Dictionary Definition
heroin n : a narcotic that is considered a hard
drug; a highly addictive morphine derivative; intravenous injection
provides the fastest and most intense rush [syn: diacetylmorphine]
User Contributed Dictionary
see Heroin
English
Etymology
Since the 1890s from a trademark < sc=polytonic (due to the feelings of power and exaltation while under the influence of the drug).Homophones
Noun
Synonyms
- sense chemical names diacetylmorphine, diamorphine
- sense street names Big H, boy, dope, junk, horse, skag, smack
Translations
powerful and addictive drug
- Bosnian: heroin
- Chinese: 海洛因
- Czech: heroin
- Danish: heroin
- Dutch: heroïne
- Estonian: heroiin
- Finnish: heroiini
- French: héroïne
- German: Heroin
- Greek: ηρωίνη
- Hungarian: heroin
- Italian: eroina
- Polish: heroina
- Portuguese: heroína
- Russian: героин
- Serbian:
- Cyrillic: хероин
- Roman: heroin
- Cyrillic: хероин
- Spanish: heroína
- Turkish: eroin
Bosnian
Noun
Czech
Noun
Danish
Noun
Serbian
Noun
Cyrillic spelling
Swedish
Noun
Extensive Definition
Heroin (INN:
diacetylmorphine, BAN:
diamorphine) is a semi-synthetic opioid synthesized
from morphine, a
derivative of the opium poppy.
It is the 3, 6-diacetyl
ester of morphine (hence diacetylmorphine). The white crystalline
form is commonly the hydrochloride salt diacetylmorphine
hydrochloride.
One of the most common methods of heroin use is
via
intravenous injection. When taken orally, heroin undergoes
extensive first-pass
metabolism via deacetylation, making it a
prodrug for the systemic
delivery of morphine. When the drug is injected, however, it avoids
this first-pass effect, very rapidly crossing the blood-brain
barrier due to the presence of the acetyl groups, which render
it much more lipid-soluble than morphine itself. Once in the brain,
it is deacetylated into 3- and 6-monoacetylmorphine
and morphine, which bind to μ-opioid
receptors resulting in intense euphoria with the feeling
centered in the gut.
Frequent administration has a high potential for
causing addiction and
may quickly lead to tolerance. If a sustained use of heroin for as
little as three days is stopped abruptly, withdrawal symptoms can
appear. This is much shorter than the withdrawal effects
experienced from other common painkillers such as oxycodone and hydrocodone.
Internationally, heroin is controlled under
Schedules I and IV of the
Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs. It is illegal to
manufacture, possess, or sell heroin in Belgium, Denmark, Germany, the
Netherlands,
the United
States and the UK. However, under the name diamorphine, heroin
is a legal prescription drug in the United
Kingdom, and in the Netherlands,
heroin is available for prescription as the generic drug
diacetylmorfine to long-term Heroin addicts. Popular street names
for heroin include black
tar, smack, junk, skag, horse, brain, chaw, chiva, china white,
dust and others. These are specific references to heroin and not
used to describe any other drug. Dope could be used to refer to
heroin, but may also indicate other drugs, from laudanum a century ago to
nearly any contemporary recreational drug.
History
The opium poppy was cultivated in lower Mesopotamia as long ago as 3400 BC. The chemical analysis of opium in the 19th century revealed that most of its activity could be ascribed to two ingredients, codeine and morphine.Heroin was first processed in 1874 by C.R. Alder
Wright, an English chemist working at
St. Mary's Hospital Medical School in London, England. He had
been experimenting with combining morphine with various acids. He
boiled anhydrous morphine alkaloid with acetic anhydride over a
stove for several hours and produced a more potent, acetylated form
of morphine, now called diacetylmorphine. The compound was sent to
F.M. Pierce of Owens College in Manchester for analysis, who
reported the following to Wright:
- ''Doses ... were subcutaneously injected into young dogs and rabbits ... with the following general results ... great prostration, fear, and sleepiness speedily following the administration, the eyes being sensitive, and pupils constrict, considerable salivation being produced in dogs, and slight tendency to vomiting in some cases, but no actual emesis. Respiration was at first quickened, but subsequently reduced, and the heart's action was diminished, and rendered irregular. Marked want of coordinating power over the muscular movements, and loss of power in the pelvis and hind limbs, together with a diminution of temperature in the rectum of about 4° (rectal failure)''.
Wright's invention, however, did not lead to any
further developments, and heroin only became popular after it was
independently re-synthesized 23 years later by another chemist,
Felix
Hoffmann. Hoffmann, working at the Bayer pharmaceutical
company in Elberfeld,
Germany, was instructed by his supervisor Heinrich Dreser to
acetylate morphine with the objective of producing codeine, a natural derivative of
the opium poppy, similar to morphine but less potent and less
addictive. But instead of producing codeine, the experiment
produced an acetylated form of morphine that was actually 1.5-2
times more potent than morphine itself. Bayer would name the
substance "heroin", probably from the word heroisch, German for
heroic, because in field studies people using the medicine felt
"heroic".
From 1898 through to 1910 heroin was marketed as
a non-addictive morphine substitute and cough medicine for
children. Bayer marketed heroin as a cure for morphine addiction
before it was discovered that heroin is converted to morphine when
metabolized in the liver, and as such, "heroin" was basically only
a quicker acting form of morphine. The company was somewhat
embarrassed by this new finding and it became a historical blunder
for Bayer.
