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Alcohol, Adderall a dangerous mixture

Published: Wednesday, October 19, 2005

Updated: Sunday, June 21, 2009 00:06


The dollar pitchers just ran out. It is 9 p.m. when Brent and Henry exit the bar to get a dose of much needed energy. The night started at 7 p.m. and with the help of little blue pills it will not end until 3:30 a.m.

"It peps me up a little, I'm on my game," Brent, who requested his real name not be used, said 45 minutes after popping the pill. "It counters the depressive effects of alcohol."

Despite drinking heavily for nearly six hours, the duo remains awake and alert. The pill combating the slowing effects of alcohol is the attention deficit disorder drug Adderall.

"You can drink like Superman because you're up for so much longer and the alcohol doesn't affect your motor skills," said Henry, who also requested his real name not be used.

Abusing prescription drugs such as Adderall has been on the rise during the past five years, said Curt Haywood, substance abuse specialist at the Younkin Success Center.

"Students are talking to each other and saying 'try this out,' it's word of mouth as something you can get high on," Haywood said.

Adderall affects the sympathetic nervous system and speeds up the heart, giving the user more energy, said Tom Pepper, medical director for Talbot Hall and Ohio State University East Hospital.

"If you drink (alcohol) it tends to bring you down and slow you down but if you take a stimulant you can get drunk and stay energized," Pepper said.

Drinking with stimulants is nothing new, Haywood said.

Consuming alcohol in conjunction with drugs such as No-Doz has been around for years.

"Students definitely will use to enhance and prolong the party but their blood alcohol content is continuing to go up and up, and instead of packing it (up) and going home they are continuing to drink and their BAC is going higher and higher and higher," Haywood said.

The trend of abusing pharmaceuticals is something that started along East Coast preparatory schools, said Louise Douce, psychologist and director of Counseling and Consultation Services for the Younkin Success Center.

"Because alcohol is a depressant and Adderall is a stimulant the ways that alcohol makes you slow down the stimulant would delay," she said. "(But) when you start mixing Adderall and alcohol you are asking for other problems that can be very dangerous."

Long term Adderall abuse can result in increased blood pressure, heart damage and even psychosis, said Dr. Eugene Arnold, a child psychiatrist and professor emeritus of psychiatry.

In addition to the effects that Adderall abuse can bring in and of itself, drinking alcohol along with it can lead to a number of other problems, he said.

"They are doing themselves in by drinking more," Arnold said. "The system has safeguards to tell you that you had too much to drink so that you stop and rest. But if you overcome that it would be like taking a bunch of analgesic it go out play football to bang yourself up other than what you could tolerate. I think that it is a very stupid thing to do."

Henry said he has not noticed any negative effects of his Adderall use besides feeling a little strange the next morning.

"(The next morning) is different from a regular hangover," Arnold said. "My head feels real slow. After riding so high you have to crash down."

Adderall abuse can potentially lead toward the use of more powerful stimulants, Haywood said.

"I think if someone is taking Adderall to enhance their party experience and they see how much that works then they may be more apt to pick up another stimulant such as cocaine or methamphetamines because they are getting more and more used to experiencing stimulant sensations when they are partying," he said.

Henry and Brent said they both believe they will neither get hooked nor move onto harder drugs as a result of their Adderall use.

Henry is a senior in computer engineering with a grade point average of about 3.6. He got his start using Adderall for recreational purposes when he broke his finger last year.

The doctors gave him a prescription for the painkiller Percocet that he gave to a friend in exchange for Adderall.

"(When) I started up I took too much," Henry said. "Doctors recommend starting at five milligrams. The first time I took 20 milligrams - I didn't fall asleep until 4:30 a.m."

He has taken Adderall around 20 times during a period of five to six months, he said.

Brent, a senior in photography, said his first time taking the drug was more than three years ago. He found out about it through high school friends.

"It was pretty sweet - a euphoric sensation. Granted, it was mixed with quite a few drinks of alcohol," Brent said.

Brent, like Henry, said he gets his Adderall through friends who have legitimate prescriptions.

"I (trade) anything from money, gifts or bartering," he said. "It's a good economy."

Brent said he takes the drug while drinking in order to remain more alert throughout the night.

"It definitely helps you to be more alert and kind of polarizes your thoughts which is always good when drinking alcohol," he said.

Adderall is also used by those without a prescription as a means to help them study, Douce said.

"I think there is some who may use it for midterms and finals who want to pull an all nighter," she said.

Brent said he has taken the drug when he was facing a mountain of school work.

"If you are given an assignment you just jump into whatever you are doing," he said.

Dr. Roger Miller, assistant director for clinical services at the Wilce Student Health Center, said he recognizes that drugs such as Adderall are becoming more popular but feels there are safeguards to prevent the drugs from getting into the hands of those who do not have a prescription.

"Someone can't walk in and say 'I'm out of my Ritalin can you give me a refill?,'" he said. "With these drugs you want to see written proof of previous testing and you want to be sure you're giving it to someone who really needs it. And in that case you are going to be giving it to them in small quantities and encouraging them to come back and visit."

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9 comments

End The Drug War
Wed Feb 8 2012 14:57
Wow. Another robot reports on the naughty-tisk-tisk use of drugs for recreation. How cute. Nixon would be so proud of your closed-mindedness and willingness to perpetuate a broken system that makes criminals out of hapless citizens searching for kicks -- because the culture has taken everything else real away from them.

Brilliant.

Mark K
Wed Jun 1 2011 11:40
"Henry is a senior in computer engineering with a grade point average of about 3.6. He got his start using Adderall for recreational purposes when he broke his finger last year.

"The doctors gave him a prescription for the painkiller Percocet that he gave to a friend in exchange for Adderall."

EDIT, PEOPLE!

Anonymous
Wed Dec 15 2010 14:03
Unfortunately, the only people who suffer as a result of harsher restrictions on prescription drug access for legitimate medical treatments are those who truly need the medications and take them as they are prescribed by their very competent physicians. There needs to be penalties on these two students who traded prescription drugs...THAT IS AGAINST THE LAW! Uphold the laws we have and we will all be fine.
Anonymous
Mon Jul 12 2010 12:51
It seems lazy to blame pharmacies, and even worse to make people who use it for the correct reasons feel like drug chasers. Assign responsibility where it belongs.
Anonymous
Sun Mar 28 2010 19:28
Well J.D. maybe next time you think you can fly, you'll jump off something and seriously injure yourself or worse...then you won't be thinking adderall and alcohol are such a great idea.
Anonymous
Wed Mar 3 2010 09:26
Great reporting. This is a huge problem on college campuses. Pharmacies must be stricter about the prescriptions they hand out.
Anonymous
Mon Feb 1 2010 00:50
This is fun at first but it ends up raising your tolerance so high that you become addicted. It may seem like a fix it all and i can tell you it is not. be good and get work done, drink red bull if you want to be alert at a party or a redline, not adderall.
J.D.
Thu Dec 31 2009 14:51
Yeah I agree. Adderall and Alcohol go together like bread and butter. Adderall is the "fix it all drug", at least for me. When I drink on it, I'm superman and I can fly, or drink till the sun comes up.
Brandon
Sun Nov 22 2009 08:03
Another scaremonger article! Great work!






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