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Two of the largest busts this year involved sailors in the San Diego-based U.S. Third Fleet, which announced last month that it planned to dismiss 28 sailors assigned to the aircraft carrier USS Ronald Reagan. A month earlier, 64 sailors, including 49 from the Vinson, were accused of being involved in a Spice ring. Many of the cases were discovered after one person was caught with the drug, prompting broader investigations. Lt. Commander Donald Hurst, a fourth-year psychiatry resident at San Diego's Naval Medical Center, said the hospital is believed to have seen more cases than any other health facility in the country. Doctors saw users experiencing bad reactions once a month, but now see them weekly. Users suffer everything from vomiting, elevated blood pressure and seizures to extreme agitation, anxiety and delusions. Hurst said the behavior in many cases he witnessed at first seemed akin to schizophrenia. Usually within minutes, however, the person became completely lucid. Sometimes, the person goes in and out of such episodes for days. He recalled one especially bizarre case of a sailor who came in with his sobbing wife. "He stood there holding a sandwich in front of him with no clue as to what to do," he said. "He opened it up, looked at it, touched it. I took it and folded it over and then he took a bite out it. But then we had to tell him,
'You have to chew.'" An hour later when Hurst went back to evaluate him, he was completely normal and worried about being in trouble. "That's something you don't see with acute schizophrenic patients," he said. "Then we found out based on the numbers of people coming in like this, that OK there's a new drug out there." Hurst decided to study 10 cases. Some also had smoked marijuana or drank alcohol, while others only smoked Spice. Of the 10, nine had lost a sense of reality. Seven babbled incoherently. The symptoms for seven of them lasted four to eight days. Three are believed to now be schizophrenic. Hurst believed the drug may have triggered the symptoms in people with that genetic disposition. His findings were published in the American Journal of Psychiatry in October. He said there are countless questions that still need answering, including the drug's effects on people with
post-traumatic stress disorder or traumatic brain injuries. What the research has confirmed, he said, is: "These are not drugs to mess with."
[Associated
Press;
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