Drug and Alcohol Dependence
Volume 121, Issue 1 , Pages 1-9, 1 February 2012

MDMA and temperature: A review of the thermal effects of ‘Ecstasy’ in humans

  • A.C. Parrott

      Affiliations

    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Tel.: +44 1792 295271; fax: +44 1792 295679.

Department of Psychology, Swansea University, Swansea SA2 8PP, United Kingdom

Received 9 June 2011; received in revised form 20 July 2011; accepted 12 August 2011.

Abstract 

Aims

To review the thermal effects of MDMA in humans, and discuss the practical implications.

Methods

The literature on Ecstasy/MDMA, body temperature, and subjective thermal self-ratings was reviewed, and explanatory models for the changes in thermal homeostasis were examined and debated.

Results

In human placebo-controlled laboratory studies, the effects of MDMA were dose related. Low doses had little effect, moderate doses increased body temperature by around +0.4°C, and higher doses caused a mean increase of +0.7°C. With Ecstasy/MDMA using dance clubbers, the findings showed greater variation, due possibly to uncontrolled factors such as physical activity, ambient temperature, and overcrowding. Some real world studies found average body temperature increases of over +1.0°C. Thermal homeostasis involves a balance between heat production and heat dissipation, and MDMA affects both aspects of this homeostatic equation. Cellular metabolic heat output is increased, and heat dissipation mechanisms are stressed, with the onset of sweating delayed. Subjective responses of ‘feeling hot’ or ‘hot-cold flushes’ are frequent, but can show individual variation. Some recreational users report that heat increases or reinstates the positive mood effects of Ecstasy/MDMA. The dangers of acute hyperthermia can include rare fatalities. It is unclear why moderate hyperthermia can occasionally progress to severe hyperpyrexia, although it may reflect a combination or cascade of events. In chronic terms, the bioenergetic stress model notes that the adverse psychobiological effects of MDMA are heightened by various co-stimulatory factors, including heat stress.

Conclusions

MDMA increases core body temperature and thermal stress in humans.

Keywords: Ecstasy, Mdma, Serotonin, Dopamine, Heat, Stress, Temperature, Thermal, Neurotoxicity

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PII: S0376-8716(11)00357-7

doi:10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2011.08.012

Drug and Alcohol Dependence
Volume 121, Issue 1 , Pages 1-9, 1 February 2012