Kathryn Knight
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It is 1am on a balmy night in one of the ritzier enclaves of west London, and at a four-storey Georgian terrace a party is in full swing. In the Philippe Starck-designed kitchen and imposing double-height living room, the thirtysomething guests — City bankers, yummy mummies and trustafarians — are engaged in animated chatter, while some are occupied by a raucous game of Twister. High spirits are buoyed by a plentiful supply of amphetamines and Colombia’s finest white powder. The mood is boisterous.
Then, one of the guests collapses on the floor, clutching his chest. One hour later, 38-year-old Max is in intensive care at St Mary’s hospital, recovering from a severe heart attack. The consultant should be baffled by the spectacle of this seemingly healthy, lithe man in his prime suffering such a dramatic collapse, but he has seen it all before: toxicology reports reveal a high level of cocaine in Max’s blood, the legacy of the rowdy party just a few hours earlier. Max will make a full recovery, but he is told that if he takes the drug again, he could be signing his own death warrant.
It sounds extreme, but ask any doctor at the sharp end of A&E admissions and they will tell you that it is not an uncommon scenario: in recent years, many of Britain’s hospitals have seen a huge increase in what the white coats privately call “cocaine toxic” or “coke strokes”. The symptoms: at the “lighter” end, hallucinations and disorientation; at the severe end, acute chest pains, heart attack and stroke. The link is cocaine use, even if it is just a few cheeky lines at weekends.
Certainly the statistics tell a story: figures published earlier this year by the magazine Druglink show that the number of drug users being admitted to hospital with cocaine overdoses is four times higher than it was eight years ago. At one London hospital, one in three young men attending A&E with suspected heart attacks were cocaine users — as men are more prone to coronary disease, they seem to be most at risk. Other research, published in the medical journal Circulation, suggests that up to 25% of heart attacks occurring in people under 30 may be due to regular cocaine use, instead of the more typical coronary artery disease.
It is familiar territory for the doctors at St Mary’s. Three years ago, a study here showed that more than half of those who turned up at A&E on Friday or Saturday night complaining of chest pains had cocaine in their systems. As one consultant, who did not want to be named, puts it: “We’re a cocaine nation, and while it creates one problem on the streets, we doctors are battling the other front line. You see a guy with chest pains on a Friday night and think, ‘Okay, get the toxicology report.’ Sometimes you can even tell the moment they come through the door.”
People such as Max are, of course, not the most obvious of drug casualties — or menaces, for that matter. He is not on the rampage, beating up police officers or stealing people’s home-entertainment systems to fund his habit. A married father of two, who annually earns close to seven figures in the City, Max’s demeanour had previously radiated the glow of invincibility common to those who have the lot — the wife, the kids, the house, the car and the monster pay packet. He stayed fit and saw his prodigious weekend cocaine and amphetamine use as no more threatening to his health than a few tequila shots after work. “I’m not untypical of the guys I work with,” he says. “I wasn’t an addict. I live a stressful life, and I wanted to get high at weekends. I didn’t see it as a big deal. It was pretty much par for the course.”
The problem, though, is that getting high at weekends can put huge strain on the heart: cocaine, in particular, constricts the blood vessels, raising blood pressure and making the heart work harder. Throw in alcohol and amphetamines, and you have what some doctors believe is a “ticking time bomb of acute cardiac problems”.
One of them, Dr Murray Mittleman of the Institute for Prevention of Cardiovascular Disease at Harvard, was among the first doctors to carry out a large-scale study of the link between cocaine and heart disease. He feels that we are only scratching the surface in terms of establishing the dangers. “We know that taking cocaine significantly increases the risk of heart attack in individuals who are otherwise at low risk,” he says. “There is a magnitude of heart-disease risk associated with cocaine use, but more research is needed.”
Jamie, a 35-year-old management consultant from Manchester, found out the hard way. Last year, he was admitted to hospital with acute chest pains after collapsing in a bar in the fashionable Canal Street area of the city, and discovered he had suffered a stroke. He is now an avowed abstainer from his previous drug of choice. “I would never in a million years have put myself down as at risk from heart problems at a young age,” he says. “There is a history of coronary disease in my family, but we’re talking men in their fifties and sixties. I was all about the gym and healthy eating, but at weekends, I would party hard. That was enough to put my body under strain. At least I got a warning.”
Dr Sue Paterson, a consultant forensic toxicologist at Imperial College London, has noticed the increased prevalence of cocaine in toxicology samples that have come across her pathology table in the past 20 years — particularly since the department has started testing hair follicles, which demonstrate longer-term cocaine use not detectable in blood or urine samples. “Certainly, our capital city is awash with the drug,” she says. “It’s a huge problem across the social spectrum. My experience suggests that, if anything, the statistics concerning usage are an underestimate.”
