Friday, September 9, 2016

Heroin Cut With Elephant Sedative Leads to Overdoses in Ohio

Heroin Cut With Elephant Sedative Leads to Overdoses in Ohio
By Dr.Fourkan Ali
Carfentanil, a powerful derivative of fentanyl used to treat large animals, has been discovered in the syringes of OD victims in Akron, Ohio.
As heroin use in our country surges, Ohio has been dealing with asevere crisis highlighted by an increase inoverdoses and the reality of addiction. But instead of things getting better, it seems they are only getting worse. Reports out of Akron claim that users are mixing powerful elephant sedatives with heroin to increase their buzz—supercharging their heroin for a more powerful high.
Carfentanil, a powerful derivative of fentanyl, has been discovered in the syringes of OD victims. Carfentanil is a potent opioid that’s 10,000 times as strong as morphine and about 100 times as strong as fentanyl. It’s marketed as a general anesthetic for large animals and isn’t intended for human consumption or use. In just a 10-day period (July 5-14), there’s been 91 overdoses and 8 deaths in Akron, according to authorities.
"What we are looking into is a bad lot of dope,” Akron Police Chief Jim Nice told theAssociated Press. "Most of the deaths from heroin overdoses are coming from too much fentanyl being cut into that.” Fentanyl and its derivatives are killing thousands of addicts a year. The drug is so powerful that even a quarter-milligram can be fatal, and the large animal version is 100 times as strong, proving to be a deadly concoction.
“The only thing killing you is respiratory depression,” Dr. Lewis Nelson, a medical toxicologist and emergency physician at NYU’s School of Medicine, told Forbes. “If I took a few times the therapeutic dose of an opioid, my breathing would slow, and I might die in several hours—it’s a slow spiral toward death.” The drug that killed Prince is super lethal in elephant-size doses. Instead of getting high, users OD and slowly suffocate to death.
Akron Deputy Fire Chief Charles Twigg noted that carfentanil didn’t react to Narcan, the naloxone-based spray that first responders have been using to successfully reverse overdoses. "Reports from the field indicate that this particular drug was less responsive to Narcan,” he told the Associated Press. With an estimated 1 million heroin users in the United States steadily looking for a way to increase their high, more overdoses involving carfentanil can be expected. And with Akron's dismal record of overdoses this year, something needs to be done to counteract the more powerful form of fentanyl users are getting their hands on.


0 comments:

Post a Comment