As with aspirin, Bayer lost some of its
trademark rights to heroin following the German defeat in World War
I.
In the United States the
Harrison Narcotics Tax Act was passed in 1914 to control the
sale and distribution of heroin. The law did allow heroin to be
prescribed and sold for medical purposes. In particular,
recreational users could often still be legally supplied with
heroin and use it. In 1924, the United States Congress passed
additional legislation banning the sale, importation or manufacture
of heroin in the United States. It is now a Schedule I substance,
and is thus illegal in the United States.
Usage and effects
Heroin is used as a recreational drug for the intense euphoria it induces, which diminishes with increased tolerance. Its popularity with recreational drug users, compared to morphine and other opiates, stems from its perceived different effects; this is unsupported by clinical research.Controlled studies comparing the physiological
and subjective effects of injected heroin and morphine in
post-addicts, subjects showed no preference for either drug when
administered on a single-injection basis. Equipotent, injected
doses had comparable action courses, with no difference in their
ability to induce euphoria, ambition, nervousness, relaxation,
drowsiness, or sleepiness. Data acquired from short-term addiction
studies did not indicate that heroin tolerance develops more
rapidly than morphine. The findings have been discussed in relation
to the physicochemical properties of heroin and morphine and the
metabolism of heroin. When compared to other opioids — hydromorphone, fentanyl, oxycodone, and (pethidine/meperidine), post-addicts
showed a strong preference for heroin and morphine, suggesting that
heroin and morphine lend themselves to abuse and addiction.
Morphine and heroin were also much more likely to produce euphoria,
and other subjective effects when compared to most opioid analgesics. Heroin can be
administered
several ways, including snorting
and injection,
and may be smoked by inhaling its vapors when heated, i.e.
"chasing
the dragon".
Some users mix heroin with cocaine in a "speedball"
or "snowball" that usually is injected intravenously, smoked, or
dissolved in water and then snorted, producing a more intense rush
than heroin alone, but is more dangerous because the combination of
the short-acting stimulant with the longer-acting depressant
increases the risk of seizure, or overdose with one or both
drugs.
Once in the brain, heroin is rapidly metabolized to morphine by
removal of the acetyl groups and is thus a prodrug. Morphine is
unable to cross the blood-brain barrier as quickly as heroin, which
gives heroin a subjectively stronger 'high'. In either case, a
morphine molecule binds
with opioid receptors, inducing the subjective, opioid high.
The onset of heroin's effects depends upon the
method of administration; orally, heroin is completely metabolized
in vivo
to morphine before crossing the blood-brain barrier; the effects
are the same as with oral morphine. Snorting results in an onset
within 3 to 5 minutes; smoking results in an almost immediate, 7 to
11 seconds, milder effect that strengthens; intravenous injection
induces a rush and euphoria usually taking effect within 30
seconds; intramuscular and subcutaneous injection take effect
within 3 to 5 minutes.
Heroin metabolizes into morphine, a μ-opioid
(mu-opioid)
agonist. It acts on
endogenous
μ-opioid receptors that are spread in discrete packets
throughout the brain,
spinal
cord and gut in almost
all mammals. Heroin,
along with other opioids, are agonists to four endogenous
neurotransmitters.
They are β-endorphin,
dynorphin, leu-enkephalin,
and met-enkephalin.
The body responds to heroin in the brain by reducing (and sometimes
stopping) production of the endogenous opioids when heroin is
present. Endorphins are regularly released in the brain and nerves,
attenuating pain. Their other functions are still obscure, but are
probably related to the effects produced by heroin besides
analgesia (antitussin, anti-diarrheal).
The reduced endorphin production in heroin users creates a
dependence on the heroin, and the cessation of heroin results in
extremely uncomfortable symptoms including pain (even in the
absence of physical trauma). This set of symptoms is called
withdrawal syndrome.
It has an onset 6 to 8 hours after the last dose of heroin.
The heroin dose used for recreational purposes
depends strongly on the level of addiction. A first-time user
typically uses between 5 and 20 mg of heroin, but a typical heavy
addict would use between 300 and 500 mg per day.
Large doses of heroin can be fatal. The drug can
be used for suicide or as a murder weapon. The serial killer
Dr
Harold Shipman used it on his victims as did Dr John
Bodkin Adams (see his
victim, Edith Alice Morrell). It can sometimes be difficult to
determine whether a heroin death was an accident, suicide or murder
as with the deaths of Sid Vicious,
Joseph
Krecker, Janis
Joplin, Tim Buckley,
Jim
Morrison, Layne
Staley, and Bradley
Nowell which have been attributed to heroin overdose.
Regulation
In the Netherlands, diamorphine(heroin) is a List I drug of the Opium Law. It is available for prescription under tight regulation to long-term heroin addicts, to whom methadone maintenance treatment has failed. Heroin is exclusively available for prescription to long-term heroin addicts, not for the treatment of severe pain or other illnesses.In the United States, heroin is a schedule I drug
according to the Controlled Substances Act of 1970 making it
illegal to possess without a DEA license. Possession of more than
100 grams of heroin or a mixture containing heroin is punishable
with a minimum mandatory sentence of 5 years of imprisonment in a
federal prison.
In Canada heroin is a controlled substance under
Schedule I of the
Controlled Drugs and Substances Act (CDSA). Every person who
seeks or obtains heroin without disclosing authorization 30 days
prior to obtaining another prescription from a practitioner is
guilty of an indictable offense and liable to imprisonment for a
term not exceeding seven years. Possession for purpose of
trafficking is guilty of an indictable offense and liable to
imprisonment for life.
