WHAT IS ECSTASY?
- Methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA)
Slang or street Names: Ecstasy, XTC, X Adam, Clarity, Lover's Speed,
"E" is a stimulant and a hallucinogen. It started out as a club drug
and has moved into the non-alcohol circuit at so-called Raves.
- Ecstasy is MDMA, or
3,4-Methylenedioxymethamphetamine. It belongs to a family of drugs
called "entactogens," which literally means "touching within." Other
drugs in this category include MDA, MDE and MBDB.
- Before it was made illegal in 1985,
MDMA was used by psychiatrists as a therapeutic tool. Studies are
currently underway in Spain and Israel assessing MDMA's effectiveness
in the treatment of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD).
WHAT
ARE THE EFFECTS?
- MDMA is a "mood elevator" that
produces a relaxed, euphoric state. It does not produce
hallucinations.
- MDMA takes effect 20 to 40 minutes
after taking a tablet, with little rushes of exhilaration which can be
accompanied by nausea. 60 to 90 minutes after taking the drug, the
user feels the peak effects.
- Sensations are enhanced and the user
experiences hightened feelings of empathy, emotional warmth, and
self-acceptance.
- The effects of 'real' ecstasy subside
after about 3-5 hours.
- Users report that the experience is
very pleasant and highly controllable. Even at the peak of the effect,
people can usually deal with important matters.
- The effect that makes MDMA different
from other drugs is empathy, the sensation of understanding and
accepting others.
IS
ECSTASY ADDICTIVE?
- Ecstasy is not physically addictive.
However, the drug can often take on great importance in people's
lives, and some people become rather compulsive in their use. Taken
too frequently, however, MDMA loses its special effect.
- MDMA releases the brain chemical
serotonin, elevating mood and acting as a short-term antidepressant.
Compulsive users may be unconsciously trying to self-medicate for
depression. Effective treatments for depression are available with the
proper diagnosis by a qualified physician.
DANGERS!
- Ecstasy is illegal and a conviction
for possession can carry long prison sentences.
- Frequent or high doses have been
linked to neurotoxic damage in laboratory animals. It is still unknown
whether such damage occurs in humans or, if it does, whether this has
any long-term, negative consequences.
- Some people experience depression
after taking MDMA. This is caused by MDMA's action on certain brain
chemicals.
- There have been some deaths associated
with MDMA. Usually these have been a result of
heatstroke from dancing for long periods of time in hot clubs
without replenishing lost body fluids.
- Much of what is sold as "ecstasy" on
the black market actually contains other drugs, some of which can be
more dangerous than MDMA, like
PMA,
speed,
DXM
and PCP.
- Mixing ecstasy with alcohol or other
drugs increases the risk of adverse reactions.
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