria Increased sociability Clumsy, or 'robotic' movement (which lead to delayed reaction time, irrationality, violent or aggressive behavior). 97 Student Notes for Drug Abuse Negative physical effects can include: Dry mouth Depressed respiration Racing heart. Nausea and/or vomiting (a common problem when taking an anesthetics or sedatives). With larger doses, it can lead to oxygen starvation of the brain and muscles. An overdose can also cause the heart to stop and death. Long-term effectsKetamine has the potential to be both physically and psychologically addicting. Individuals who use it regularly may find it difficult to stop. Effects on pregnancy In humans, safety in pregnancy and lactation has not been established. However, studies with rats showed that ketamine, PCP (phencyclidine, another dissociative anesthetics having similar effects as ketamine), and alcohol trigger widespread cell death in the brains of developing rats. (For details see: http://www.drugabuse.gov/NIDA_Notes/NNVol15N2/Ketamine.html) Treatment Little is known conclusively about the treatment of ketamine abuse and counseling appears to be a useful approach. References: http://www.nbcd.gov.tw/prop/prop_1-11.asp (Chinese) http://www.greencross.org.tw/drugabuse/ketamine.htm (Chinese) http://www.erowid.org/chemicals/ketamine/ketamine.shtml End of Period 2 98 Student Notes for Drug Abuse PERIOD THREE D. Benzodiazepines (Sleeping pills) The term ‘benzodiazepines’ or ‘sleeping pills’ shall be used, instead of other clinical terms, to describe different drugs belong to this group. What are benzodiazepines? Benzodiazepines are CNS depressants or sedative hypnotic compounds and they are the most common minor tranquilizers and sleeping pills. Commonly abused/prescribed benzodiazepines include: Valium [安定; 羅氏五號; 羅氏十號] Librium [利眠寧; 綠豆仔] In the following discussion, Valium is used as an example to illustrate the actions and effects of benzodiazepines. In Hong Kong, unscrupulous medical practitioners, drug store operators and medicine brokers supply most of the benzodiazepines and related drugs in the black market. Street/Other names In Hong Kong’s black market, there are about 100 different types of benzodiazepines and related pills that come in different forms and colours. Slang terms for this group include Roach, Roofies, Run-Trip-and-Fall, R-2, Mexican Valium, Rohypnol, Rib, and Rope. [Surf the web to download their pictures.] Clinical uses Benzodiazepines are used as sedatives and anti-anxiety agents and taken orally. How is it abused? Most of the drugs in this group are colorless, odorless and flavorless; they can be slipped into drinks unnoticed. This is one reason why these drugs are 99 Student Notes for Drug Abuse so dangerous. People may consume it without knowing it. It dissolves quickly and takes effect in 20-30 minutes. Short-term effects At low doses (doses prescribed by a doctor), Valium acts as a sedative and reduce psychomotor responses, anxiety; reduce respiration, reduce blood pressure, reduce heart rate and induce sleep. At high doses, Valium can actually increase some types of behavior and act like a stimulant. These effects are caused by depression of inhibitory brain circuits. In other words, they can produce amnesia (memory loss) and muscle relaxation and make people lower their inhibitions. [An inhibition is when you feel like you can't do something. When inhibitions are lowered, people feel as if an obstacle has been removed. Therefore, they can talk more freely and feel less shy.] Overdoses of Valium can lead to excessive sedation and cause anesthesia, coma and even death. Overdoses may occur because the effective dose of these drugs is not too far away from the lethal dose. Long-term effects: Long-term uses of large doses of Valium and related drugs can lead to addiction. This is because both may lead to tolerance and dependence. What are ’tolerance’ and ‘ dependence’? Tolerance occurs when a greater and greater amount of the drug is required to get the desired effect. For example, if a large dose of Valium is used to help a person sleep, over time, a greater dose of the drug will be needed to get the person to sleep. Dependence occurs when a person feels like he or she must use the drug and withdrawal symptoms occur when the person stops using the drug. Withdrawal symptoms of Valium addiction: Headache Muscle pain Confusion Hallucinations 100 Student Notes for Drug Abuse Convulsions Valium, when taken along with other drugs (in particular heroin) or alcohol, are a common cause of overdose toxicity and overdose related deaths. Effects of pregnancy Long-term use of Valium in large dose is addictive to both the mother and the baby. The baby is less able to cope with this type of drug than the mother. It is recommended that the use of Valium and related drugs be avoided during pregnancy, as they can be harmful if taken continuously or in high doses. Valium can produce withdrawal symptoms in newborn babies. Withdrawal symptoms of newborn babies include: Breathing problems Poor body temperature control Poor muscle tone Difficult sucking The babies can appear floppy or limp and this poor muscle tone can last for a number of months, although the babies do eventually recover. Treatment There is no effective medical treatment for abuse of Valium and related drugs, and the most effective treatment is counseling. References: http://faculty.washington.edu/chudler/barb.html http://faculty.washington.edu/chudler/roof.html http://www.hon.ch/Dossier/MotherChild/preg_drugs/benzodiazepines.html http://womenshealth.about.com/library/bldaterapedrugfaq.htm?terms=Treat ment+Rohypnol 101 Student Notes for Drug Abuse E. GHB What is GHB? Gamma-hydroxybutyrate (GHB) [G 水、迷暈水] is both a metabolite and precursor of the nhibitory neurotransmitter GABA (gamma-aminobutyric acid, or gamma-aminobutyrate). It is a naturally occurring component of human cells. GHB is a constituent of some wine, and it has been speculated that GHB may be responsible for the soporific (a substance causing sleep) effects of wine. Street/Other names GHB, G, Liquid X, Liquid E, GBH, Gamma-oh, Blue Verve G 水、迷暈水, etc It is called a “date rape drug” because it is believed to improve sex performance, but this is arguable. Clinical uses GHB was developed in the early 60s as a human anaesthetic, but was discontinued due to unwanted side effects. During the 1980s, GHB was widely available over-the-counter in health-food stores, purchased largely by body-builders for its ability to stimulate growth hormone release which aids in fat reduction and muscle building. [It may cause a "protein sparing" effect which reduces the rate at which the body breaks down its own proteins.] One of the major concerns with GHB is that the recreational dosage range is narrow and even small overdoses can cause temporary unconsciousness and large overdoses (poisonings) can be life threatening. GHB was banned from over-the-counter sale by the Food and Drug Administration, USA in 1990, and it is illegal to possess this drug in Hong Kong. How is it abused? GHB commonly comes as a colorless, odorless, bitter or salty-tasting liquid usually sold in the black market in small bottles or vials. It also comes as a 102 Student Notes for Drug Abuse crystal powder. It is mostly taken orally, however, there have been reports of people injecting the drug. Short-term effects Effects of small doses may include: Sense of well-being and relaxation Increased confidence and sociability Enhanced sense of touch Drowsiness, induced sleep, nausea, dizziness, and headache An increase in the amount or strength of GHB used, may result in the initial feelings of euphoria being replaced by effects including: Impaired movement and speech Extreme drowsiness Hallucinations Disorientation Difficulties in respiration Amnesia Whatever side effects may be noted, they are often much more severe when GHB is combined with other central nervous system depressants such as alcohol or central nervous system depressants, such as ketamine, heroin and benzodiazepines (sleeping pills), as these drugs help to further suppress respiration. Adding alcohol on top of GHB will highly and rapidly increase the possibility of respiratory collapse, coma and possibly death. The effects of GHB can generally be felt within five to twenty minutes after ingestion. Determining the ideal dose is probably the trickiest aspect of abusing GHB. The amount required for a given level of effect will vary from person to person, and the dose-response curve is fairly steep. Because GHB generally comes in liquid form and thus the concentration is difficult to determine, thus, there is a real danger of overdose toxicity. 