In Hong Kong, heroin is regulated under Schedule
1 of Hong
Kong's Chapter 134 Dangerous Drugs Ordinance. It can only be
used legally by health professionals and for university research
purposes. It can be given by pharmacists under a prescription.
Anyone who supplies heroin without prescription can be fined
$10,000 (HKD).
The penalty for trafficking or manufacturing heroin is a $5,000,000
(HKD) fine and life imprisonment. Possession of heroin for
consumption without license from the Department of Health is
illegal with a $1,000,000 (HKD) fine and/or 7 years of jail
time.
In the United
Kingdom, heroin is available by prescription, though it is a
restricted Class A
drug. According to the British
National Formulary (BNF) edition 50, diamorphine hydrochloride may be used
in the treatment of acute pain, myocardial
infarction, acute pulmonary
oedema, and chronic
pain. The treatment of chronic non-malignant pain must be
supervised by a specialist. The BNF notes that all opioid
analgesics cause dependence and tolerance but that this is "no
deterrent in the control of pain in terminal illness". When used in
the palliative
care of cancer patients, heroin is often injected using a
syringe
driver.
Production and trafficking: The Golden Triangle
Manufacturing
Heroin is produced for the black market through opium refinement process - first, morphine is isolated from opium. This crude morphine is then acetylated by heating with acetic anhydride. Purification of the obtained crude heroin as a hydrochloride salt provides a water-soluble salt form of white or yellowish powder.Crude opium is carefully dissolved in hot water
but the resulting hot soup is not boiled. Mechanical impurities -
twigs - are scooped together with the foam. The mixture is then
made alkaline by gradual addition of lime. Lime causes a number of
unwelcome components present in opium to precipitate out of the
solution. (The impurities include the useless alkaloids, resins,
proteins). The precipitate is removed by filtration through a
cloth, washed with additional water and discarded. The filtrates
containing water-soluble calcium salt of morphine are then
acidified by careful addition of ammonium
chloride. This causes the morphine to precipitate. The morphine
precipitate is collected by filtration and dried before the next
step. The crude morphine (which makes only about 10% of the weight
of the used opium) is then heated together with acetic
anhydride at 85 °C (185 °F) for six hours. The reaction mixture
is then cooled, diluted with water, alkalized with sodium carbonate
and the precipitated crude heroin is filtered and washed with
water. This crude water-insoluble free-base product (which by
itself is usable, for smoking) is further purified and decolourised
by dissolution in hot alcohol, filtration with activated charcoal
and concentration of the filtrates. The concentrated solution is
then acidified with hydrochloric acid, diluted with ether and the
precipitated white hydrochloride salt of heroin is collected by
filtration. This precipitate is the so-called "no. 4 heroin". Along
with heroin freebase cut with a small amount of caffeine (to help
vaporise it more efficiently), so called "no. 3 heroin", they are
the standard products exported to the Western market. Heroin no. 3
predominates on the European market, where heroin no. 4 is unheard
of. (Side-product residues from purification or the crude free base
product are also available on the markets, as the "tar heroin" - a
cheap substitute of inferior quality.)
The initial stage of opium refining - the
isolation of morphine - is relatively easy to perform in
rudimentary settings - even by substituting suitable fertilizers
for pure chemical reagents. However, the later steps (acetylation,
purification, precipitation as hydrochloride) are more involved -
they use large quantities of dangerous chemicals and solvents and
they require both skill and patience. The final step is
particularly tricky as the highly flammable ether can easily ignite
during the positive-pressure filtration (the explosion of vapor-air
mixture can obliterate the refinery). If the heroin does ignite,
the result is a catastrophic explosion.
History of heroin traffic
The origins of the present international illegal
heroin trade can be traced back to laws passed in many countries in
the early 1900s that closely regulated the production and sale of
opium and its derivatives including heroin. At first, heroin flowed
from countries where it was still legal into countries where it was
no longer legal. By the mid-1920s, heroin production had been made
illegal in many parts of the world. An illegal trade developed at
that time between heroin labs in China (mostly in Shanghai and
Tianjin) and other nations. The weakness of government in China and
conditions of civil war enabled heroin production to take root
there. Chinese triad gangs
eventually came to play a major role in the heroin trade.
Heroin trafficking was virtually eliminated in
the U.S. during World War
II due to temporary trade disruptions caused by the war.
Japan's war with China had cut the normal distribution routes for
heroin and the war had generally disrupted the movement of opium.
After the second world war, the Mafia took advantage of the
weakness of the postwar Italian government and set up heroin labs
in Sicily. The Mafia took advantage of Sicily's location along the
historic route opium took from Iran westward into Europe and the
United States. Large scale international heroin production
effectively ended in China with the victory of the communists in
the civil war in the late 1940s. The elimination of Chinese
production happened at the same time that Sicily's role in the
trade developed.
Although it remained legal in some countries
until after World War II, health risks, addiction, and widespread
abuse led most western countries to declare heroin a controlled
substance by the latter half of the 20th century.
