CAN YOU KEEP YOURSELF
SAFE?
Advocates and critics disagree about whether
people can protect themselves from
MDMA-induced toxicities by taking measures to keep their body temperature down
and keep hydrated. Savvy ravers have adopted several practices designed to try to protect themselves from MDMA's dangers. They drink extra water, try to keep their
body temperature down by using "mist rooms" in which people spray
each other with water, keep the room
temperature low, and sometimes even take SSRIs like fluoxetine (Prozac) in an attempt to protect against
neurotoxicity and the amino acid
tryptophan when they are coming down to help restore serotonin levels. Do these practices work? Certainly, the
organ damage caused by high body
temperature can be avoided if you stay in a cold enough environment. Protecting yourself against neurotoxicity
is more controversial. There is
animal literature showing that changes in serotonin neurons don't happen if animals are kept cold. However, we
don't know yet if these findings
extend to people. The same story is true of taking SSRIs like Prozac. This approach has worked in studies on
animals but is untested in people. If you take SSRIs before taking MDMA, these
drugs keep MDMA from getting into the
terminal. This prevents the damage completely but also prevents MDMA's effects. So users take it when
they are coming down. Could this be
dangerous? Theoretically, if you take an SSRI too early, while lots of serotonin is still floating
around, you could trigger the "serotonin
syndrome." SSRIs keep the serotonin from being recaptured by the nerve terminal, just like MDMA does. In
combination, you can get a dangerous
elevation of serotonin that leads to the effects of an MDMA overdose. A mild case could cause nausea,
diarrhea, increased muscle tone, and
increased blood pressure; a severe case could cause greatly elevated body temperature and death. Cases of
serotonin syndrome have been reported after MDMA alone, and theoretically the
combination could increase the risk.
MDMA raises some
challenging ethical questions. Should this drug be used clinically? This question
is debated actively by some scientists, and there are credible arguments on both sides of the issue. In favor of its
use, MDMA does not cause dangerous
effects at doses that would likely be used
clinically. Certainly, there are many clinically approved drugs like morphine and amphetamine that are equally
dangerous at high doses, so the
dangerous side effects are hardly unique. Furthermore, certain circumstances exist, like compassionate use at the end
of life, when the potential long-term
effects are not an issue. Offsetting these "positives" are many open
questions: Are there long-term consequences to low-level use that could be dangerous? Can scientists
advocating clinical use show convincingly
that MDMA offers unique advantages that outweigh the advantages of other
medications? What are the benefit and harm caused by a drug that can apparently treat
"personality" rather than disease? Would a completely safe entactogen be a valid clinical drug or a
"tonic" for treating the
ills of normal life? Can insights and positive feelings aroused
during a drug-induced state carry over into normal life? (The same issue has arisen with the incredible
popularity of Prozac, as addressed in
the book Listening to Proztic by Peter D. Kramer.) We can't answer these questions here, but we will raise a cautionary note. Sometimes there is a good reason for bad feelings:
they are caused by bad experiences,
and they often motivate personal change for the better.