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No question about it, all around the world, raves are the hottest thing since disco. Might even be hotter, but one has to be way under 30 to know for sure.
Raves mean, first of all, music and dancing. Raves are characterized by music of the techno persuasion. Most parents have sampled this music while waiting at a stoplight next to a car full of young people - unless they have teenagers in the house, in which case there's probably no way to escape it. Because, like its progenitor, rock, techno music is LOUD.
Not surprisingly, since they cater to a mostly college crowd, raves are characterized by some rebellion against the adult world. First, they delight in really bad spelling (we think it's deliberate). Next, they go from 9-6. That's 9PM to 6AM, and that's how they separate out the rest of us.
The reigning attitude at a rave is expressed in the acronym PLUR, which stands for Peace, Love, Unity and Respect. But that's not all that permeates the rave ambience.
The dark side
PLUR notwithstanding, there is a darker side to raves, and it goes by the seductive name of Ecstasy. Ecstasy (or MDMA, 3, 4-methylenedioxymethylamphetamine) is a derivative of amphetamine, more familiarly known as speed. Amphetamines and other related derivatives are powerful stimulants of the central nervous system. Unfortunately there seems to be a lot of it circulating at raves these days.
The immediate effects of Ecstasy ingestion include increased heart and breathing rate as well as reduced appetite. Large doses may result in fever and sweating, headache, dizziness or even collapse. What's worse, since Ecstasy is manufactured underground, it's ingredients are never certain.
"Sometimes the tablets contain only caffeine," says Professor Jean-Luc Veuthey, of the Department of Analytical Pharmaceutical Chemistry, University of Geneva. "Then it's not very dangerous, just expensive - at least for caffeine. The problem is in certain cases the tablets contain atropine, which is a poison, or cocaine or even heroin." Death due to fatal overdosing or through allergic reactions has also been reported.
Prof. Veuthey has been working on new methods to detect the presence of Ecstasy in biological fluids. One method using Capillary Electrophoresis (CE) with UV detection has been established earlier [1]. Currently his group is evaluating the power of CE coupled to Electrospray Ionization Mass Spectrometry (ESI-MS), on instruments his institution purchased from Hewlett-Packard [2].
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