Between the end of World War II and the 1970s,
much of the opium consumed in the west was grown in Iran, but in the late
1960s, under pressure from the U.S. and the United
Nations, Iran engaged in anti-opium policies. While opium
production never ended in Iran, the decline in production in those
countries led to the development of a major new cultivation base in
the so-called "Golden
Triangle" region in South East Asia. In 1970-71, high-grade
heroin laboratories opened in the Golden Triangle. This changed the
dynamics of the heroin trade by expanding and decentralizing the
trade. Opium production also increased in Afghanistan due to the
efforts of Turkey and Iran to reduce production in their respective
countries. Lebanon, a traditional opium supplier, also increased
its role in the trade during years of civil war.
Soviet-Afghan war led to increased production in
the Pakistani-Afghani border regions. It increased international
production of heroin at lower prices in the 1980s. The trade
shifted away from Sicily in the late 1970s as various criminal
organizations violently fought with each other over the trade. The
fighting also led to a stepped up government law enforcement
presence in Sicily. All of this combined to greatly diminish the
role of the country in the international heroin trade.
Trafficking
- See also: Opium production
Traffic is heavy worldwide, with the biggest
producer being Afghanistan. According to U.N. sponsored survey, as
of 2004, Afghanistan accounted for production of 87 percent of the
world's heroin. Opium production in that country has increased
rapidly since, reaching an all-time high in 2006. War once again
appeared as a facilitator of the trade.
At present, opium poppies are mostly grown in
Afghanistan,
and in Southeast
Asia, especially in the region known as the Golden Triangle
straddling Myanmar, Thailand, Vietnam, Laos and Yunnan province in
the
People's Republic of China. There is also cultivation of opium
poppies in the Sinaloa region of
Mexico and
in Colombia. The
majority of the heroin consumed in the United States comes from
Mexico and Colombia. Up until 2004, Pakistan was considered one of
the biggest opium-growing countries. However, the efforts of
Pakistan's Anti-Narcotics
Force have since reduced the opium growing area by 59% as of
2001.
Conviction for trafficking in heroin carries the
death penalty in most South-east
Asia and some East Asia and
Middle
Eastern countries (see
Use of death penalty worldwide for details), among which
Malaysia,
Singapore
and Thailand are the
most strict. The penalty applies even to citizens of countries
where the penalty is not in place, sometimes causing controversy
when foreign visitors are arrested for trafficking, for example the
arrest of nine Australians in
Bali or the hanging of Australian
citizen Van Tuong
Nguyen in Singapore, both in 2005.
Sandra
Gregory has written an autobiography covering her experience of
getting caught with Heroin at a Thai airport.
Risks of non-medical use
- For intravenous
users of heroin (and any other substance), the use of non-sterile
needles and syringes and other related equipment leads to several
serious risks:
- the risk of contracting blood-borne pathogens such as HIV and hepatitis
- the risk of contracting bacterial or fungal endocarditis and possibly venous sclerosis
- abscesses caused by transfer of fungus from the skin of lemons, the acidic juice of which can be added to impure heroin to increase its solubility
- Poisoning from contaminants added to "cut" or dilute heroin
- Chronic constipation
- Addiction and an increasing tolerance.
- Physical dependence can result from prolonged use of all opiate and opioids, resulting in withdrawal symptoms on cessation of use.
- Decreased kidney function. (although it is not currently known if this is due to adulterants used in the cut)
Many countries and local governments have begun
funding programs that supply sterile
needles to people who inject illegal drugs in an attempt to reduce
these contingent risks and especially the contraction and spread of
blood-borne diseases. The Drug Policy Alliance reports that up to
75% of new AIDS cases among women and children are directly or
indirectly a consequence of drug use by injection. But despite the
immediate public
health benefit of needle
exchanges, some see such programs as tacit acceptance of
illicit drug use. The United States federal government does not
operate needle exchanges, although some state and local governments
do support needle exchange programs.
A heroin overdose is usually treated
with an opioid antagonist,
such as naloxone
(Narcan), or
naltrexone, which has
a high affinity for opioid
receptors but does not activate them. This blocks heroin and
other opioid antagonists and causes an immediate return of
consciousness and the beginning of withdrawal symptoms when
administered intravenously. The half-life of this
antagonist is usually much shorter than that of the opiate drugs it
is used to block, so the antagonist usually has to be
re-administered multiple times until the opiate has been
metabolized by the body.
Depending on drug interactions and numerous other
factors, death from overdose can take anywhere from several minutes
to several hours due to anoxia because the breathing reflex is
suppressed by µ-opioids. An overdose is immediately reversible with
an opioid
antagonist injection. Heroin overdoses can occur due to an
unexpected increase in the dose or purity or due to diminished
opiate tolerance. However, most fatalities reported as overdoses
are probably caused by interactions with other depressant drugs like alcohol
or benzodiazepines. It
should also be noted that, since heroin can cause nausea and
vomiting, a significant number of deaths attributed to heroin
overdose are caused by aspiration of vomitus by an unconscious
victim.
The LD50 for a physically
addicted person is prohibitively high, to the point that there is
no general medical consensus on where to place it. Several studies
done in the 1920s gave users doses of
1,600–1,800 mg of heroin in one sitting, and no
adverse effects were reported. Even for a non-user, the LD50 can be
placed above 350 mg though some sources give a figure of
between 75 and 375 mg for a 75 kg person.
Street heroin is of widely varying and
unpredictable purity. This means that the user may prepare what
they consider to be a moderate dose while actually taking far more
than intended. Also, those who use the drug after a period of
abstinence have tolerances below what they were during active
addiction. If a dose comparable to their previous use is taken, an
effect greater to what the user intended is caused, in extreme
cases an overdose could result.
