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A Little Tiny Rave For Rats
Good [+1]Toggle ReplyLink» ADDJ replied on Sun Feb 19, 2006 @ 8:54pm
addj
Coolness: 43200
[ news.bbc.co.uk ]

Music intensifies ecstasy effects
Nightclub
Ecstasy is linked to dance culture
Listening to loud music exacerbates the effects on the brain of taking ecstasy, researchers have found.

Italian scientists gave the drug to rats who were then exposed to music at nightclub noise levels.

The researchers measured the electrical activity in the rats' brains and found that noise prolonged the effects of ecstasy by up to five days.

Experts said the study, published in the Biomed Central Neuroscience, showed music worsened users' "comedown".


This research suggests that exposure to loud music may worsen the comedown but it is unclear how this may contribute to longer term effects
Martin Barnes, Drugscope

Ecstasy is usually taken by clubbers - who are in an environment full of flashing lights and loud music.

The drug produces feelings of euphoria and energy, and a desire to socialise.

But there is mounting evidence from both animal and human studies that it may damage nerve pathways in the brain. Long term use has been linked to memory loss and depression.

Experts have suggested that loud music may also affect higher brain functions.

'More potent'

The researchers, from the Institute of Neurological Science in Catanzaro, found low doses of ecstasy did not modify the brain activity of rats if no music was played.

But total electrical brain activity in the animals significantly decreased in the presence of loud music, selected to mimic levels commonly found in clubs.

High doses of ecstasy reduced brain activity even without noise, but the effect was enhanced by loud music and lasted for up to five days after the drug was administered.

In rats given a high dose of ecstasy but not exposed to music, brain activity returned to normal in one day.

Dr Michelangelo Iannone, who led the research, said in BMC Neuroscience that the effects of the drug could be made more potent "by relatively common environmental factors" and stressed the "potential danger for man of substances that have been so 'popularly' accepted as relatively 'safe' owing to their 'short term' effects."

Depression risk

Martin Barnes, chief executive of the drugs information charity DrugScope said: "Ecstasy is very much associated with the clubbing and dance scene and users report a heightened sense of awareness and a greater appreciation of music and their surroundings.

"After taking ecstasy users may feel tired and low and this may last several days leading to a 'mid-week hangover'.

"Short-term memory can be impaired and there is emerging evidence that prolonged use can lead to periods of depression.

"This research suggests that exposure to loud music may worsen the comedown but it is unclear how this may contribute to longer term effects."

Ecstasy was first synthesised in 1910. It was patented two years later by the German company Merck Pharmaceuticals as an appetite suppressant.

It was first seen in Britain as a recreational drug from the US in the mid-1980s, but has been illegal in the UK since 1977.

In the early 1990s, ecstasy tablets cost up to £20 each. Last year their price was reported to have dropped to as little as 50p.

Home Office figures published in October last year showed that an estimated 2m people aged 16 to 59 had used ecstasy in their lifetime, and 556,000 had used it in the previous month.

Around 10 deaths are linked to ecstasy use each year.
Good [+1]Toggle ReplyLink» ufot replied on Mon Feb 20, 2006 @ 12:51am
ufot
Coolness: 93780
good odds, theres 10 chances out of 6million that you'll die from ecstasy use/// a .00000006% of death is not bad at all... course my math could be totally off here, due to my prolonged exposure to loud music while under the influence of above mentioned recreational drug of choice... neoform? care to share the accurate figures with us? gawd im depressed...

Ufot-not believing in calculators
Good [+1]Toggle ReplyLink» moondancer replied on Mon Feb 20, 2006 @ 3:29am
moondancer
Coolness: 92945
gay.
Good [+1]Toggle ReplyLink» Bassic replied on Mon Feb 20, 2006 @ 8:29am
bassic
Coolness: 129375
I'm depressed.
Good [+1]Toggle ReplyLink» flo replied on Mon Feb 20, 2006 @ 9:19am
flo
Coolness: 147005
we should offer these scientists our experience and time so that they stop playing around with animals
Good [+1]Toggle ReplyLink» PitaGore replied on Mon Feb 20, 2006 @ 10:21am
pitagore
Coolness: 472485
throw this fuckin shit @ the garbage and stop talkin''bout it
pills are so fuckin has-been
Good [+1]Toggle ReplyLink» basdini replied on Mon Feb 20, 2006 @ 12:40pm
basdini
Coolness: 145880
what, you needed a study to know this?
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