-Caveat Lector- Now we need to find-out who Eric Harris' Psychiatrist was...... Will he turn-out to have connections to the National Security Dictatorship? -- Lloyd -----Original Message----- From: Ian Goddard <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Date: Tuesday, May 04, 1999 6:12 AM Subject: -----Original Message----- From: Ian Goddard <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Date: Tuesday, May 04, 1999 6:12 AM Subject: Gunman on Luvox - Confirmed * LITTLETON GUNMAN TESTS POSITIVE FOR MANIA-INDUCING DRUG * ABC's Colorado affiliate KCNC NEWS4 reports (5/4/99) [1]: "[T]he coroner has released further toxicology reports on Eric Harris, one of the two dead suspects. Specialized testing shows levels of Luvox in Harris' blood in a therapeutic range." While doctors interviewed by The Washington Post [2] and CNN [3] claim there's no link between Luvox and aggressive behavior, the medical literature gives a different picture. Luvox is the trade name for fluvoxamine, which research shows can induce mania. A study found in the "American Journal of Psychiatry" (9/91, page 1264) concludes: "Our observations confirm the efficacy of fluvoxamine [ Luvox ] in the treatment of depression but suggest that this drug can induce mania in some patients when it is given at normal doses." [4] One symptom of mania can be "aggressive behavior." [5] Luvox is a selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI). About such drugs Dr. Jodi Worrel of the Western Missouri Mental Health Center states: "Child and adolescent data suggest worsening of aggression with SSRI treatment."[6] Psychiatric-drug expert Dr. Peter Breggin states [7]: "According to the manufacturer, Solvay, 4% of children and youth taking Luvox developed mania during short-term controlled clinical trials. Mania is a psychosis which can produce bizarre, grandiose, highly elaborated destructive plans..." A study published in the "Journal of Clinical Psychiatry" (July 1995, pages 288-96) states about another SSRI drug similar to Luvox: "Fluoxetine-treated patients reported an increased frequency of...anger or aggression." [8] A study by researchers at the Hadassah-Hebrew University School of Medicine in Jerusalem published in the "Annals of Pharmacotherapy" concluded the following about Luvox: "Our case series suggests that fluvoxamine may have the ability to induce or unmask manic behavior in depressed patients. Clinicians are alerted to monitor for this 'switching' effect..."[9] In that study, patients suffering Luvox-induced mania were not helped by the anti-mania drug lithium, indeed it seemed to make them worse. Only when the use of Luvox stopped did the patient's mania clear. Not only Luvox causes mania. In a letter published in the "American Journal of Psychiatry" (3/90, page 372), researcher Dr. Alan Lipschitz states: "I would like to draw your attention to a psychiatric aphorism that illuminates some mood disorder mechanisms: Every antidepressant that does not cure mania causes mania." [10] So it seems mania is linked to many antidepressants. Eric Harris, who was said to be the leader of the two dead gunman, had been taking a mania-inducing drug and displayed aggressive and unusual behavior indicative of mania prior to his deadly shooting rampage at Columbine High school, when, as tests prove, he was on that mania- inducing drug, Luvox. (relevant http://drugawareness.org) _________________________________________________________ [1] KCNC NEWS4: Columbine Shooting (5/4/99, 12:41 AM ET) http://www.kcncnews4.com/prd1/now/now_template_utility. call_proper_frameset?p_story=146544&p_who=kcnc&p_section=200 [2] The Washington Post: Shooter Used Often-Prescribed Drug: http://search.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/WPlate/1999-04/30/ 016l-043099-idx.html [3] CNN: Columbine shooter was prescribed anti-depressant: http://cnn.com/HEALTH/9904/29/luvox.explainer/index.html [4] American Journal of Psychiatry: Mania and Fluvoxamine. C.Burrai, A.Bocchetta, M.Zompo, Sept.'91, (148)9, p.1263-4. [5] Bipolar Disorder (Manic-Depression) Explained: http://mentalhelp.net/articles/grohol/bipolar.htm [6] The Psyche: Chronic Treatment of Aggressive Behavior. By Jodi Worrel, Pharm.D., May 1998 Volume 3, Issue 5. http://www.med.umkc.edu/thepsyche/pastissu/may98/index.html [7] "Eric Harris was taking Luvox (a Prozac-like drug) at the time of the Littleton murders." By Peter R. Breggin, M.D., April 30, 1999: http://www.breggin.com/luvox.html [8] Journal Of Clinical Psychiatry: Postmarketing surveillance by patient self-monitoring: preliminary data for sertraline versus fluoxetine. Fisher, Kent, Bryant, 7/95, 56(7):288-96. [9] Annals Of Pharmacotherapy: Fluvoxamine-associated manic behavior: a case series. A. Dorevitch, Y. Frankel, A. Bar- Halperin, December 1993, Vol. 27 No. 12, pages 1455-7. [10] American Journal of Psychiatry: Antidepressants and mania. Alan Lipschitz, March 1990, Vol.147, No.3, p. 372. Was the Littleton Shooting a Drug-Induced Mania? http://www.erols.com/igoddard/littleton.htm ------------------------------------------------------------ GODDARD'S JOURNAL: http://www.erols.com/igoddard/journal.htm ____________________________________________________________ * LITTLETON GUNMAN TESTS POSITIVE