It has been speculated that an unknown portion of
heroin related deaths are the result of an overdose or allergic
reaction to quinine,
which may sometimes be used as a cutting agent.
A final source of overdose in users comes from
place
conditioning. Heroin use, like other drug using behaviors, is
highly ritualized. While the mechanism has yet to be clearly
elucidated, it has been shown that longtime heroin users,
immediately before injecting in a common area for heroin use, show
an acute increase in metabolism and a surge in the concentration of
opiate-metabolizing
enzymes. This acute
increase, a reaction to a location where the user has repeatedly
injected heroin, imbues him or her with a strong (but temporary)
tolerance
to the toxic effects of the drug. When the user injects in a
different location, this environment-conditioned tolerance does not
occur, giving the user a much lower-than-expected ability to
metabolize the drug. The user's typical dose of the drug, in the
face of decreased tolerance, becomes far too high and can be toxic,
leading to overdose.
A small percentage of heroin smokers may develop
symptoms of toxic
leukoencephalopathy. This is believed to be caused by an
uncommon adulterant
that is only active when heated. Symptoms include slurred speech
and difficulty walking.
Harm reduction approaches to heroin
Proponents of the harm reduction philosophy seek to minimize the harms that arise from the recreational use of heroin. Safer means of taking the drug, such as smoking or nasal, oral and rectal insertion, are encouraged, due to injection having higher risks of overdose, infections and blood-borne viruses. Where the strength of the drug is unknown, users are encouraged to try a small amount first to gauge the strength, to minimize the risks of overdose. For the same reason, poly drug use (the use of two or more drugs at the same time) is discouraged. Users are also encouraged to not use heroin on their own, as others can assist in the event of an overdose. Heroin users who choose to inject should always use new needles, syringes, spoons/steri-cups and filters every time they inject and not share these with other users. Governments that support a harm reduction approach often run Needle & Syringe exchange programs, which supply new needles and syringes on a confidential basis, as well as education on proper filtering prior to injection, safer injection techniques, safe disposal of used injecting gear and other equipment used when preparing heroin for injection may also be supplied including citric acid sachets/vitamin C sachets, steri-cups, filters, alcohol pre-injection swabs, sterile water ampules and tourniquets (to stop use of shoe laces or belts).Withdrawal
The withdrawal syndrome from heroin may begin
starting from within 6 to 24 hours of discontinuation of sustained
use of the drug; however, this time frame can fluctuate with the
degree of tolerance as well as the amount of the last consumed
dose. Symptoms may include: sweating, malaise, anxiety, depression,
priapism, extra
sensitivity of the genitals in females, general feeling of
heaviness, cramp-like pains in the limbs, yawning, tears, sleep difficulties
(insomnia), cold
sweats, chills, severe muscle and bone aches not precipitated by
any physical trauma; nausea and vomiting, diarrhea, goose bumps,
cramps, and fever. Many users also complain of
a painful condition, the so-called "itchy blood", which often
results in compulsive scratching that causes bruises and sometimes
ruptures the skin, leaving scabs. Abrupt termination of heroin use
causes muscle spasms in the legs and arms of the user (restless
leg syndrome). Users taking the "cold turkey"
approach (withdrawal without using symptom-reducing or
counteractive drugs), or induced withdrawal with opiate antagonist
drugs, are more likely to experience the negative effects of
withdrawal in a more pronounced manner.
Three general approaches are available to ease
the physical part of opioid withdrawal. The first is to substitute
a longer-acting opioid such as methadone or buprenorphine for heroin
or another short-acting opioid and then slowly taper the dose.
Third is use of benzodiazapines.
In the second approach, benzodiazepines such as
diazepam (Valium) may
temporarily ease the often extreme anxiety of opioid withdrawal.
The most common benzodiazepine employed as part of the detox
protocol in these situations is oxazepam (Serax).
Benzodiazepine use must be prescribed with care because
benzodiazepines have an addiction potential, and many opioid users
also use other central nervous system depressants, especially
alcohol. Also, though unpleasant, opioid withdrawal seldom has the
potential to be fatal, whereas complications related to withdrawal
from benzodiazepines, barbiturates and alcohol
(such as epileptic seizures, cardiac
arrest, and delirium
tremens) can prove hazardous and are potentially fatal.
Many symptoms of opioid withdrawal are due to
rebound hyperactivity of the sympathetic
nervous system, which can be suppressed with clonidine (Catapres), a
centrally-acting alpha-2 agonist primarily used to treat hypertension. Another drug
sometimes used to relieve the "restless legs" symptom of withdrawal
is baclofen, a muscle
relaxant. Diarrhea can likewise be treated symptomatically with
the peripherally active opioid drug loperamide.
Buprenorphine
is one of the substances most recently licensed for the
substitution of opioids in the treatment of users. Being a partial
opioid agonist/antagonist, it develops a lower grade of tolerance
than heroin or methadone due to the so-called ceiling effect. It
also has less severe withdrawal symptoms than heroin when
discontinued abruptly, which should never be done without proper
medical supervision. It is usually administered every 24-48 hrs.
Buprenorphine is a kappa-opioid receptor antagonist. This gives the
drug an anti-depressant effect, increasing physical and
intellectual activity. Buprenorphine also acts as a partial agonist
at the same μ-receptor where opioids like heroin exhibit their
action. Due to its effects on this receptor, all patients whose
tolerance is above a certain level are unable to obtain any "high"
from other opioids during buprenorphine treatment except for very
high doses.