103 Student Notes for Drug Abuse Long-term effects There has been little research conducted on the effects of long-term use of GHB. Apart from the potential to develop physical and psychological dependence, the health and social consequences of long-term use are largely unknown. Withdrawal symptoms include a strong desire to take GHB or other psychotropic substances, difficulty sleeping, vertigo, and worrisome chest pains. Effects on pregnancy Like other abused drugs, GHB use during pregnancy is not recommended. Drug use during pregnancy can increase the incidence of premature labour, resulting in low birth weight babies. If the mother continues to use GHB while breastfeeding, it is possible that the drug will be present in the mother's milk and possibly cause adverse affects to the baby. Treatment There is no effective medical treatment for GHB abuse and counseling is the method of choice. References: http://www.adf.org.au/drughit/facts/ghb.html http://www.ceida.net.au/tools_for_workers/drugs/ghb.htm http://www.emedicine.com/emerg/topic848.htm Stimulants What are stimulants? CNS stimulants are chemicals that can increase the activities of the brain Types of stimulants In here, stimulants are divided into two types: socially accepted (caffeine and nicotine) and unaccepted (amphetamines and cocaine). 104 Student Notes for Drug Abuse A. Caffeine Caffeine-containing beverages are used habitually in different cultures. Fox example, Chinese, Japanese, Indians and Britain have the habit of drinking tea while South and North Americans drink coffee. In Hong Kong, many people, young and old, like to drink Pepsi Cola, Coca Cola and other cola drinks. Coffee has the most caffeine with 47-164 milligrams per 150 mL serving. The caffeine content depends on how the coffee is brewed -- fresh drip has the highest level, instant has the lowest. Caffeine-free coffer contains about 3-6 mg per cup. A single serving of black tea (150 mL) can have anywhere from 25 to 110 milligrams of caffeine, while a single serving of Coca-Cola (350 mL) measures in with 46 milligrams. However, when you break it down to caffeine per mL, tea handily beats Coke. Chocolates also contain caffeine because they contain cocoa (dark brown powder make from crushed cocoa seeds). (Visit http://ask.yahoo.com/ask/20001018.html to find out how much caffeine in chocolates.) The various effects of caffeine are given below: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Slightly pulse rate (1 cup/day). Alertness and Fatigue (1 cup or more). Loss of calcium in the urine (5 cups/day). [Caffeine increases water excretion.] A possible human teratogen (>6 mg/kg body weight). [A teratogen is a chemical that causes abnormal fetus development.] Calorie intake. [This is because most of these drinks contain sugar.] Affects sleep patterns Withdrawal symptoms: Headaches, gastrointestinal effects and diarrhea. 105 Student Notes for Drug Abuse B. Nicotine (Tobacco smoking) Apart from caffeine, nicotine is the most widely used stimulant in our society. Nicotine is an alkaloid found in tobacco. Comments on the effects Nicotine is an extremely potent stimulant exerting powerful effects on the nervous system, the heart and various other body structures. It exerts its various effects by stimulating acetylcholine receptors that are widely distributed in our bodies. [Acetylcholine is a neurotransmitter.] Chronic smoking results in a smoker’s syndrome characterized by difficulty in breathing, wheezing, chest pain lung congestion and increasing susceptibility to infections of the respiratory tract. Cigarette smoking impairs ventilation and greatly increases the risk of emphysema (a form of irreversible lung damage). There is a strong correlation between smoking and lung cancer. However, lung cancer is believed to be caused by tars and other chemicals in tobacco rather than nicotine. There is also evidence that smoking has harmful effects on the developing foetus. Cigarette smoking increases the rates of spontaneous abortion, stillbirths and early postpartum death of infants. Thus, pregnant women are advised to quit smoking. C. Amphetamine and related compounds What are they? This group includes amphetamine: methylene dioxymethamphetamine (MDMA, ecstasy) and methamphetamine (Ice). They have chemical structures similar to those of amphetamine, and they act as stimulants in the nervous system. Stimulants can create a sense of well-being and higher energy, sometimes a release of social inhibition, and feelings of “cleverness”, “competence” and “power”. But these are unreal. 106 Student Notes for Drug Abuse They are popular rave party drugs in Hong Kong and elsewhere. Because ‘Ice’ is odorless and has a colorless smoke, users of the drug may go virtually unnoticed. Significant abuse of the drug began to be seen in the United States in the 1960s and in Hong Kong since the late 1990s. Street/Other names Methamphetamine (Ice, 冰) or Dextroamphetamine is also known as “Meth”, ‘crystal meth’, ‘speed’, ‘ice’, ‘black beauties’, ‘bennies’, ‘dexies’, ‘beans’, ‘crank’, etc. “Ice" is a concentrated form of methamphetamine that resembles tiny chunks of translucent glass (it is also called ‘glass’. It is very potent crystal methamphetamine in a form that can be "smoked" rather than injected. Because the “Ice” is vaporized and inhaled, and not actually burned, the term "smoking" is technically incorrect. Another very popular synthetic amphetamine is ecstasy (亞甲二氧基甲基安 非他明, 狂喜, 忘我 ), commonly known as MDMA, short for methylene dioxymethamphetamine. It acts simultaneously as a stimulant and a hallucinogen. Users sometimes take ecstasy for the sense of well-being, the sensory distortions caused by the drug, or to stay awake. [One of the primary problems with MDMA is the low quality of street ecstasy. Street ecstasy, especially pressed pills, is often mixed with a wide variety of adulterants that can cause a variety of negative side effects both unpleasant and dangerous.] Clinical uses Amphetamines first were synthesized in 1887, but were not used medically until about 1930. Between 1930 and the early 1960s, amphetamines were used to treat childhood hyperactivity, obesity and narcolepsy (day sleep), a rare disorder in which persons are overcome by sudden attacks of deep sleep. How is it abused? Ecstasy is most often found in tablet, capsule, or powder form and is usually consumed orally, although it can also be injected. Other amphetamine drugs are used in similar manner. Ecstasy is sometimes packaged in capsules or generic tablets to imitate prescription drugs. 107 Student Notes for Drug Abuse (For other details see: http://parentingteens.about.com/library/fs/blsldicamph.htm?terms=Ampheta mine+.) Ice is usually consumed by smoking or orally. Short-term effects Physical effects: Loss of appetite Involuntary teeth clenching Blurred vision Increased heart rate and blood pressure Chills and sweating Tremors Deaths have occurred because users don’t drink enough water and become overheated. Psychological difficulties can include the following symptoms: Confusion Depression Sleep problems Drug craving (an addiction behaviour) Severe anxiety Paranoia - during and sometimes weeks after taking MDMA. Amphetamine-induced psychosis is a paranoid state that may develop after ingestion or the injection of large doses of amphetamines. Long-term effects Research links MDMA use to long-term damage to those parts of the brain critical to thought and memory possibly by destroying and producing neurons in the brain. [Damage to these neurons is the underlying cause of the motor disturbances seen in Parkinson's disease. Symptoms of this disease begin with lack of coordination and tremors and can eventually result in a form of paralysis.] Long-term heavy use of amphetamines may lead to malnutrition (amphetamine reduces appetite), skin disorders, ulcers and diseases resulting from vitamin deficiencies. Regular use may contribute to lack of 108 Student Notes for Drug Abuse sleep and weight loss. Intravenous users are at risk for serious, life-threatening diseases such as AIDS, lung and heart disease and other cardiovascular diseases. Frequent use of large amounts of amphetamines may eventually result in mental illness, suicide or violent death. Effects on pregnancy Pregnant women who take ecstasy, ice and other amphetamine-related drugs may increase the chances of their babies developing birth defects. (For details see: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/481775.stm and http://mdma.net/prenatal/pregnancy.html) Pregnant women who take ecstasy increase their risk of an abnormal baby by up to seven times. (For