When people hear the phrase "accidental drug overdose," they
naturally assume that someone mistakenly snorted, shot up, or swallowed
too much. But a heroin overdose, such as the one likely
suffered by the
actor
Philip Seymour Hoffman over the weekend, is not that simple.
A heroin overdose happens because use of the drug alters
the neurons within every addict's brain—but the alterations occur in
different parts of the brain at varying rates of speed. The pleasure
center, increasingly hard to satisfy, is screaming "More!" But primitive
centers that control breathing and heart rate are not building up
tolerance at the same pace and are whispering "Enough."
"As your dosage goes up, you have a rapid tolerance to the euphoric
response, but not nearly as much to the respiratory response," says
David Smith, an addiction treatment specialist and founder of the Haight Ashbury Free Clinics of San Francisco.
Added to the brain's biological dilemma are some very practical
problems for the addict. Since heroin is an unregulated substance,
addicts have no way of knowing what is in that plastic bag of powder.
Pure heroin? Heroin cut with sugar, starch, or powdered milk? Or heroin
enhanced with an even more powerful substance, like fentanyl, an opioid
similar to heroin but many times more potent?
"Literally, every time someone injects heroin, they're taking a risk of an overdose," says
Jack Stein,
director of the Office of Science Policy and Communications at the
National Institute on Drug Abuse. And the pool of people at risk is
growing. The number of heroin users has increased from 373,000 in 2007
to 669,000 in 2012, a rise of 80 percent.
PHOTOGRAPH BY MEL EVANS, AP
A police officer holds a packet of confiscated heroin; drug overdose deaths are increasing nationwide.
Heroin Hijacks the Brain
When injected, heroin makes its way across the blood-brain barrier,
is converted into morphine, and fits into the mu opioid receptor in the
brain and turns it on. Within seven to eight seconds, the drug user
feels a rush of euphoria. Soon after, the user goes into a "nod,"
alternating between wakeful and drowsy states for perhaps several hours.
The pleasure of the first rush of heroin doesn't repeat itself over
prolonged usage. That initial euphoria becomes a lasting memory, and one
to be obsessively chased. "Drugs hijack the brain, and you stop feeling
the pleasure of the experience. The addict who used to feel great, now
is lucky to feel a little better," says Stein.
The experience of using heroin changes the brain permanently. People
like Hoffman, who had said he was clean for more than 20 years before
relapsing into drug abuse, remain vulnerable to falling into addiction
again and again. "Drugs have a powerful effect on memory centers in the
brain," says Stein. "Very positive, reinforcing memories of that drug
use are really ingrained in the brain."
Hoffman may also have fallen victim to the compromised content of
East Coast heroin. "We've gotten reports in Pennsylvania, Vermont,
Maryland, and all up and down the East Coast of heroin mixed with
fentanyl," says Stein. "People are getting a much stronger dose than
they expected."
And when addicts bounce back and forth between recovery and relapse,
as many do, it gets increasingly hard for them to calculate their own
tolerance levels. They may think they can try to use a little bit, but
they often relapse faster and harder than in previous bouts of
addiction. "It's like being allergic to a bee sting," says Smith. "When
you get stung, you have this very intense reaction. Every time you get
stung, it's worse than the last time."
With too much heroin, the brain stops sending its automatic messages
for the continuation of heartbeats and breathing, and the person dies of
an overdose.
One final tragic note: If Hoffman had not been alone when his
possible overdose occurred, he might have been saved. Naloxone is an
injectable opioid antagonist that most paramedics have in emergency
vehicles. "Having access to this medication can provide a miraculous
recovery," says Stein. It jump-starts the brain's primitive areas, and
the brain again tells the body to breathe, tells the heart to pump.