Researchers at Johns
Hopkins University have been testing a sustained-release
"depot" form of buprenorphine that can relieve cravings and
withdrawal symptoms for up to six weeks. A sustained-release
formulation would allow for easier administration and adherence to
treatment, and reduce the risk of diversion or misuse.
Methadone is another μ-opioid agonist most often
used to substitute for heroin in treatment for heroin addiction.
Compared to heroin, methadone is well (but slowly) absorbed by the
gastrointestinal tract and has a much longer duration of action of
approximately 24 hours. Thus methadone
maintenance avoids the rapid cycling between intoxication and withdrawal
associated with heroin addiction. In this way, methadone has shown
some success as a "less harmful substitute"; despite bearing about
the same addiction potential as heroin, it is recommended for those
who have repeatedly failed to complete withdrawal or have recently
relapsed. As of 2005, the μ-opioid agonist buprenorphine is also
being used to manage heroin addiction, being a superior, though
still imperfect and not yet widely known alternative to methadone.
Methadone, since it is longer-acting, produces withdrawal symptoms
that appear later than with heroin, but usually last considerably
longer and can in some cases be more intense. Methadone withdrawal
symptoms can potentially persist for over a month, compared to
heroin where significant physical symptoms would subside in 4
days.
Three opioid antagonists are known:
naloxone and the
longer-acting naltrexone and nalmefene. These medications
block the effects of heroin, as well as the other opioids at the
receptor site. Recent studies have suggested that the addition of
naltrexone may improve the success rate in treatment programs when
combined with the traditional therapy.
The University
of Chicago undertook preliminary development of a heroin
vaccine in monkeys
during the 1970s, but it was abandoned. There were two main reasons
for this. Firstly, when immunized monkeys had an increase in dose
of x16, their antibodies became saturated
and the monkey had the same effect from heroin as non-immunized
monkeys. Secondly, until they reached the x16 point immunized
monkeys would substitute other drugs to get a heroin-like effect.
These factors suggested that immunized human users would simply
either take massive quantities of heroin, or switch to other
drugs.
There is also a controversial treatment for
heroin addiction based on an Iboga-derived African
drug, ibogaine. Many
people travel abroad for ibogaine treatments that generally
interrupt substance use disorders for 3-6 months or more in up to
80% of patients. Relapse may occur when the person returns home to
their normal environment however, where drug seeking behavior may
return in response to social and environmental cues. Ibogaine
treatments are carried out in several countries including Mexico
and Canada as well as, in South and Central America and Europe.
Opioid withdrawal therapy is the most common use of ibogaine. Some
patients find ibogaine therapy more effective when it is given
several times over the course of a few months or years. A synthetic
derivative of ibogaine, 18-methoxycoronaridine
was specifically designed to overcome cardiac and neurotoxic
effects seen in some ibogaine research but, the drug has not yet
found its way into clinical research..
Heroin prescription
The UK Department of Health's Rolleston Committee report in 1926 established the British approach to heroin prescription to users, which was maintained for the next forty years: dealers were prosecuted, but doctors could prescribe heroin to users when withdrawing from it would cause harm or severe distress to the patient. This "policing and prescribing" policy effectively controlled the perceived heroin problem in the UK until 1959 when the number of heroinists doubled every sixteenth month during a period of ten years, 1959-1968. . The failure changed the attitudes; in 1964 only specialized clinics and selected approved doctors were allowed to prescribe heroin to users. The law was changed in 1968 in a more restrictive direction. From the 1970s, the emphasis shifted to abstinence and the prescription of methadone, until now only a small number of users in the UK are prescribed heroin.In 1994 Switzerland began a trial program
featuring a heroin prescription for users not well suited for
withdrawal programs—e.g. those that had failed multiple
withdrawal programs. The aim is maintaining the health of the user
in order to avoid medical problems stemming from low-quality street
heroin. Reducing drug-related
crime was another goal. Users can more easily get or maintain a
paid job through the program as well. The first trial in 1994 began
with 340 users and it was later expanded to 1000 after medical and
social studies suggested its continuation. Participants are
prescribed to inject heroin in specially designed pharmacies for 15
Swiss Francs per dose.
The success of the Swiss trials led German,
Dutch, and Canadian cities to try out their own heroin prescription
programs. Some Australian cities (such as Sydney) have trialed
legal heroin supervised
injecting centers, in line with other wider harm
minimization programs. Heroin is unavailable on prescription
however, and remains illegal outside the injecting room, and
effectively decriminalized inside the injecting room.
Drug interactions
Opioids are strong central nervous system depressants, but regular users develop physiological tolerance allowing gradually increased dosages. In combination with other central nervous system depressants, heroin may still kill even experienced users, particularly if their tolerance to the drug has reduced or the strength of their usual dose has increased.Toxicology
studies of heroin-related deaths reveal frequent involvement of
other central nervous system depressants, including alcohol,
benzodiazepines such as temazepam (Restoril;
Normison), and, to a rising degree, methadone. Ironically,
benzodiazepines are often used in the treatment of heroin addiction
while they cause much more severe withdrawal symptoms.