details see: http://www.erowid.org/chemicals/mdma/references/journal/1999_mc elhatton_lancet_1/1999_mcelhatton_lancet_1_media1.shtml.) Treatment There is no effective medical treatment for abuse of amphetamines and counseling appears to be a very useful mean. References: http://substanceabuse.about.com/library/weekly/aa040700.htm (kills brain cell) http://substanceabuse.about.com/library/weekly/aa040700.htm http://www.nida.nih.gov/infofax/ecstasy.html http://drugabuse.gov/ResearchReports/methamph/methamph.html http://www.erowid.org/chemicals/mdma/references/journal/1999_mcelhatton _lancet_1/1999_mcelhatton_lancet_1_media1.shtml http://faculty.washington.edu/chudler/mdma.html http://weber.Im.flu.edu.tw/~swduh/sociology_of_drug/amphetamine_1.htm (Chinese) http://www.greencross.org.tw/drugabuse/amph_withdraw.htm (Chinese) 109 Student Notes for Drug Abuse D. Cocaine General information Cocaine, a stimulant, is one of the most addictive psychotropic substances. The other is heroin. It is one of the oldest known drugs. The pure chemical, cocaine hydrochloride, has been an abused substance for more than 100 years, and coca leaves, the source of cocaine, have been ingested for thousands of years particularly in South American countries for example, Peru and Bolivia. It was used as tonics/elixirs to treat a wide variety of illnesses. Because of its powerful addictive effect, this usage has been abandoned. The major sources of cocaine are some South American countries. There are two chemical forms of cocaine: the hydrochloride salt and the "freebase“ (not neutralized by an acid). The hydrochloride salt, or powdered form of cocaine, dissolves in water and, when abused, can be taken intravenously (by injection) or intranasally (sniffing). The freebase form of cocaine is smokable. Street names or other names Cocaine is generally sold on the street as a fine, white, crystalline powder, known as "coke," "C," "snow," "flake," "blow," 可卡因, 可可精 or 古柯鹼. Street dealers generally dilute it with such inert substances such as corn starch, talcum powder, and/or sugar, or with such active drugs like procaine (a local anesthetic) or with such other stimulants such as amphetamines. Cocaine abuse and addiction continues to be a major problem in Europe and North and South Americas. For example, an estimated 1.5 million Americans age 12 and older were chronic cocaine users in 1997. However, the number of cocaine abusers in Hong Kong remains small. One reason may be because cocaine in the local black market is very expensive. Short-term effects Cocaine's effects appear almost immediately after a single dose, and disappear within a few minutes or hours. 110 Student Notes for Drug Abuse In small amounts (up to 100 mg), cocaine usually makes the user feel euphoric, energetic, talkative, and mentally alert, especially to the sensations of sight, sound, and touch. (These are common effects of CNS stimulants.) It can also temporarily decrease the need for food and sleep. Some users find that the drug helps them to perform simple physical and intellectual tasks more quickly, while others can experience the opposite effect. The short-term physiological effects of cocaine include: Dilated pupils Increased body heat sensation Increased heart rate and blood pressure (constricted blood vessels). Larger amounts (several hundred milligrams or more) intensify the user's high, but may also lead to bizarre, erratic, and violent behavior. These users may experience tremors, vertigo, muscle twitches, paranoia, or, with repeated doses, a toxic reaction closely resembling amphetamine poisoning. Some users of cocaine report feelings of restlessness, irritability, and anxiety. In rare instances, sudden death can occur on the first use of cocaine or unexpectedly thereafter. Cocaine-related deaths are often a result of cardiac arrest or seizures followed by respiratory arrest. Long-term effects Cocaine is a powerfully addictive drug. Once having tried cocaine, an individual may have difficulty predicting or controlling the extent to which he or she will continue to use the drug. An appreciable tolerance to cocaine's high may develop, with many addicts reporting that they seek but fail to achieve as much pleasure as they did from their first experience. Some users will frequently increase their doses to intensify and prolong the euphoric effects. While tolerance to the high can occur, users can also become more sensitive (sensitization) to cocaine's anesthetic and convulsant effects, 111 without increasing the dose taken. This increased sensitivity may explain some deaths occurring after apparently low doses of cocaine. 112 Student Notes for Drug Abuse Reference: http://www.drugabuse.gov/ResearchReports/Cocaine/cocaine2.html#what Effects and danger of taking multi-drugs A. Do not take psychoactive drugs together with alcohol! The brain compartment is separated from the circulatory (blood) system by a filter, called the blood-brain barrier. [This protects the brain from sudden changes in chemical composition in the blood, for example after a meal.] This filter prevents most substances from entering the brain freely. To compensate this ‘defect’, there are specialized carrier system to carry substances, e.g., glucose (a must fuel for the brain) and others, into the brain to allow the brain to perform its normal functions. Interestingly, fat-soluble substances do not have to enter the brain by carriers and they do so by diffusion because they can dissolve in the lipid components of a cell membrane then enter a cell. Most, if not all, psychoactive drugs are fat-soluble substances and they dissolve readily in alcohol (a good solvent for fat-soluble substances), so these mood-altering drugs can pass through the blood brain barrier more rapidly by diffusion. Thus, taking these drugs with alcohol would cause a sudden and sharp rise of the drug(s) in the brain. This may cause overdose toxicity in the brain and explains why taking psychoactive drugs with alcohol is extremely dangerous. The point to be remembered is “Do not use drugs with alcohol!” B. Effects of taking multi-drugs are unpredictable! Some abusers believe that taking a depressant together with a stimulant will cancel out each other’s effects. This is Wrong! It is a misconception. The real answer could be ‘fatal’. This false belief was developed simply because some abusers think depressants equate to ‘minuses’, while stimulants ‘pluses’, and they have the false belief that (-1) + (+1) should equal to 0 (zero) mathematically, therefore the false belief that taking both together should have no harmful effect(s). 113 Student Notes for Drug Abuse This is wrong because: 1. 2. 3. Depressants and stimulants are very different drugs and they affect different neurotransmitter systems. They affect different areas of the brain. [At the beginning of this block, we discussed the concept that different brain areas perform different functions. The fact is taking different kinds of psychoactive drugs together could be fatal. This is because more neuronal systems and more brain areas are affected at the same time. End of Period 3 114 Student Notes for Drug Abuse PERIOD FOUR Hallucinogens What are hallucinogens? Hallucinogens are also called ‘psychedelics’. They are substances that induce sensory (vision, sound, smell, etc.) sensitivities of the brain. Under the influence of hallucinogens, people see images, hear sounds, and feel sensations that seem real but do not exist. These are called ‘psychedelic’ sensations. These drugs can disrupt a person's ability to think and communicate rationally, or even to recognize reality, sometimes resulting in bizarre or dangerous behavior. The two commonly abused hallucinogens in HK are LSD and marijuana. [Note that although ketamine is classified as a depressant in this block, it can distort perceptions of sight and sound and produces feelings of detachment - dissociation - from the environment and self. The details of ketamine will not be repeated here.] A. LSD What is LSD? LSD (lysergic acid diethylamide) is a hallucinogen that causes emotions to swing wildly and from real-world sensations to assume unreal, sometimes frightening aspects. LSD is the hallucinogen most widely used in this class of drugs. Recently, LSD and ketamine are becoming more widely used at entertainment places and all-night rave parties by older teens and young adults in Hong Kong. Herbal hallucinogens In addition to LSD and marijuana, there are other hallucinogens, in the forms of hallucinogenic plants that had been used in many cultures. These include cactus, which grow in Mexico and the Southwest United States, 'magic mushrooms' and Star Jasmine. Of this group, however, LSD is by far the most potent. Abuse of these plant hallucinogens is not common in HK, probably because of lack of supply. 