MDMA is a synthetic, psychoactive drug chemically similar to the stimulant methamphetamine and the hallucinogen mescaline. MDMA is an illegal drug that acts as both a stimulant and psychedelic, producing an energizing effect, as well as distortions in time and perception and enhanced enjoyment from tactile experiences…touching, feeling, tasting, etc.
Street names for Ecstasy (MDMA) include:
Ecstasy, Adam, XTC, hug, beans, love drug, 007s, 69s, Batmans, Bermuda Triangles, Blue Kisses, Care Bears, Chocolate Chip Cookies, Decadence, Disco Biscuit, Dolls, E, Egyptian, Elephants, Greenies, Green Triangles, Happy Pill, Mercedes, Orange Bandits, Pink Panthers, Playboy Bunnies, Rave Energy, Red Devils, Rolls Royce, Smurfs, Stars, Strawberry Shortcake, Swans, Tom & Jerries, Tweety Birds, White Diamonds, White Dove.
Other terms to watch out for:
Candy flipping on a string (combining or sequencing LSD with Ecstasy or mixing LSD, MDMA, and cocaine), Elephant flipping (use of PCP and Ecstasy), Flower flipping or Hippy Flip (Ecstasy mixed with mushrooms), H – bomb (Ecstasy mixed with heroin), Hammerheading (Ecstasy used in combination with Viagra), Kitty flipping (use of ketamine and Ecstasy), Love flipping (use of mescaline and Ecstasy), Parachute Down (use of Ecstasy after heroin).
Ecstasy exerts its primary effects in the brain on neurons that use the chemical serotonin to communicate with other neurons. The serotonin system plays an important role in regulating mood, aggression, sexual activity, sleep, and sensitivity to pain. Research in animals indicates that MDMA is neurotoxic…poisonous to nerves or nerve tissue…whether or not this is also true in humans is currently an area of intense investigation. MDMA can also be dangerous to health and, on rare occasions, lethal.
The serotonin system, which is compromised by ecstasy, is fundamental to the brain’s integration of information and emotion. At the very least, people who take ecstasy even just a few times, are risking long-term or perhaps permanent problems with learning and memory. (NIDA)
Health Hazards:
For some people, MDMA can be addictive. A survey of young adult and adolescent MDMA users found that 43 percent of those who reported ecstasy use met the accepted diagnostic criteria for dependence, as evidenced by continued use despite knowledge of physical or psychological harm, withdrawal effects, and tolerance (or diminished response), and 34 percent met the criteria for drug abuse. Almost 60 percent of people who use MDMA report withdrawal symptoms, including fatigue, loss of appetite, depressed feelings, and trouble concentrating.
While it is not as addictive as heroin or cocaine, ecstasy can cause other adverse effects including nausea, hallucinations, chills, sweating, increases in body temperature, tremors, involuntary teeth clenching, muscle cramping, and blurred vision.
Ecstasy users also report after-effects of anxiety, paranoia, and depression. An ecstasy overdose is characterized by high blood pressure, faintness, panic attacks, and in more severe cases, loss of consciousness, seizures, and a drastic rise in body temperature. Ecstasy overdoses can be fatal, as they may result in heart failure or extreme heat stroke.
Mental Effects:
Chronic users of MDMA perform more poorly than nonusers on certain types of cognitive or memory tasks. Some of these effects may be due to the use of other drugs in combination with MDMA (flipping), among other factors.
Physical Effects:
In high doses, MDMA can interfere with the body’s ability to regulate temperature. On rare but unpredictable occasions, this can lead to a sharp increase in body temperature (hyperthermia), resulting in liver, kidney, and cardiovascular system failure, and death.
Because MDMA can interfere with its own metabolism (breakdown within the body), potentially harmful levels can be reached by repeated drug use within short intervals.
Users of MDMA face many of the same risks as users of other stimulants such as cocaine and amphetamines. These include increases in heart rate and blood pressure, a special risk for people with circulatory problems or heart disease, and other symptoms such as muscle tension, involuntary teeth clenching, nausea, blurred vision, faintness, and chills or sweating.
Psychological Effects:
These can include confusion, depression, sleep problems, drug craving, and severe anxiety, paranoia, and psychotic episodes. These problems can occur during and sometimes days or weeks after taking MDMA.
Neurotoxicity: (the exposure to natural or manmade toxic substances, which are called neurotoxins, alters the normal activity of the nervous system. This can eventually disrupt or even kill neurons, key cells that transmit and process signals in the brain and other parts of the nervous system)
Research in animals links MDMA exposure to long-term damage to neurons that are involved in mood, thinking, and judgment. A study in nonhuman primates showed that exposure to MDMA for only 4 days caused damage to serotonin nerve terminals that was evident 6 to 7 years later.
While similar neurotoxicity has not been definitively shown in humans, the wealth of animal research indicating MDMA’s damaging properties suggests that MDMA is not a safe drug for human consumption.
Hidden Risk…Drug Purity:
Other drugs chemically similar to MDMA, such as MDA (the parent drug of MDMA) and PMA (associated with fatalities in the U.S. and Australia) are sometimes sold as ecstasy. These drugs can be neurotoxic or create additional health risks to the user. Also, ecstasy tablets may contain other substances in addition to MDMA, such as ephedrine (a stimulant); dextromethorphan (DXM, a cough suppressant that has PCP-like effects at high doses); ketamine (an anesthetic used mostly by veterinarians that also has PCP-like effects); caffeine; cocaine; and methamphetamine. While the combination of MDMA with one or more of these drugs may be inherently dangerous, users might also combine them with substances such as marijuana and alcohol, putting themselves at further physical risk.
You have the right to give this report away freely. You may use it as a bonus item on your website, email it to your list and distribute it as you wish, as long as you do not sell it, claim authorship or change it in any way, including the author’s resource box below.
Pat Graham is the author of the eBook: “Child Drug Addicts – Save Them While You Can”
Get a copy at www.ChildDrugAddicts.com …plus free articles and more information.
© 2011 by Pat Graham – All Rights Reserved
To download a pdf copy of this article please CLICK HERE.


