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Study: Ecstasy linked with
long-term memory loss
London -
People who take the drug ecstasy are more likely to suffer from
long-term memory loss, according to a British study published on
Thursday.
The study, which surveyed users in
Europe, the United States and Australia, found that those who
regularly took the dance club drug were 23 percent more likely to
report problems with their memory than non-users.
Ecstasy users who also take cannabis
were facing a "myriad of memory afflictions," the report said, which
could represent "a time bomb" of cognitive problems for later life.
The report, led by the University of
Newcastle upon Tyne, said short-term memory was affected by cannabis.
Despite some high-profile deaths
caused by ecstasy, there has been a widespread perception among young
users that the drug is safe.
Users say it heightens awareness,
intensifies their emotions and makes them feel good. But in extreme
cases, ecstasy can cause spikes in body temperatures severe enough to
be fatal. "Users may think that ecstasy is fun and that it feels
fairly harmless at the time," said lead researcher Dr. Jacqui Rodgers
of Newcastle University in Britain. "However, our results show slight
but measurable impairments to memory as a result of use, which is
worrying."
The survey team based their findings
on responses from 763 participants but they also looked closely at a
sub-group of 81 "typical" ecstasy users who had taken the drug at
least 10 times.
The typical users showed their
long-term memory to be 14 percent worse than the 480 people who had
never taken ecstasy and 23 percent worse than the 242 who had never
taken drugs at all.
Additionally, the typical users made
29 percent more mistakes on the questionnaire form than the people who
did not take drugs at all.
"The findings also suggest that
ecstasy users who take cannabis are suffering from a 'double whammy'
where both their long-term and short-term memory is being impaired,"
Rodgers said.
The study has been published in the
current edition of the Journal of Psychopharmacology. -- Ananova
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