115 Student Notes for Drug Abuse History of LSD LSD was synthesized in 1938 by German chemist Albert Hofmann. He accidentally ingested a small amount and experienced a series of frightening sensory effects. Properties of LSD LSD is a clear or white, odorless, water-soluble material synthesized from lysergic acid, a compound derived from a rye fungus. LSD is the most potent mood- and perception-altering drug known: oral doses as small as 30 micrograms (mg) can produce effects that last 6 to 12 hours. The most common form of LSD is called "blotter acid" - sheets of blotting paper soaked in LSD. Drug distributors often apply LSD to colored paper, making it difficult for a buyer to determine the drug's purity or dosage. (Purity of this street drug is an issue of concern in substance abuse.) Street/Other names Acid, angel dust, and vitamin K Clinical uses Most hallucinogens, including LSD, which are intended for illegal uses, have no accepted medical use. How is it used? LSD is usually taken orally, but is sometimes inhaled or injected. Short-term effects Short-term effects appear soon after a single dose and disappear within a few hours or days. Physical effects include: Increased blood pressure and heart rate Increased body temperature and sweating Impaired motor skills and coordination Nausea; dizziness, loss of appetite Dry mouth Affect emotion and sensory (major effects of hallucinogens) 116 Student Notes for Drug Abuse After the physical effects, dramatic changes in perception, thought, and mood occur. These may include: Vivid, usually visual, "pseudo-hallucinations" that the user is aware are not real. Distorted perceptions of: time (minutes seem like hours) Distorted distance perception (hazardous if operating motor vehicles or standing near balcony edges) Space between oneself and one's environment (for some, a feeling of oneness with the universe, for others, a feeling of terror) Fusion of the senses (music is “seen,” colors “heard”) is experienced. Long-term effects LSD users quickly develop a high degree of tolerance for the drug's effects. After repeated use, they need increasingly larger doses to produce similar effects. This may result in addiction. Two long-term effects are “psychosis” and “perception disorder”. Psychosis is the disorganization of a person's capacity to recognize reality, think rationally, or communicate with others. These effects of LSD may last for years and can affect people who have no history or other symptoms of psychological disorder. Perception Disorder consists of episodes of spontaneous, repeated, sometimes continuous, recurrences of some of the sensory distortions originally produced by LSD. The experience may include hallucinations, but it most commonly consists of visual disturbances such as seeing false motion on the edges of the field of vision, bright or colored flashes, and halos or trails attached to moving objects. This condition is typically persistent and in some cases remains unchanged for years after individuals have stopped using the drug. Chronic LSD use may result in prolonged depression and anxiety. Effects on pregnancy There appears to be a higher risk of spontaneous abortion and congenital abnormalities in babies born to women who regularly used LSD during pregnancy. 117 Student Notes for Drug Abuse Treatment There is no effective medical treatment for LSD abuse, and counseling appears to be the method of choice. References: http://www.drugabuse.gov/ResearchReports/Hallucinogens/hallucinogens.ht mlhttp://www.erowid.org/plants/peyote/peyote.shtml (Mescaline/peyote) http://www.erowid.org/plants/mushrooms/mushrooms.shtml (Psilocybin and magic or hallucinogenic mushrooms) http://www.erowid.org/chemicals/ibogaine/ibogaine.shtml (Ibogaine) B. Marijuana What is marijuana? Marijuana (Marihuana) is a green, brown or grey mixture of dried, shredded leaves, stems, seeds and flowers of the hemp plant (Cannabis sativa). It is a mind-altering substance. Street/Other names 大 麻 , 草 , ‘Pot’, ‘herb’, ‘weed grass’, ‘boom’, ‘Mary Jane’, ‘gangster or chronic’, ’grass’ and hashish (‘hash’ for short). Hashish is the stronger form of marijuana. Clinical uses Marijuana in its smoked form has no commonly accepted medical use. THC (delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol; te-tra-hydro-can-na-bin-nol), the active ingredient in marijuana, has been used by some medical practitioners to treat nausea and vomiting that occur with certain cancer treatments and to help AIDS patients eat more to keep up their weight. However, further studies are needed to determine its therapeutic value and consequence of regular use. How is it abused? Marijuana is usually smoked as a cigarette (called a ‘joint’ or a ‘nail’), or in pipe. 118 Student Notes for Drug Abuse Short-term effects Distorted perceptions including sights, sounds, time and touch. This is because it is a hallucinogen. Other effects are: trouble with thinking and problem-solving ability, loss of coordination (athletes could find their performance is off; timing, movements and coordination), and increased heart rate and anxiety. Long-term effects Tolerance and addiction are common effects. Marijuana contains some, or even more, of the cancer-causing chemicals, e.g., tars found in cigarette smoke. [Studies found that someone who smokes 5 joints per week may have taken in as much cancer-causing chemicals as someone who smokes a full pack of cigarettes every day.] Thus, long-term marijuana abusers have much higher risk of lung and other cancers. Development of the same kinds of breathing problems that cigarette smokers have: coughing and wheezing as well as emphysema. Animal studies have found that THC can damage cells of the immune system. Abusers of marijuana are at higher risk of becoming addicted to other drugs, such as cocaine and amphetamine-related drugs. Effects on pregnancy Marijuana, like other drugs of abuse, can affect a mother's health during pregnancy, making it a time when expectant mothers should take special care of themselves. Drugs of abuse may interfere with proper nutrition and rest, which can affect good functioning of the immune system and have a detrimental effect on the development of the fetus. Babies born to marijuana users were shorter, weighed less and had smaller head sizes. [Head size, or circumference, is an indicator of brain development during infancy.] Smaller babies are more likely to develop health problems. Also, Children born to women who abused marijuana have trouble concentration. 119 Student Notes for Drug Abuse A nursing mother who uses marijuana passes some of the THC to the baby in her breast milk. Research indicates that the use of marijuana by a mother during the first month of breast-feeding can impair the infant's motor development (e.g., control of muscle movement). Treatment There are currently no medications for treating marijuana addiction effectively. Treatment programmes focus on counseling and group support systems are quite effective. See also: http://www.health.org/reality/articles/2000/youth.asp References http://www.nida.nih.gov/MarijNroch/MarijparentsN.htmlhttp://www.nida.nih.go v/Infofax/marijuana.html http://www.health.org/reality/articles/2001/birthdefects.asp Signs of taking club drugs The information given below describes some common observable signs in club drug abusers. Signs of drug abuse 1. 2. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. Problems remembering things they recently said or did (amnesia) Loss of appetite & body weightLoss of muscle coordination, dizziness, fainting Depression Confusion Sleep problems Chills or sweating (for no medical reasons) Slurred speech The main point is that drug abuse can be identified, and that the belief that misuse of club drugs can be hidden is false. So, stay away from drugs. 