Soma Muscle Relaxant To Get High
A growing number of teens are misusing the prescription muscle relaxant Soma
to get high, CBS News reported June 2, 2007.
"Some students are crushing it up and snorting it, " said Mesa
Police Sgt. Sean Kelly in Arizona. "They're also mixing it with
alcohol."
In Mesa, 29 students were suspended for possessing the drug. A 16-year-old
girl was arrested for smuggling 3,000 Soma pills across the border from Mexico
and distributing them at five schools.
"They're really cheap, especially down in Mexico, and everybody's got
them," said one student.
Mike Salazar, a drug counselor in Arizona, said Soma is part of a national
trend toward mixing prescription and over-the-counter drugs to get high.
"If [youths] have access to the medicine cabinet, that's what they're going
to mix together," Salazar said.
What is Soma?
Soma, a trade name for the prescription drug Carisoprodol, is a muscle
relaxant legitimately prescribed to relieve pain from muscle injuries and
spasms. When taken in dosages exceeding those recommended by physicians, Soma
causes drowsiness, giddiness, and relaxation. Soma is metabolized into
Meprobamate, a Schedule 4 drug with a potential for abuse. A significant number
of physicians are unaware of the potential for abuse and the metabolism to
Meprobamate.
What does Soma look like?
Soma is available as a 250 or 350 milligram tablet. The round white tablets
are inscribed with SOMA on one side and 37 WALLACE 2001 on the other. Soma is
also available in tablet form combined with Codeine or Aspirin.
How is it abused?
Abusers typically ingest Soma orally. There are reported instances of the
drug being smoked or snorted. Many abusers take it in combination with other
drugs to enhance the effects of those drugs. Alcohol, Codeine, Valium, Heroin,
Vicodin, Meprobamate and Darvon commonly are abused in combination with Soma.
Who abused Soma?
Individuals of all ages abuse Soma. Data reported in the Naitional Survey on
Drug Use and Health indicated that 2, 276,000 residents aged 12 and older used
Soma non-medically at least once in their lifetime.
Law enforcement officers indicate that youths living in Arizona and
California often obtain Carisoprodol at pharmacies in Mexico. Carisoprodol is
sold in Mexico under the brand name Somacid and on the street cost $20 for 100
pills. Online orders go for around a dollay for a 350 mg pill.
Soma used in sexual assaults can bbe found in abundance at dance clubs and
bars. Drug pushers go where the buyers are, and clubs are typically full of
young people looking to take something for fun or recreation. So-called
"club drugs", like Soma, Ecstasy, Ketamine, Rohypnol and GHB, are used
to enhance the atmosphere at parties and to help the user "have a good
time". Sexual predators use these drugs to facilitate assaults because
large doses create blurred vision, dizziness, and loss of coordination in a
victim.
Many "club drugs" used to facilitate sexual assault are
increasingly being sold in schools and on college campuses and some can even be
purchased online.
What are the risks?
Soma is generally safe when prescribed. However, individuals who abuse Soma
can develop physchological addictions to the drug. Common side effects of Soma
abuse include blurred vision, dizziness, drowsiness, and loss of coordination.
More serious side effects include chills, depression, racing heartbeat,
tightness in the chest, vomiting, and unusual weakness. Withdrawal symptoms
associated with Soma dependency include abdominal cramps, headache, insomnia,
and nausea. Signs that an overdose has occurred include difficulty in breathing,
shock, and coma. A Soma overdose can result in death.
What are some Street Names?
The most common street names for Soma are DANCE, DS, Las Vegas Cocktail, Soma
Coma and Wallace 200's.
Soma is known as "Sitting On my Ass" or better yet "Stoned Off
My Ass".
Soma also refers to the area that is "South of Market Street"
(hence "SOMA") in San Francisco. Once strictly a gritty industrial
neighborhood, it still maintains the grit while developing into a thriving
nightclub area.
Is it illegal to abuse Soma?
Yes, abusing Soma is illegal. Reports of Soma abuse have resulted in a number
of states scheduling Soma as a controlled substance. Some states that have taken
this action are Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Indiana,
Kentucky, Minnesota, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Oregon and West Virginia. As of
November 2007, Soma has been taken off the market in Sweden due to problems of
abuse.
Some additional facts
Soma is the drug used in Huxley's futuristic utopian novel "Brave New
World". The drug is described to have the affect of modern drugs, yet with
no side-effects. Soma is described as bliss, oblivion, pure love, peace, or pure
utopia.
Soma was used in ancient Persian and Hindu cultures to induce a
hallucinogenic euphoria. It was used as both recreational substance and in
religious rituals. Most historians believe Soma to be an ancient Marijuana or
Psychedelic Mushroom.
The brand name Soma is shared with the Soma/Haoma of ancient India, a drug
mentioned in ancient Sanskrit writings which various classical and modern
researchers have theorized could be anything from ephedra to mushrooms of the
genus Amanita with hallucinogenic and psychedelic properties related to
the muscarinic drugs contained therein to various anticholinergic plants to
opium -- or a still unknown hallucinogen, stimulant and/or narcotic of unknown
chemical class and origin or even coca or other drugs ported from the Western
Hemisphere by an as yet unknown pre-Viking, pre-Columbian contact.
Laboratory Testing
Friends medical Laboratory has a long history of testing for Soma. Soma is
metabolized to Meprobamate, a drug that is screened by Thin Layer Chromatography
and confirmed by High performance Thin Layer Chromatography. GC/MS is an
alternative confirmation method used in or laboratory to detect Meprobamate.
For more information on the services Friends Medical Laboratory provides, please
contact the customer service department at 410-247-4417.
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