Having Sex While On Meth

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Trade Sexual Health
Free, confidential health advice, information,
services & support for the lesbian, gay, bisexual
and trans communities of Leicester,
Leicestershire & Rutland
Trade Sexual Health is a health charity working with under-represented communities, including lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGB&T) and new arrivals, across Leicester, Leicestershire & Rutland (UK).
Trade Sexual Health is a health charity working with the lesbian, gay, bisexual and trans (LGB&T) community of Leicester, Leicestershire and Rutland.
We offer a range of free and confidential support and advice services around sexual health and HIV information; one-to-one emotional and practical support; support in 'coming out', sexuality and relationships; rapid HIV testing; community based men’s sexual health clinics; safer-sex packs for men and women; and a fully qualified counselling service.
Trade offers FREE and Confidential advice, information and support to the lesbian, gay, bisexual and trans (LGB&T) community of Leicester, Leicestershire and Rutland.
We believe that by providing you with these services, you will be able to make more informed choices about your sexual and overall health.
Practicing safer sex means protecting yourself and others from sexually transmitted infections and HIV infection by taking the necessary precautions during sex and foreplay.
There are a whole host of of support organisations specifically for the LGB&T community within Leicester, Leicestershire and Rutland.
Within this section we aim to give you an idea of what services are available for a range of differing needs. We try to update this on a regular basis, however if there is a service you know of that isn't listed, or one you cannot find please contact the Trade office on 0116 254 1747.
This area is to help you find your way around groups, services, venues and events for lesbian, gay, bisexual and trans people in Leicester, Leicestershire and Rutland.
We continue to update this section on a regular basis, but if we miss something or a LGB&T service, group or venue is not listed, send us an email or give us a ring and let us know.
Welcome to Trade’s section for professionals working in the field of lesbian, gay, bisexual and trans (LGB&T) health, or for those Healthcare professionals who just want to widen their knowledge base. In this section there will be resources, links and information covering a wide range of topics from healthcare to transphobia/homophobia and schools to safer-sex as well as Trade’s bespoke training packages, which could help your organisation become more LGB&T aware.
Crystal meth is also known as: meth, crystal, methamphetamine and Tina. In the US it's also called ice, crank and speed (not to be confused with the British use of speed for ordinary, weaker amphetamine).
Crystal's a super-strength amphetamine stimulant (it speeds up your body and its functions). Industrial chemicals and cleaning products (often toxic) go into making it.
Used in dance clubs or during sex, crystal releases the brain's stress hormone norepinephrine and 'feel good' chemicals dopamine and serotonin.
Meth comes as white or colourless crystals which can be cruched to make a powder. It might sometimes come as a pill.
Crystal can make a man feel very horny, even sexually complusive, shagging with lots of men during sex binges. Some guys on crystal do sexual stuff they wouldn't normally do, including risking picking up or passing on HIV.
Crystal often stops men from coming or getting a hard-on (known as 'crystal dick').
Long or rough crystal-fuelled sex sessions can cause sore or bleeding arses, dicks and mouths. These might not be noticed but mean more risk of HIV, hepatitis C and other sexually transmitted infections being passed on.
Sex on crystal has been described as cold, aggressive or disconnected.
Meth in its crystal form can be smoked through a glass pipe. Crystal as a powder is usually snorted, but can be mixed with water and injected. It can also be injected up the arse with a syringe with the needle taken off (known as a booty pump).
Using meth is called tweaking; injecting it is called slamming.
Meth is used for energy during non-stop sex or dancing. It can make you feel on a high, wide awake, confident (sometimes invincible), impulsive, less likely to feel pain, and very horny (and with fewer inhibitions).
Crystal pushes up your body temperature, heartbeat and blood pressure, possibly to dangerous levels, with a risk of heart attack, stroke, coma or, if unlucky, death.
You might go days without eating or sleeping. The come-down can leave you feeling exhausted, aggressive, paranoid, and in some cases even suicidal.
Depending on how you take crystal, it can damage the lungs, nose and mouth.
The drug's bad reputation comes from the many casualties it's caused on the gay scene in America and Australia.
Tolerance to crystal meth soon builds, with more needed to get the same high. The drug has a reputation for being quickly addictive. Many who party with Tina have waved goodbye to jobs, homes, money, boyfriends, friends, and health. Hardened gay scene party animals who can control their use of other drugs have found themselves out of their depth with crystal. It can get hard to think of having sex without being on meth.
Using crystal long term can get scary; we're talking psychosis or lasting mental health problems (even after quitting the drug).
Quitting crystal can be very hard, and its effects on the brain can last long after giving the drug up.
HIV drugs - protease inhibitors could cause a big, maybe fatal rise in levels of crystal in the body. And if you're tweaking the weekend away you're less likely to take your HIV drugs on time (if you remember at all). Meth itself damages the immune system, as does going without food or sleep when you're on it.
Ecstasy, cocaine, poppers and Viagra-type drugs - all these put your heart under strain. If you're using crystal too, you're pushing your heart even harder.
