People who swallow the party drug ecstasy may forget more than just their inhibitions, according to new research.
The popular disco drug affects the memory of people who take it, especially in high pressure situations, says the study by a clinical psychology PhD student, presented at a conference.
The research, conducted over four years, compared the average memory performance of three groups of about 30 participants.
They were ecstasy users who had not used the drug in two weeks, drug users who did not take ecstasy and people who did not use illicit drugs.
"Using standard clinical neuropsychological tests, we identified small deficits in the average memory performance of ecstasy users compared to both of the other groups," said researcher John Brown, from The Australian National University.
But he said another test found relatively large memory deficits that appeared to be caused by problems processing information at the time it was being stored, rather than failure to store information.
Mr Brown said sets of 10 triplets of unrelated words were quickly read to participants with about one second between each triplet. They then had to recall as many triplets as they could.
The results were significant enough to suggest that ecstasy users might experience "functional deficits" in demanding real-life situations.
"The average rate at which ecstasy users learnt new information under difficult conditions was significantly lower than that of marijuana users," Mr Brown said.
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Ecstasy may cause memory loss
Sun Oct 3 2004
Link
The popular disco drug affects the memory of people who take it, especially in high pressure situations, says the study by a clinical psychology PhD student, presented at a conference.
The research, conducted over four years, compared the average memory performance of three groups of about 30 participants.
They were ecstasy users who had not used the drug in two weeks, drug users who did not take ecstasy and people who did not use illicit drugs.
"Using standard clinical neuropsychological tests, we identified small deficits in the average memory performance of ecstasy users compared to both of the other groups," said researcher John Brown, from The Australian National University.
But he said another test found relatively large memory deficits that appeared to be caused by problems processing information at the time it was being stored, rather than failure to store information.
Mr Brown said sets of 10 triplets of unrelated words were quickly read to participants with about one second between each triplet. They then had to recall as many triplets as they could.
The results were significant enough to suggest that ecstasy users might experience "functional deficits" in demanding real-life situations.
"The average rate at which ecstasy users learnt new information under difficult conditions was significantly lower than that of marijuana users," Mr Brown said.
------------------------------------------------------
Ecstasy may cause memory loss
Sun Oct 3 2004
Link