120 Student Notes for Drug Abuse Some major effects of drug abuse Addiction and withdrawal 1. Affects heart, kidney and liver functions 2. Affects brain function by interfering with neuronal transmissionMay cause death because of: a. b. c. Impurities/toxic substances found in the drug Overdose [Concentrations vary in packages] Poly-drug use [Remember that different drugs affect different brain areas and different neurotransmitter systems] Summary of effects of psychoactive drug abuse on different organs The figure below summarizes the effects of different drugs on different organs in our body. One very important point to be remembered is that these drugs also affect other vital organs in our body. Some suggested ways to say “No” to drugs These are some suggested ways to say “No!” to drugs. Some means to say “No” to drugs 1. Avoid places where drug-uses are likely 2. Keep ‘suspected’ abusers at arm’s length 3. When offered drugs: a. Say “No” decisively, and tell them the harmful effects of drugs b. Change the subject or excuse yourself and leave the place 121 Student Notes for Drug Abuse c. Accept the offer, and tell them that you would like showing it to d. your teachers/social worker at school/friends Other appropriate means Can you think of other good ways to refuse drugs? Penalties of drugs-related crimes The figure below summaries the penalties in HK and neighboring place. The point to be noted is that possession/trafficking of some of these drugs is illegal and the penalty is very heavy. For example, in Singapore, possession of 15 grams of heroin can result in the death penalty. Maximum penalties for drug-related crimes Places Penalty Hong Kong Life imprisonment and confiscation of properties Mainland China Death or life imprisonment and confiscation of properties Macau Long prison terms Singapore Death >15 grams of heroin End of Period 4 and this block 122 Suggested activities Suggested Activities 1. Group discussion Divide students in a group of 4-5, and each takes turn to explain the following to fellow students in their group why the following is NOT true: (a) Drinking alcohol does no harm to our body because many people do drink. (b) Drinking beer is less harmful than taking heroin (c) Smoking is less harmful than inhaling organic solvents (d) Taking sleeping pills prescribed by doctors do not cause addiction. 2. Data Analysis and information search Show the slide below and ask the students visit public libraries or surf the web to find information related to this slide, e.g.: (a) What are drug-related ‘major offences’ and ‘minor offences’ in HK? Suggested answer: Possession or trafficking of large quantity of drugs, making heroin, etc are major offences, while possession of small quantity and taking heroin, etc are minor. (b) What could be the causes for the rise in drug-related offenders in 1994-1996? Suggested answer: HK was used as a drug-transit place between Mainland China and Golden Triangle and other countries. The drop in 1997and onward was possibly due to stepped up cooperation between Mainland and HK authorities to reduce the supply of drugs and join efforts of the law enforcing agencies in HK. (c) Name some government departments/agencies that are responsible for enforcing drug-related laws. Suggested answer: Hong Kong Police, Custom and Excise, Department of Health, Correctional Services and the Narcotics Division of the Security Bureau. Government departments and agencies that play active role in drug-prevention education include: Education Department, Social Welfare Department, Hospital Authority and the Narcotics Division of the Security Bureau. 123 Suggested activities 3. Discussion and information searching: (a). The table below, taken from the PowerPoint file, shows reasons why young people in HK take drugs. Find some means to help them to stay away from drugs. (b). Hemp seeds [火麻仁] and poppy seeds [罌粟籽] are used in Chinese medicine and recipes, respectively. Do you think taking these seeds would cause addiction? Explain. 124 Suggested activities If you find out that your good friend is a frequent rave partygoer and is addicted to ketamine, what would you do? 4. Knowing the drugs (Worksheet) (a) Below is a list of drugs/chemicals. Try to classify them by writing them correctly in the boxes provided. Drugs/Chemicals: ecstasy, heroin, marijuana, ice, morphine, organic solvents, codeine, amphetamines, ketamine, LSD, opium, paint thinner, butane, caffeine, 綠豆仔, 羅氏五號, 羅氏十號 etc. Analgesics Stimulants Depressants Hallucinogens b) The diagram below shows a human body. In the boxes provided, name a drug that affects the organ. 125 Suggested activities 5. Debate Arrange a debate (after school) on one of the following topics: (a) Pop stars are suitable beat-drug ambassadors; or (b) Taking heroin is more harmful than alcohol/cigarette smoking. References: http://debate.uvm.edu/ http://residence.educities.edu.tw/tranemac/ http://hkpuedt.tripod.com/ 6. Visit Arrange a visit to a drug-related agency, for example, Drug Information Center (to be open in late 2002), a non-government drug-counseling center, etc 7. Interview Arrange a visit to a rehabilitation center and students can interview/talk to drug addicts or ex-drug abusers to understand why they take drugs. 8. Design/Creative writing/Independent study (a) Design a brochure/poster to warn or educate young people of the adverse effects of drug abuse. (b) Imagine you were a drug: What would you do to bring a potential abuser under you control? (c) Imagine you were a foetus and you could talk to your mother. How would you persuade her to stop smoking/drinking/taking ecstasy? (d) Construct a website at your school’s website to hyperlink sites that are related to drug abuse. (e) Write a play on the following situation: if you were a parent/teacher/student and discovered your child/student/friend is a frequent rave party goer and taking ketamine occasionally. In the script include the following characters: a drug trafficker who is eager to sell ketamine; a youngster who is desperate for money; a youngster who is seeking for “high” sensation; a worried parent who suspects something fishy going on with his child; a very helpful social worker and a undercover policeman watching at the party. 126 Review Questions/Quizzes/Food for thought Review Questions/quizzes/food for thought Quizzes for students 1. What is the most commonly used “drug” in Hong Kong? a) Heroin b) Cocaine c) Alcohol d) Marijuana e) Amphetamine 2. Name the two “legal drugs” most commonly used by teenagers in Hong Kong. 3. Which drug is associated with the most traffic deaths? 4. Ecstasy obtained at rave parties is a particularly dangerous drug because: a) it is too cheap b) it is readily available c) it is highly addictive d) it contains impurities e) both (c) and (d) 5. Fumes from which of the following can be inhaled to produce a high feeling: a) paint thinner b) model glue c) nail polish remover d) freon e) all of the above 6. Students who have not used alcohol and other drugs before they graduate from secondary school a) should be good citizens after graduation b) are “book-worms” c) have lower risk of becoming chemically dependent after graduation. d) have an increased risk of becoming chemically dependent after graduation. 127 Review Questions/Quizzes/Food for thought 7. Which of the following drug combinations is more likely to induce an addiction? a) Cocaine and heroin b) Coffee and cigarette smoking c) Sleeping pills and alcohol d) Amphetamines and alcohol e) Cigarette smoking and alcohol 8. How much alcohol can a pregnant woman safely consume? a) 100 ml (a glass) of red wine with dinner. b) Two cans of beer each day. c) 100 ml (a glass) of rice wine a week. d) 100 ml (a glass) of red wine a week. e) None 9. Young people smoke because a) they believe it is a symbol of adulthood. b) they are attracted by advisements that link smoking to maturity, social status, etc. c) they are curious. d) they want to cover up their weakness or shortcomings. e) all of the above 10. Most people continue to smoke because a) of psychological effects. They feel that smoking relieves tension and boredom. b) it has become a habit. c) they become addicted. d) both a) and c). e) all of a), b) and c). 11. Smoking increases the risk of a) lung cancer. b) chronic bronchitis. c) emphysema. d) (coronary) heart disease. e) all of the above. 128 Review Questions/Quizzes/Food for thought 12. Name some substances, not discussed in this block, but you consider being drugs. Explain 13. Why is psychotropic drug abuse more common in youth in Hong Kong? 129 Review Questions/Quizzes/Food for thought Answers 1. (c) Because it is legal for adults and widely accepted in our culture, alcohol is the drug most often used in Hong Kong. 2. Alcohol and tobacco. These are the "gateway" drugs, drugs that children are first exposed to and whose use often precedes use of other drugs. 3. Alcohol. (Activity: ask students to find out the number of people died and injured in alcohol-related traffic accidents in last year.) 4. (e) Ecstasy is highly addictive and ecstasy of dubious origin may contain poisonous impurities. In fact, cases of death due to consumption of street drugs had been reported. 