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Weed a growing risk to teens - Rave.ca
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News (Media Awareness Project) - Weed a growing risk to teens
Title:Weed a growing risk to teens
Published On:1997-10-09
Source:Chicago Tribune
Fetched On:2008-09-07 21:37:18
WEED A GROWING RISK TO TEENS

HALLUCINOGENIC JIMSON REPORTEDLY CAN KILL

By Bob Kemper and Carolyn Starks, Tribune Staff Writers Freelance writers
Steve Stanek and Stephanie Price contributed to this article

It stands 5 feet tall, sprouting huge trumpet leaves and spiny pods.

For decades, it has been mostly known as the bane of Midwestern farmers,
who annually unleash a flood of spring herbicide to stamp out the jimson
weed that chokes their fields.

But lately, more than farmers appear to be interested in jimson weed.

McHenry County authorities are concerned that suburban teenagers, attracted
by tales of jimson weed's hallucinogenic powers but unaware of its intense
toxicity, are once again turning to the plant for a cheap high.

Two weeks ago, McHenry County sheriff's police found and destroyed about
600 carefully cultivated plants growing in a cornfield north of Crystal
Lake. Then on Tuesday, Cary police removed several hundred jimson weed
plants growing wild on an empty lot near an elementary school.

The attraction for teens is easy to understand. Not only is jimson weed
cheap and accessible, but, unlike controlled substances, it's not illegal.
Whoever planted the jimson weed in the cornfield probably would face no
more than a misdemeanor trespassing charge.

But the problem is jimson weed is highly toxic, and those who smoke, chew
or eat the plant or its seeds can wind up in the hospital or dead.

"It's not something to mess with," said Cary Police Detective Denise
Anderson, as she yanked the weeds from atop a 12foot high mound of earth
Tuesday.

"You take a good dose of this, and you'll get a good lesson," said Wayne
Roques, a former Drug Enforcement Administration official who now works as
a drugprevention consultant. "People are not going to use it over and over
againunless they are idiots."

Jimson weed has been around for centuries. The Puritans who settled
Jamestown, Va., tried it. In fact, the weed's name is a corrupted form of
"Jamestown Weed."

Jimson weed also was integrated into the rituals of some Native Americans,
and it was chronicled in the writings of Mark Twain and the paintings of
Georgia O'Keeffe.

But despite the lore, jimson weed is more likely to make a person sick than
high. Users may suffer hypertension, fever and hallucinations. Their hearts
can beat quickly, and their pupils can dilate severely. Symptoms can last
two days.

Deaths are uncommon, but the American Association of Poison Control Centers
said there are nearly 300 cases of jimson poisoning reported annually.
Local health officials said jimson cases come in waves, as the weed goes
through cycles of popularity with teens.

"Jimson weed has always been around," said John Dellinger, director of the
Illinois Poison Center in Chicago. "So it's not unusual to have this thing
pop up now and again."

A check of hospital emergency rooms in McHenry County and elsewhere in the
Chicago area found no recent cases of jimsonweed poisoning. But the
discovery of the plants in McHenry County has local officials concerned.
Police said the crop found in the middle of the cornfield appeared to have
been deliberately planted. The jimson weed found Tuesday appeared to be
growing wild.

But authorities' quick response Tuesday to destroy the plants after they
were alerted by a neighbor illustrated their concern.

Anderson and Cary Police Sgt. Edward Fetzer were working up a sweat pulling
out the jimson plants when two workers from the Cary Public Works
Department pulled up with a truck with a small loading bed.

They joined Anderson and Fetzer in pulling out the weeds and throwing them
onto the truck bed, filling it in about 30 minutes.

The weeds were 3 to 5 feet high, with branching rhubarblike stalks,
maplelike leaves, squashlike flowers and oblong seed pods covered with
cactuslike spines.

After the truck was loaded, the weeds were taken to the Public Works
Department garage, where they were burned.

"I've never heard of jimson weed," said Public Works Department employee
Jarrett Wika. "Heck, I've never even seen it before."

But the weed grows wild throughout the area. It seems to favor disturbed
soil, such as at construction sites. It also is commonly found near
railroad tracks.

Originally a central Asian plant, jimson weed now grows throughout the world.

Douglas Kinghorn, a professor of pharmacognosy at the University of
Illinois at Chicago, said its easy accessibility is one of the weed's most
alarming characteristics. Indeed, there are Internet sites offering jimson
seeds for sale. "People might try it because it is so cheap to do. It
essentially grows everywhere," Kinghorn said. "That's pretty worrying
because it can actually kill a few kids."

In a sevenyear span beginning in the late 1980s, the American Association
of Poison Control Centers reported 1,458 cases of jimson weed poisoning,
and a majority of the cases involved teenagers.

Two years ago, Dr. Elizabeth Scharman, director of the West Virginia Poison
Center, dealt with a miniepidemic when 18 cases of jimsonweed poisoning
were reported to the clinic within a couple of weeks.

The teenagers and young adults were eating the seeds, smoking the leaves
and brewing teas from the plant.

"The weed was growing right along the fences at a couple of schools,"
Scharman said. "We had to educate the teachers and had to remove the plants."

But the weed's popularity usually wanes, she said, once word of its
sideeffects spread.
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