Max agrees. These days, he still likes to “get high”, but sticks to wine and vodka, in moderation. It’s not easy, because those weekend parties he attends on occasion are still, by and large, a narcotics free-for-all. “The attitude seems to be that I was just unlucky, a blip,” he says. “The coke and ecstasy still get passed round like Smarties.” And in those moments, it seems, the statistics count for little.
National Drugs Helpline; 0800 776600. British Heart Foundation; 0845 070 8070
All names have been changed
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your heart tracing at the top of the story is back to front.
paul, liverpool, merseyside
What this article rather deliberately fails to point out is that overall rates of heart attacks are very much down in recent years. A trend towards healthy living and exercise, most likely pioneered and made vogue by cocaine snorting lifestylers, has greatly reduced heart disease.
rvdm, London, UK
End prohibition, pay farmers in Columbia to grow the stuff, by-pass the FARC economically, regulate the price of drugs through taxation and the quality/strength through law. We would cut out the illegal gangs and enable the revenues from sales to be ploughed back into the NHS, education, treatment.
Will., Winchester., England
Wow who'd have thought it? Use of drugs = not good for you.
Can't wait for the cutting edge expose on stabbing your self in the eye with a fork not good for 20:20 vision
Stuart, London ,
"Make them pay for the treatment", "make the NHS insurance based".
It occurs to me that anyone who has a salary "approaching seven figures" has probably paid an awful lot into the NHS.
Are we also suggesting that people who eat themselves into a heart attack should be denied treatment too?
Robert, London, UK
People guilty of minor drug offences should be made to attend a days training where they can hear about the 2 Reading school girls who were tortured to death over a drug dispute, Columbians who have lost their land to drug growers or lost limbs on the mines they defend their crops with.
Luke, London, UK
If drugs are the answer, the question is irrelavent :)
KJ, York, UK
The BBC showed a video how to make cocaine. the recipe included cement petrol caustic soda and was highly toxic.If the government really wanted to kill off the habit this video would be regularly in the public view. After doing a search this video is no longer available??
Steve Byrne, christchurch, UK
Ingo"If we want a police state to walk around telling us what we can or can't do in the privacy of our homes.."
This sounds good, but really we are talking of private, excessive self-indulgence resulting in a big public impact. Rather it is intimacy that needs protection, not privacy.
Greg Lorriman, Leatherhead, UK
Do you really need drugs to have a good time? Take up painting, write poetry, change job or change partner, and start living your real life instead.
O. U., Melbourne, Australia
I'm not suggesting that cocaine is a health food, but aren't we overlooking the effects of the 'plentiful supply of amphetamines' also mentioned in the story?
mikey, bromley, Kent
Since most cities are already awash with cocaine why do we expect the taxpayer to fund the pointless pursuit of trying to stop the trade at all. If police forces around the world allowed the free flow of all drugs of all types, the price would drop dramatically and associated crime would also fall.
Francesca, Brighton , UK
Prohibition doesn't work.take all the wasted money away from the governtment agencies who get hundreds of millions to fight this and put the money into educating kids about drugs.we would be much better off
Kevin, London, England
Legalise it, make available warnings about how it damages you and what it does, the money you make from it can treat geninuine ill people, make them pay for the healthcare if it is drink or drug related, makes sense take dealers off the street and stops alot of crime...
Adam Webb, MK, UK
Surprisingly, even 38-year olds that have never used any drugs get heart attacks. I would think a stressful job during the week is at least as large a contributing factor. I'm not saying drugs are harmless but the "don't insure drug users" brigade would probably target coffee drinkers next.
Matt, Berlin, Germany
Time to make the NHS insurance based. I'm sure most insurers would be delighted to pay out for alcohol and drug related treatment. And when they don't the NHS should pursue the individuals for payment. We might then see a dramatic drop in alcohol/drug cases and better funding for the NHS.
JC, Helston, Cornwall
Make them pay for the treatment; if they can afford drugs, they can afford to pay for medical treatment.
m wilson, bidache, france
Get off the high horse of morality, this article doesn't mention the thousands of people who do nothing more than wake up with a hangover. If we want a police state to walk around telling us what we can or can't do in the privacy of our homes, then move to Singapore or China. End the drug wars.
ingo baker, los angeles,
Surely it's just natural selection? The stupid and thoughtless have always been a high-risk category.
MM, LONDON, United Kingdom
Simple answer: Routine drug tests.
Alex, London,
To too many people drugs are the answer. But what the hell was the question?
Bruce Northwood, Washington, D.C., USA