5. (e) Virtually anything that emits fumes or comes in aerosol form contains inhalant(s) and they all can produce a high feeling. (It should be noted that solvent inhaling is extremely dangerous and may be fatal. (For detail see: http://corp.aadac.com/drugs/beyond/Solvents.asp.) 6. (d) Early use of alcohol and other drugs - often by age 15 or less - is strongly associated with drug-related problems such as addiction. 7. (a) Both cocaine and heroin are highly addictive substances. (However, it does not imply that the others are not addictive.) 8. (e) It is generally recommended these days that expectant mothers consume no alcohol at all during pregnancy to be on the safe side. (For detail see: http://www.aerc.org.uk/alcohol_insights/Insert08.pdf .) 9. (e). Recent survey results in HK indicate that all are causes why young people smoke. 10. (e). All are causes of smoking. 11. (e). Smoking increases the risk of all the disorders mentioned. 12. Any substances that fit the definition given in the PowerPoint/Notes are considered to be correct. 13. Any reasonable answers. For questions that require high order of thinking skill, please refer to 130 activities below 131 Tips for teachers Tips for Teachers Suggested Assessment Questions Please refer to Suggested activities: 1, 3, 4 and 5. Points to be noted The materials in this block are quite detailed because the authors wish to provide a more complete picture of drug abuse in HK. Users are requested to use their discretions and judgments to select topics that are most suitable for their students. The teaching materials described in this module take both a biological/medical and a social science approach. However, some users may consider content to be lacking the depth required for a science course. Some simplification has been used so as not to burden students with difficult scientific terms/names. Users may find more advanced materials from the reference websites cited to complement the deficiencies. The simple description of the structures and functions of the central nervous system and a neuron are included to provide users/students with a brief idea of the actions of different psychoactive chemicals. [Please note that teaching of neuroanatomy/neuroscience is not intended.] The message to be given to students is “different areas of the brain perform different functions’. The point on neurotransmission is to inform students that these chemical messengers carry different messages to surrounding neurons, like postmen/couriers delivering different letters to different addressees. The idea is to explain to students how these chemicals affect neurotransmission instead of just informing students that ‘these chemicals affect functions of the brain’. It is hoped that this section will arouse students’ interest in this topic. Also, this section attempts to provide a scientific explanation for the dangers of taking multiple psychoactive substances, or taking psychoactive substance(s) with alcohol. 132 Tips for teachers The classification of drugs adopted in this block is based both on the pharmacological (mechanisms of action of drugs) and medical aspects of the drugs or chemicals. Users may find the classification different from those used by other drug-abuse agencies. One of the reasons is that some of the drugs described in this block have multiple effects. For example, ketamine is classified by some drug-abuse agencies as a hallucinogen because it induces hallucination and is abused for its mind-altering effects. However, it is classified as a depressant in here because it depresses neuronal activities and is used clinically as an anaesthetic. Pharmacologically, it is classified as an anaesthetic (CNS depressant). Also, drugs that depress nerve activities are simply grouped under ‘depressants’ and they are not divided into ‘CNS depressants’ and ‘tranquilizers’. [To sub-divide them into these two classes requires some detailed medical/pharmacological discussion, which is outside the scope of this course.] This hopefully will ease students’ burden. The materials on the effects of different psychoactive substances are quite substantial, though not extensive; the main objective is to illustrate the dangers as well as the diverse actions of these chemicals. Users are advised not to ask students to memorize all of them. Just the major ones should be acceptable. In delivering this part, users are advised to bring out the following messages clearly: (a) Psychoactive drugs/substances are dangerous; (b) Their effects are unpredictable; (c) Street drugs contain impurities, some even contain toxic substances; (d) Drugs must not be mixed with alcohol and that taking (e) (f) two or more drugs at the same time is extremely dangerous and can be fatal; Most of these drugs are odorless and tasteless, and students should be very careful when they attend parties; The information on ‘Signs of an abuser’ is designed to guide students, teachers and parents in identifying possible abusers and to remind students that although 133 Tips for teachers abusers may take drugs in clandestine places, there are signs that can be recognized. Most of the references cited are electronic ones. This is because they are very informative and readily available than suitable textbooks. Students are encouraged to find more sites to appreciate the diversities and harmful effects of these substances so as to reinforce their understanding of this subject. Teachers are requested to help students to appreciate the scientific merits of these sites. Users may find photographs and figures provided in this block insufficient due to copyright issues. Users can amend these shortcomings and enrich the content by downloading appropriate, copyright-cleared pictures from textbooks, newspapers, magazines, websites and other sources. 134 Glossary Glossary [The simple definitions or explanations given below are in the context of substance abuse, to enhance users’ understanding of the terms used in this module. They are NOT exhaustive but they serve as references for students and teachers who would like to learn more. They should NOT be treated to indicate the depth and breadth of teaching.] Acid: Common street name for LSD (see below). Addiction: A chronic, relapsing disease characterized by compulsive drug seeking and use. The mechanism is believed due to neurochemical and molecular changes in the brain. Amnesia: Loss of memory. Analog: a chemical compound that is similar to another drug in its effects but differs slightly in its chemical structure. Anaesthetic (Anesthetic): An agent that causes insensitivity to pain and other sensations. Angel dust: Common street name for PCP (phencyclidine). Anterograde amnesia: Individuals may not remember events they experienced while under the effects of the drugs. Antidepressants: A group of drugs used in treating depressive disorders. Antipsychotic drugs: Drugs used to treat schizophrenia, a mental disorder. Benzodiazepines: drugs that relieve anxiety or are prescribed as sedatives; the most widely prescribed medications include Valium, Librium and Rohypnol. Blood-brain barrier (BBB): A barrier that prevents direct contact between blood and the brain. Its major function is to protect the brain from toxic substances. This means that a substance entering the brain has to pass through this barrier. [For example, 1. Selectively permeable- lipid soluble substances pass through easily because they dissolve through membranes (some of these substances are nicotine, opiates-heroin, cannabinol); water-soluble molecules are retarded, as they are unable to pass through fatty membranes readily. 