Cocaine sometimes
proves to be fatal when used in combination with heroin. Though
"speedballs" (when
injected) or "moonrocks" (when smoked) are a popular mix of the two
drugs among users, combinations of stimulants and depressants
can have unpredictable and sometimes fatal results. In the United
States in early 2006, a rash of deaths was attributed to either a
combination of fentanyl
and heroin, or pure fentanyl masquerading as heroin particularly in
the Detroit Metro Area; one news report refers to the combination
as 'laced heroin', though this is likely a generic rather than a
specific term.
Popular Culture
Film & television
The 1996 Danny Boyle film Trainspotting, based on the book by Irvine Welsh, depicts heroin users in the areas around Edinburgh in Scotland. Other movies that deal with heroin users include Quentin Tarantino's Pulp Fiction in which Vincent Vega played by John Travolta struggles with heroin addiction, the 1955 Frank Sinatra film The Man with the Golden Arm; the 1969 film More; the 1971 Al Pacino film The Panic in Needle Park; the 1981 true story Christiane F. - Wir Kinder vom Bahnhof Zoo; The Basketball Diaries, based on the diary of author, poet, and musician Jim Carroll during his heroin addiction; the 1997 film Gridlock'd starring Tupac Shakur and Tim Roth as heroin users struggling to get into rehab; the 1998 television movie Gia starring Angelina Jolie about drug-addicted supermodel Gia Carangi; and the 2000 film Requiem for a Dream. Throughout the third season of Fox's 24, the show's protagonist, Jack Bauer, struggles with using heroin. In American Gangster (2007), Denzel Washington portrays the 1970s drug kingpin, Frank Lucas, who smuggled heroin on military transport flights from Vietnam for eventual distribution on the East Coast. Candy is a 2006 Australian film starring Heath Ledger that depicts the life of a heroin addict. Also, in the Broadway musical Rent and the movie adaptation of Rent, two of the main characters, Mimi and Roger, were both once heroin addicts, Roger having come off a year of withdrawal the year prior to when the musical/movie takes place, and Mimi struggling to quit throughout the course of the story.The 1989 miniseries Traffik is set in
three countries (the UK, Germany, and Pakistan) and follows the
lives of people in each country who all play different roles in the
trafficking of heroin, from the UK politician who is trying to stem
the flow of heroin into the UK (but whose daughter is addicted),
the businessman and his wife who run a trafficking business in
Germany, the Pakistan businessman who controls the shipping out of
his country, and the farmers who grow the opium crops.
In 2000 the miniseries was adapted into the
American film Traffic
with the setting shifted to America and Mexico and the focus moved
from heroin to the cocaine trade.
The Australian drama serial A
Country Practice had a major heroin storyline during 1988. It
involved the character of Sophie Elliott (portrayed by Katrina
Sedgewick) having a heroin addiction. She eventually developed AIDS
and she died. These episodes drew huge ratings and were widely
praised by Australian medical authorities for the way they tackled
the subject.
In 2004, the TV show LOST featured a
character who is a heroin addict named Charlie
Pace. Charlie was a member of a fictional band named Drive Shaft
before crashing on the island and it is revealed that he became
addicted during his band's success. Charlie's addiction to heroin
is a minor but prominent subplot throughout the first and second
season of the series.
Literature
Before the film Trainspotting, there was Irvine Welsh's novel of the same name. A 2007 book entitled The Heroin Diaries by author and musician Nikki Sixx from Motley Crue and Sixx:A.M. chronicles his heroin addiction in his diary between the years 1986-1987, as well as his chronic extreme hedonism, attitudes, drug use and his inevitable route to dying and coming back to life. Author William S. Burroughs also wrote about his experiences with heroin in numerous books, starting with the 1953 semi-autobiographical Junkie (aka Junky). Even earlier, in 1922, Aleister Crowley wrote Diary of a Drug Fiend. Allen Hoey's 2006 novel, Chasing the Dragon, examines the use of heroin among jazz musicians in the 1950s.Music
The well-known jazz artist Miles Davis was a heroin addict from about 1950 to 1954. His album Kind of Blue (recorded in 1959) is supposed to sound like a heroin high feels. This album is widely regarded as one of the best jazz albums ever.John Lennon
wrote the song "Cold Turkey"
in 1969 about
his and Yoko
Ono's attempts to get off the drug, which the pair started
using after she suffered a miscarriage. David Bowie's
first single "Space
Oddity" was seemingly about his experiences with heroin, as his
1980 single "Ashes
to Ashes" included the lines that refer to Major Tom as "...a
junkie/strung out on heaven's high/hitting an all-time low".
The
Rolling Stones' 1973 song "Coming
Down Again" was written by Keith
Richards about his experiences with heroin, as was "Before
They Make Me Run". Mick Jagger wrote the song "Monkey
Man", and with Marianne
Faithfull wrote "Sister
Morphine". The band's 1971 album Sticky
Fingers featured a drug reference in every track. Kill Hannah's
song "Lips Like Morphine" (from their album of
the same name) refers to the lead singer's want of an addictive
woman that will "knock" him out with one touch.
Many songs by singer song writer Elliott
Smith such as "A Fond
Farewell", and "King'
Crossing" refer to his addiction with heroin.
Goldfrapp made
the song Ride a
White Horse, which many claim refers to Alison
Goldfrapp's heroin usage.