FOR MANIA-INDUCING DRUG * ABC's Colorado affiliate KCNC NEWS4 reports (5/4/99) [1]: "[T]he coroner has released further toxicology reports on Eric Harris, one of the two dead suspects. Specialized testing shows levels of Luvox in Harris' blood in a therapeutic range." While doctors interviewed by The Washington Post [2] and CNN [3] claim there's no link between Luvox and aggressive behavior, the medical literature gives a different picture. Luvox is the trade name for fluvoxamine, which research shows can induce mania. A study found in the "American Journal of Psychiatry" (9/91, page 1264) concludes: "Our observations confirm the efficacy of fluvoxamine [ Luvox ] in the treatment of depression but suggest that this drug can induce mania in some patients when it is given at normal doses." [4] One symptom of mania can be "aggressive behavior." [5] Luvox is a selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI). About such drugs Dr. Jodi Worrel of the Western Missouri Mental Health Center states: "Child and adolescent data suggest worsening of aggression with SSRI treatment."[6] Psychiatric-drug expert Dr. Peter Breggin states [7]: "According to the manufacturer, Solvay, 4% of children and youth taking Luvox developed mania during short-term controlled clinical trials. Mania is a psychosis which can produce bizarre, grandiose, highly elaborated destructive plans..." A study published in the "Journal of Clinical Psychiatry" (July 1995, pages 288-96) states about another SSRI drug similar to Luvox: "Fluoxetine-treated patients reported an increased frequency of...anger or aggression." [8] A study by researchers at the Hadassah-Hebrew University School of Medicine in Jerusalem published in the "Annals of Pharmacotherapy" concluded the following about Luvox: "Our case series suggests that fluvoxamine may have the ability to induce or unmask manic behavior in depressed patients. Clinicians are alerted to monitor for this 'switching' effect..."[9] In that study, patients suffering Luvox-induced mania were not helped by the anti-mania drug lithium, indeed it seemed to make them worse. Only when the use of Luvox stopped did the patient's mania clear. Not only Luvox causes mania. In a letter published in the "American Journal of Psychiatry" (3/90, page 372), researcher Dr. Alan Lipschitz states: "I would like to draw your attention to a psychiatric aphorism that illuminates some mood disorder mechanisms: Every antidepressant that does not cure mania causes mania." [10] So it seems mania is linked to many antidepressants. Eric Harris, who was said to be the leader of the two dead gunman, had been taking a mania-inducing drug and displayed aggressive and unusual behavior indicative of mania prior to his deadly shooting rampage at Columbine High school, when, as tests prove, he was on that mania- inducing drug, Luvox. (relevant http://drugawareness.org) _________________________________________________________ [1] KCNC NEWS4: Columbine Shooting (5/4/99, 12:41 AM ET) http://www.kcncnews4.com/prd1/now/now_template_utility. call_proper_frameset?p_story=146544&p_who=kcnc&p_section=200 [2] The Washington Post: Shooter Used Often-Prescribed Drug: http://search.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/WPlate/1999-04/30/ 016l-043099-idx.html [3] CNN: Columbine shooter was prescribed anti-depressant: http://cnn.com/HEALTH/9904/29/luvox.explainer/index.html [4] American Journal of Psychiatry: Mania and Fluvoxamine. C.Burrai, A.Bocchetta, M.Zompo, Sept.'91, (148)9, p.1263-4. [5] Bipolar Disorder (Manic-Depression) Explained: http://mentalhelp.net/articles/grohol/bipolar.htm [6] The Psyche: Chronic Treatment of Aggressive Behavior. By Jodi Worrel, Pharm.D., May 1998 Volume 3, Issue 5. http://www.med.umkc.edu/thepsyche/pastissu/may98/index.html [7] "Eric Harris was taking Luvox (a Prozac-like drug) at the time of the Littleton murders." By Peter R. Breggin, M.D., April 30, 1999: http://www.breggin.com/luvox.html [8] Journal Of Clinical Psychiatry: Postmarketing surveillance by patient self-monitoring: preliminary data for sertraline versus fluoxetine. Fisher, Kent, Bryant, 7/95, 56(7):288-96. [9] Annals Of Pharmacotherapy: Fluvoxamine-associated manic behavior: a case series. A. Dorevitch, Y. Frankel, A. Bar- Halperin, December 1993, Vol. 27 No. 12, pages 1455-7. [10] American Journal of Psychiatry: Antidepressants and mania. Alan Lipschitz, March 1990, Vol.147, No.3, p. 372. Was the Littleton Shooting a Drug-Induced Mania? http://www.erols.com/igoddard/littleton.htm ------------------------------------------------------------ GODDARD'S JOURNAL: http://www.erols.com/igoddard/journal.htm ____________________________________________________________ -- Forwarded for info and discussion from the New Paradigms Discussion List, not necessarily endorsed by: *********************************** Lloyd Miller, Research Director for A-albionic Research (POB 20273, Ferndale, MI 48220), a ruling class/conspiracy research resource for the entire political-ideological spectrum. Quarterly journal, book sales, rare/out-of-print searches, New Paradigms Discussion List, Weekly Up-date Lists & E-text Archive of research, intelligence, catalogs, & resources. 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