2. Important substances, such as glucose, are actively transported through capillary walls by special transport carrier proteins] Central nervous system (CNS): the brain and spinal cord. Cerebral cortex: Region of the brain responsible for cognitive functions including reasoning, mood, and perception of stimuli. Club drugs: Although tobacco and alcohol are the most common 135 Glossary substances found on the club scene, other substances such as ecstasy, herbal ecstasy, Rohypnol, GHB, ketamine, and LSD have gained popularity with young people in recent years. Typically, nightclubs, bars, parties, and raves attract teenagers and young adults who may risk their health in the interest of a good time. They are also known as ‘Rave party drugs’. Coca: The plant, Erythroxylon, from which cocaine is derived. Also refers to the leaves of this plant. Crack: Short term for a smokeable form of cocaine. Craving: A powerful, often uncontrollable desire for drugs. Date rape drugs: In recent years a new kind of rape threat has occurred at parties, on campuses and in nightclubs in the form of "date rape" drugs. Technically speaking, any substance that renders you incapable of saying no or asserting yourself and your needs can be used to commit rape. This includes things like alcohol, marijuana or other street drugs, designer or club drugs like ecstasy, over-the-counter sleeping pills and antihistamines, even cold medications. However, the term "date rape drug" usually applies to the drugs Rohypnol, gamma hydroxybutyrate (GHB) and ketamine. There are many factors that make these drugs desirable to sexual predators. The drugs are virtually undetectable; they are tasteless, odorless and colorless. Date rape drugs are easily slipped into drinks and food and are very fast acting. They render the victim semi-conscious but responsive with little or no memory of what happens while the drug is active in their system. The drugs also make the victim act without inhibition, often in a sexual or physically affectionate way. Like most drugs, date rape drugs render a person incapable of thinking clearly or of making appropriate decisions. This makes for a very passive victim, one who is still able to play a role in what is happening but who will have no clear memory of what happened afterwards. Without any memory of events the victim is often unaware that they have even been raped, and if they are aware or have suspicions they make very poor witnesses. If you suspect that you have been given a date rape drug you need to get to a hospital quickly and you must request that you be properly tested. The drugs can be found in your system if you act quickly. If you suspect that you have been raped using any one of these drugs go to a hospital and request a preliminary rape exam with testing for date rape drugs. This is the only way to know for sure. 136 Glossary Dementia: A condition of deteriorated mentality. One hallmark is inability to remember things or events, especially things that happened recently. Dissociative anesthetic: A compound, such as phencyclidine (PCP) or ketamine that produces an anesthetic effect characterized by a feeling of being detached from the physical self or the environment. Detoxification: a process of allowing the body to rid itself of a drug while managing the symptoms of withdrawal; often the first step in a drug treatment program. Dopamine: A neurotransmitter present in regions of the brain that regulate movement, emotion, motivation, and the feeling of pleasure. DXM: Common street name for dextromethorphan. Endorphin: A peptide produced by the brain that has pill-killing activity. Compared to enkephalins, endorphin is a longer peptide. Emphysema: A lung disease, often caused by smoking, in which tissue deterioration results in increased air retention and reduced exchange of gases. The result is difficult breathing and shortness of breath. This condition is incurable and terminal. Enkephalin: A peptide produced by the brain that has pill-killing activity. Euphoria: A pleasurable feeling experienced by a user after taking psychoactive/psychotropic substances (drugs). [Synonym: rush.] GABA: (gamma-Aminobutyric acid): an inhibitory neurotransmitter substance in the brain. Inhibitory neurotransmitters modulate (slow down) the actions of stimulatory (excitatory) neurotransmitters in the brain. GHB: (gamma-hydroxybutyrate): GHB is both a metabolite and precursor of the inhibitory neurotransmitter GABA (above). It is a depressant that is abused as a club drug. It is also one of the ’date rape’ drugs. Glutamate: A (excitatory) neurotransmitter associated with pain, memory, and response to changes in the environment. Hallucination: A condition where a person experiences profound distortions in his perceptions of reality. Under the influence of hallucinogens, people see images, hear sounds and feel sensations that seem real but do not exist. Hallucinogen: A compound that causes hallucination. Ketamine: A dissociative anaesthetic abused for its mind-altering effects and sometimes used to facilitate sexual assault. Locus ceruleus: Region of the brain that receives and processes sensory signals from all areas of the body. 137 Glossary LSD: Lysergic acid diethylamide, a very potent hallucinogen. Insomnia: Inability to sleep in the absence of impediments, such as noise, a bright light, etc., during the period when sleep should normally occur. Neurotransmitter: A chemical compound that acts as a messenger to carry signals or stimuli from one nerve cell to another. Magic mushroom: A type of mushroom that contains psilocybin, a hallucinogen. Narcolepsy: a disorder characterized by uncontrollable attacks of deep sleep even during the day. Neonatal abstinence syndrome: A clinical condition that occurs in infants due to intrauterine exposure to addictive substances, e.g., heroin, cocaine, LSD, etc. Onset of symptoms varies according to which drug is being used by the mother, the quantity, frequency, and duration of intrauterine exposure, and the timing of the withdrawal (last dose prior to delivery). Symptoms include: CNS irritability (decreased duration of sleep between feedings), CNS motor activities (tremors, increased muscle tone, [myoclonic] jerks, etc), respiratory distress, vague autonomic symptoms (fever, sweating, mottling, etc.) and other effects such as decreased birth weight and increased weight loss during early neonatal period. Neuron: A nerve cell in the brain. It is the basic building block of the nervous system. Nicotine: An alkaloid derived from the tobacco plant that is responsible for smokers’ psychoactive and addictive effects; is toxic at high doses but can be safe and effective as medicine at lower doses. Opiates: Compounds derived from morphine or compounds that have actions similar to morphine Paranoia: A severe mental disorder characterized by the presence of delusions such as being followed, poisoned or harmed by other means, in an otherwise personality. PCP: Short for phencyclidine, a hallucinogen. Physical dependence: An adaptive physiological state that occurs with regular drug use and results in a withdrawal syndrome when drug use is stopped; usually occurs with tolerance. (Physical dependence occurs when a person's body becomes used to functioning with the drug present; if the person suddenly stops their drug use, withdrawal symptoms are experienced. A sign of psychological dependence is when the use of a drug becomes increasingly important in a person's life and the drug use may take priority over other activities and responsibilities.) 138 Glossary Poly-drug user: An individual who uses more than one drug e.g., ecstasy and ketamine together. Psychosis: a mental disorder characterized by symptoms such as delusions or hallucinations that indicate an impaired conception of reality. Rave party drugs: See ‘Clubs drugs’. Rush: A surge of pleasure that rapidly follows administration of some drugs. (Synonym: euphoria.) Sedative hypnotic compounds: They are drugs that are capable of inducing not only behavioral sedation or hypnosis (sleep) but also behavioral alterations, ranging from (at low doses) relief from anxiety to sedation, release from inhibition, sleep, and finally (at high doses) death as a result of the depression of the respiratory center in the CNS (the medulla). Serotonin: A neurotransmitter that causes a very broad range of effects on perception, movement, and the emotions by modulating the actions of other neurotransmitters in most parts of the brain. Teratogen: A chemical that can cause abnormal fetal development. Teratogenesis: Interference with normal fetal development. Tetrahydrocannabinol (THC): The active ingredient found in marijuana. Tobacco: A plant widely cultivated for its leaves, which are used primarily for smoking; the tabacum species is the major source of tobacco products. Tolerance: A condition in which higher doses of a drug are required to produce the same effect as during initial use; often is associated with physical dependence. Toxic: Causing temporary or permanent effects that are detrimental (harmful) to the functioning of a body organ or group of organs. Vertigo: The sensation of dizziness. Withdrawal: A variety of symptoms that occur after use of an addictive drug is reduced or stopped. The effects of withdrawal tend to be the opposite to the original effects of the drugs of dependence. Symptoms include stomach cramps, sweating, runny nose, loss of appetite, diarrhea, and irritability. This glossary provides a quick reference for teachers and students. Some of the terms are abridged from websites/textbooks. 