Other notable artists who have had experiences
with or who wrote about heroin include Dave
Mustaine, Pete
Doherty, Lynyrd
Skynyrd, Eric
Clapton, Jerry
Garcia, Pete
Townshend, Ezra Crack,
Trent
Reznor, Layne
Staley, David
Reilly, Nikki Sixx,
John
Frusciante, Steven
Tyler, Kurt Cobain,
Scott
Weiland, Brian Jones,
Chet
Baker, Tim Buckley,
Jesse Ed
Davis, Brad Nowell,
Johnny
Thunders, Janis
Joplin, Jimmy Page,
Charlie
Parker, Jim
Morrison, Ray Charles,
Billie
Holiday, Phil Lynott,
Frankie
Lymon, Mike
Bloomfield, Miles Davis,
Courtney
Love, Mike
McCready, Phil
Anselmo, B.G., James Brown,
Gil
Scott-Heron, Amy
Winehouse, Raekwon
the Chef and Ghostface
Killah.
See also
- Morphine
- Opioids
- Black Tar Heroin
- Cheese (recreational drug)
- China White
- HIV in Yunnan
- Drugs and prostitution
- Ibogaine
- Monoacetylmorphine
- Dipropanoylmorphine
- Diacetyldihydromorphine
- Recreational drug use
- Psychoactive drug
- The Great Binge
- Opium
- Polish heroin
- Poppy
- Drug injection
- Illegal drug trade
- Illicit drug use in Australia
- Entomotoxicology
- Trainspotting
References
Literature
- Diary Of A Drug Fiend by Aleister Crowley (1922)
- Heroin (1998) ISBN 1-56838-153-0
- Heroin Century (2002) ISBN 0-415-27899-6
- This is Heroin (2002) ISBN 1-86074-424-9
- The Heroin User's Handbook by Francis Moraes (paperback 2004) ISBN 1-55950-216-9
- The Little Book of Heroin by Francis Moraes (paperback 2000) ISBN 0-914171-98-4
- Heroin: A True Story of Addiction, Hope and Triumph by Julie O'Toole (paperback 2005) ISBN 1-905379-01-3
- The Heroin Diaries: A Year in the Life of a Shattered Rockstar by Nikki Sixx (2007) ISBN 978-0743486-28-6
External links
- EMCDDA drugs profiles: heroin (2007)
- Geopium: Geopolitics of Illicit Drugs in Asia, especially opium and heroin production and trafficking in and around Afghanistan and Burma (Articles and maps and French and English)
- Drugs Factfile what you really need to know
- The mismanagement of methadone
- National Alliance of Advocates for Buprenorphine Treatment - non-profit education website for treatment of Heroin addiction
- NIDA InfoFacts on Heroin
- ONDCP Drug Facts
- United States Department of State fact sheet: anti-narcotics efforts in Pakistan - dated June 7, 2002
- BBC Article entitled 'When Heroin Was Legal'. References to the United Kingdom and the United States
- Harm reduction strategies in relation to heroin and other illicit drugs
- Heroin news page - Alcohol and Drugs History Society
heroin in Bulgarian: Хероин
heroin in Catalan: Heroïna
heroin in Czech: Heroin
heroin in Danish: Heroin
heroin in German: Heroin
heroin in Estonian: Heroiin
heroin in Spanish: Heroína
heroin in Esperanto: Heroino
heroin in Basque: Heroina
heroin in Persian: هروئین
heroin in French: Héroïne
heroin in Galician: Heroína (droga)
heroin in Croatian: Heroin
heroin in Indonesian: Heroin
heroin in Icelandic: Heróín
heroin in Italian: Eroina
heroin in Hebrew: הרואין
heroin in Lithuanian: Heroinas
heroin in Hungarian: Heroin
heroin in Malay (macrolanguage): Heroin
heroin in Dutch: Heroïne
heroin in Japanese: ヘロイン
heroin in Norwegian: Heroin
heroin in Norwegian Nynorsk: Heroin
heroin in Polish: Heroina
heroin in Portuguese: Heroína
heroin in Romanian: Heroină
heroin in Russian: Героин
heroin in Simple English: Heroin
heroin in Slovak: Heroín
heroin in Slovenian: Heroin
heroin in Serbian: Хероин
heroin in Serbo-Croatian: Heroin
heroin in Finnish: Heroiini
heroin in Swedish: Heroin
heroin in Thai: เฮโรอีน
heroin in Vietnamese: Bạch phiến
heroin in Turkish: Eroin
heroin in Ukrainian: Героїн
heroin in Chinese: 海洛因
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Amytal,
Amytal pill, Demerol,
Dolophine, H, Luminal, Luminal pill, M, Mickey Finn, Nembutal, Nembutal pill,
Seconal, Seconal pill,
Tuinal, Tuinal pill,
alcohol, amobarbital
sodium, analgesic,
anodyne, barb, barbiturate, barbiturate
pill, black stuff, blue,
blue angel, blue devil, blue heaven, blue velvet, calmative, chloral hydrate,
codeine, codeine cough
syrup, depressant,
depressor, dolly, downer, goofball, hard stuff, hop, horse, hypnotic, junk, knockout drops, laudanum, liquor, lotus, meperidine, methadone, morphia, morphine, narcotic, opiate, opium, pacifier, pain killer, paregoric, pen yan, phenobarbital,
phenobarbital sodium, purple heart, quietener, rainbow, red, scag, secobarbital sodium, sedative, shit, sleep-inducer, sleeper, sleeping draught,
sleeping pill, smack,
sodium thiopental, somnifacient, soother, soothing syrup,
soporific, tar, tranquilizer, turps, white stuff, yellow, yellow jacket