Anti-depressants - taking crystal while on anti-depressants can make life-threatening reactions more likely, including dangerously high blood pressure. Check with your doctor if you are on these other drugs.
Injecting is best avoided. It's the quickest way to getting addicted and runs the risk of serious health problems (skin abscesses, collapsed veins, blood poisoning and heart infections). Sharing injecting equipment puts you at high risk of getting or passing on HIV, hepatitis C and other infections.
Using hot pipes might injure your mouth and if you share them it risks passing on - in tiny amounts of blood - infections like hepatitis C and HIV.
Condoms are more likely to break after about half an hour of having sex. So during long sex sessions on crystal it makes sense to check rubbers during sex and put a fresh one on after 30 minutes.
In 2007 crystal meth was reclassified as a class A drug.
Possession can mean up to seven years in prison and/or an unlimited fine.
Intending to supply (including giving it to mates) can mean up to life in prison and/or an unlimited fine.
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Women and the Adverse Effects of Meth Use
So…Just What is Gray Matter?
Why Does This Make a Difference to Females?
Dr. Priscilla Henson is a Resident Physician specializing in Emergency Medicine at a community hospital in central California. She also serves as a member of the Pain Management Quality Improvement Committee through the same hospital. Part of the committee’s mandate is to work toward non-narcotic pain management alternatives.
Women and the Adverse Effects of Meth Use
So…Just What is Gray Matter?
Why Does This Make a Difference to Females?
Articles in the media show that use of crystal meth by young adult females has seen a steady increase in recent years.1 Also increasing is the number of young women facing depression. Meth provides an easy way to cope with these unwanted feelings as it provides a euphoric sensation and decreases inhibitions – but this long-term abuse often leads to dangerous behaviors like unwise sexual activity, random partners, and a stronger possibility of unprotected sex.
Methamphetamine causes the amount of the dopamine (a naturally occurring chemical affecting pleasure, attention, learning, and movement) in the brain to increase dramatically.
This quick and short-lasting boost to dopamine levels causes the user to seek more of the substance to further enhance the effects. But tolerance to these pleasurable sensations builds, and so too does the need for more of the drug, furthering use, and probable addiction.
Most people have heard about the common adverse effects caused by methamphetamine use: rotting teeth and gums, premature aging, loosening of inhibitions, exposure to STDs, and the like.
However, new studies are showing that there is another serious outcome of meth use, and it is particularly damaging to women at a greater rate than men.
In a study published by the RSNA, researchers found that “…women with stimulant dependence had a significantly lower gray matter volume (GMV) in the frontal lobe (orbitofrontal cortex, medial frontal gyrus, superior frontal gyrus), limbic regions (insula, amygdala, cingulate gyrus), temporal lobe (temporal pole, uncus, parahippocampal gyrus, hippocampus, occipitotemporal gyri, superior temporal gyrus, middle temporal gyrus), and inferior parietal lobule.”2
Simply put, this means that the study showed a marked reduction in gray matter volume (GMV) found in the brains of women who had used meth.
Gray matter is part of the physical makeup of the brain and is really important to humans in two ways.
First, gray matter gives people their power to process information. Found in many areas of the brain, the three components of gray matter include “neurons, the cells that make connections and store information in our brain, glial cells that feed the neurons so they can work at their best, and capillaries, which provide cells with blood and oxygen.”3
Secondly, gray matter functions in what’s called “neuroplasticity” of the human brain, or the ability of one’s brain to change and adapt as a result of experience. With this capability, the brain will actually modify its own neural network in response to many events, including normal growth development (emotional development from a teenager to an adult), and sometimes to external input such as a traumatic physical injury to the head.
Neuroplasticity acts to affect changes related to cognitive abilities, motor tasking, learning, memory, and more as children develop into adulthood.
In females, the activity of this neuroplasticity is complex and sex-specific. Changes happen in different areas of the brain than males, at different times, and in differing degrees.
For example, take changes that affect mood. Studies have shown that during puberty, females experience an increase in incidence of depression, caused by changes to the hypothalamic pituitary adrenal axis (HPA), which is a person’s central stress response system. “In females, there is an increased response of the HPA axis with advancing puberty, while in males, the response is decreased, possibly associated with increased testosterone levels. Schizophrenia is another disorder whose incidence rises markedly during adolescence and whose presentation shows significant sex differences.”4
Some researchers suspect that use of meth causes an actual shrinking of gray matter, which can lead to developmental issues and rocky recovery from later life stressors. Most agree that methamphetamine use causes permanent damage to the neural network, effectively interrupting messages transmitted by the brain’s neurons.
The female body is already loaded with its own complexities. Female teenagers who don’t use meth are already faced with complex and confusing physical and mental issues, especially those that relate to their emotional and sexual development. By introducing a chemical that works on the intricacies of the brain that control key developmental components, women who use meth place themselves at risk for developing serious physical and mental disadvantages that may last their lifetimes.
Dr. Priscilla Henson is a Resident Physician specializing in Emergency Medicine at a community hospital in central California. She also serves as a member of the Pain Management Quality Improvement Committee through the same hospital. Part of the committee’s mandate is to work toward non-narcotic pain management alternatives.
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