139 References for Teachers Supplementary Resources References for Teachers: General “Hong Kong Narcotics Report” (Publishes annually by the Narcotics Division, Security Bureau of the HKSAR Government and the Action Committee Against Narcotics) http://substanceabuse.about.com/gi/dynamic/offsite.htm?site=http://www.nid a.nih.gov/ http://parentingteens.about.com/library/fs/blsldicindex.htm?terms (Street names) http://parentingteens.about.com/library/weekly/aa052302a.htm?terms (Party drugs) http://www.drugarm.org.au/ h t t p :/ / www. d ru gf ree a me rica . o rg/ h t t p :/ / www. e ro wid . o rg/ ch e m ica ls/ http://www.drugarm.org.au/main_index/teachers_menu.htm (Site with pictures and brief introduction for each drug) h t t p :/ / www. u sd o j. go v/ d e a / http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/cocaineabuse.html http://www.nida.nih.gov/ResearchReports/Prescription/Prescription.html Chinese websites http://health.yahoo.com/health/drugs_tree/medication_or_drug/ http://www.bses.hcc.edu.tw/effect/duping/2a.htm http://info.gov.hk/nd/chinese/drug/index.htm http://www.catholic.org.hk/spiritual/drug.htm (介紹有關的徵兆、成因、經常被 濫用藥物種類及潛在危險) http://www.nwcmoed.com.hk.ro/ (含多種類型的毒品介紹) http://www.info.gov.hk/nd/text/chinese/info/index.htm (介紹麻醉鎮痛劑、迷幻 劑、鎮抑劑、興奮劑、鎮靜劑的醫藥用途及濫用後果) http://www.hkcs.org/overview/csnews/c209/c209_31.htm (探討被訪者對此等 藥物的了解、服藥後的徵狀及處理方法) http://www.raveparty.com.hk/drugs.htm (介紹忘我(Fing 頭丸)、海洛英、氯胺 酮(K 仔)、冰及大麻等藥物) http://www.info.gov.hk/healthzone/exhibits/saab001/ (含藥物濫用與酗酒的定 義、影響及戒除方法) 140 References for Teachers Amphetamines http://www.erowid.org/chemicals/mdma/mdma.shtml #http://substanceabuse.about.com/library/weekly/aa040700.htm (kills brain cells) http://www.erowid.org/chemicals/mdma/references/journal/1999_mcelhatton _lancet_1/1999_mcelhatton_lancet_1_media1.shtml http://faculty.washington.edu/chudler/mdma.html http://weber.lm.fju.edu.tw/~swduh/sociology_of_drug/amphetamine_1.htm (Chinese) http://www.greencross.org.tw/drugabuse/amph_withdraw.htm (Chinese) http://substanceabuse.about.com/library/weekly/aa040700.htm http://www.nida.nih.gov/Infofax/ecstasy.html http://www.drugabuse.gov/ResearchReports/methamph/methamph.html http://www.med.harvard.edu/AANLIB/home.html (Brain Atlas) CNS depressants (Benzodiazepines) http://faculty.washington.edu/chudler/barb.html http://faculty.washington.edu/chudler/roof.html http://www.hon.ch/Dossier/MotherChild/preg_drugs/benzodiazepines.html http://womenshealth.about.com/library/bldaterapedrugfaq.htm?terms=Treat ment+Rohypnol Cocaine http://www.drugabuse.gov/ResearchReports/Cocaine/cocaine2.html http://ceiba.cc.ntu.edu.tw/health/note/drugabuse.htm (Chinese) http://www.info.gov.hk/nd/text/info/4.htm (Hong Kong) http://www.welcome.to/cocaine http://ceiba.cc.ntu.edu.tw/health/note/drugabuse.htm (Chinese) GHB http://www.adf.org.au/drughit/facts/ghb.html http://www.ceida.net.au/tools_for_workers/drugs/ghb.htm http://www.emedicine.com/emerg/topic848.htm Heroin http://www.tcada.state.tx.us/research/facts/heroin.pdf http://www.drugabuse.gov http://www.health.org 141 References for Teachers http://www.drugabuse.gov/ResearchReports/Heroin/herml http://alcoholism.about.com/library/blnida04.htm?terms=The+Drug+Morphin e http://alcoholism.about.com/library/blnida04.htm?terms=The+Drug+Morphin e Inhalants http://www.inhalants.com/ http://corp.aadac.com/drugs/beyond/Solvents.asp Ketamine http://www.nbcd.gov.tw/prop/prop_1-11.asp (Chinese) http://www.greencross.org.tw/drugabuse/ketamine.htm (Chinese) http://www.erowid.org/chemicals/ketamine/ketamine.shtml http://www.drugabuse.gov/NIDA_Notes/NNVol15N2/Ketamine.html LSD http://www.drugabuse.gov/ResearchReports/Hallucinogens/hallucinogens.ht ml http://www.erowid.org/plants/peyote/peyote.shtml (Mescaline/peyote) http://www.erowid.org/plants/mushrooms/mushrooms.shtml (Psilocybin and magic or hallucinogenic mushrooms) http://www.erowid.org/chemicals/ibogaine/ibogaine.shtml (Ibogaine) Marijuana http://www.nida.nih.gov/Infofax/marijuana.html http://www.nida.nih.gov/MarijBroch/MarijparentsN.html http://www.health.org/reality/articles/2001/birthdefects.asp http://www.druganswer.com/chinese/index.html Treatment http://www.nida.nih.gov/ResearchReports/Prescription/prescription7.html#Tr eating 142 References for Teachers Organizations related to drug abuse in Hong Kong The following is a list of some organizations that provide services to drugs abusers in Hong Kong. Teachers may invite experienced personnel from these organizations to give lectures to their students to enhance their understanding of this complicated topic, or ex-drug abusers to share their experience e.g. how they get hooked, the effects of drug on their bodies and families, and how they overcame their addiction. 香港戒毒服務機構 Organizations Providing Services to Drug Abusers in Hong Kong 計劃 Programme 美沙酮門診治療計劃 Methadone Out-patient Treatment Programme 自願住院戒毒治療和康復服務計劃 Voluntary Residential Treatment and Rehabilitation Programme 機構名稱 Agency 衛生署美沙酮診所 Department of Health, Methadone Clinics 香港戒毒會 The Society for the Aid and Rehabilitation of Drug Abusers (SARDA) 巴拿巴愛心服務團 Barnabas Charitable Service Association 明愛黃耀南中心 Caritas Wong Yiu Nam Center 基督教得生團契 Christian New Being Fellowship 基督教正生會 Christian Zheng Sheng Association 得基輔康會 Drug Addict Counselling and Rehabilitation Services (DACARS) 信義會芬蘭差會靈愛青年中心 Finnish Evangelical Lutheran Mission Ling Oi Youth Center 香港晨曦會 Operation Dawn 143 References for Teachers 計劃 Programme 機構名稱 Agency 戒毒康復協會人道援助基金 SER Foundation for Humanitarian Aid 聖士提反會 St. Stephen’s Society 濫用精神藥物者輔導計劃 Counselling Programme for Psychotropic Substance Abuse 基督教互愛中心 Wu Oi Christian Center 香港基督教服務處 Hong Kong Christian Service PS33 社會福利署「健康新一代」計劃 Social Welfare Department Against Substance Abuse Scheme 明愛容圃中心 Caritas HUGS Center 物質誤用診所 Substance Abuse Clinic 香港路德會社會服務處-路德會青欣中心 Hong Kong Lutheran Social Service – Cheer Lutheran Center 醫院管理局 Hospital Authority 九龍醫院 Kowloon Hospital 柬區尤德夫人那打素醫院 Pamela Youde Nethersole Eastern Hospital 威爾斯親王醫院 Prince of Wales Hospital 瑪麗醫院 Queen Mary Hospital 葵涌醫院藥物誤用評估中心 Kwai Chung Hospital Substance Abuse Assessment Unit 青山醫院屯門精神健康中心 Castle Peak Hospital Tuen Mun Mental 144 References for Teachers 計劃 Programme 輔導與多元化之綜合服務計劃 Counselling and Multiple Integrated Service Programme 機構名稱 Agency Health Center 明愛樂協會 Caritas Lok Heep Club 香港培康聯會 Pui Hong Self-help Association 勵扶青會 KELY Support Group 善導會 The Society for the Rehabilitation of Offenders, Hong Kong 香港社會服務聯會 Hong Kong Council of Social Service 145 References for Students References for students: General websites 1. http://parentingteens.about.com/library/weekly/aa052302a.htm?terms (Party drugs) 2. http://www.drugarm.org.au/ 3 . h t t p :/ / www. d ru gf ree a me rica . o rg/ 4 . h t t p :/ / www. e ro wid . o rg/ ch e m ica ls/ 5. http://www.drugarm.org.au/main_index/teachers_menu.htm (Site with pictures and brief introduction for each drug) Chinese websites 1. http://health.yahoo.com/health/drugs_tree/medication_or_drug/ 2. http://www.bses.hcc.edu.tw/effect/duping/2a.htm 3. http://info.gov.hk/nd/chinese/drug/index.htm 4. http://www.catholic.org.hk/spiritual/drug.htm (介紹有關的徵兆、成因、經 常被濫用藥物種類及潛在危險) 5. http://www.nwcmoed.com.hk.ro/ (含多種類型的毒品介紹) 6. http://www.info.gov.hk/nd/text/chinese/info/index.htm (介紹麻醉鎮痛 劑、迷幻劑、鎮抑劑、興奮劑、鎮靜劑的醫藥用途及濫用後果) 7. http://www.hkcs.org/overview/csnews/c209/c209_31.htm (探討被訪者對 8. 9. 此等藥物的了解、服藥後的徵狀及處理方法) http://www.raveparty.com.hk/drugs.htm (介紹忘我(Fing 頭丸)、海洛英、 氯胺酮(K 仔)、冰及大麻等藥物) http://www.info.gov.hk/healthzone/exhibits/saab001/ (含藥物濫用與酗酒 的定義、影響及戒除方法) Amphetamines 1. http://www.erowid.org/chemicals/mdma/mdma.shtml 2. http://weber.lm.fju.edu.tw/~swduh/sociology_of_drug/amphetamine_1.ht 3. 4. m (Chinese) http://www.greencross.org.tw/drugabuse/amph_withdraw.htm (Chinese) http://www.nida.nih.gov/Infofax/ecstasy.html CNS depressants (Benzodiazepines) 1. http://faculty.washington.edu/chudler/barb.html 2. http://faculty.washington.edu/chudler/roof.html 146 References for Students Cocaine 1. http://ceiba.cc.ntu.edu.tw/health/note/drugabuse.htm (Chinese) 2. http://www.info.gov.hk/nd/text/info/4.htm (Hong Kong) 3. http://ceiba.cc.ntu.edu.tw/health/note/drugabuse.htm (Chinese) GHB 1. http://www.adf.org.au/drughit/facts/ghb.html 2. http://www.ceida.net.au/tools_for_workers/drugs/ghb.htm Heroin 1. http://www.tcada.state.tx.us/research/facts/heroin.pdf 2. 3. 4. http://www.health.org http://alcoholism.about.com/library/blnida04.htm?terms=The+Drug+Mor phine http://alcoholism.about.com/library/blnida04.htm?terms=The+Drug+Mor phine Inhalants 1. http://www.inhalants.com/ 2. http://corp.aadac.com/drugs/beyond/Solvents.asp Ketamine 1. http://www.nbcd.gov.tw/prop/prop_1-11.asp (Chinese) 2. http://www.greencross.org.tw/drugabuse/ketamine.htm (Chinese) 3. http://www.erowid.org/chemicals/ketamine/ketamine.shtml Marijuana 1. http://www.nida.nih.gov/Infofax/marijuana.html 2. http://www.druganswer.com/chinese/index.html 147