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originally posted by: CriticalStinker
a reply to: Blaine91555
Then I suppose me any you never had disagreement
originally posted by: Blaine91555
a reply to: underwerks
Thanks, that's helpful info.
Are there any double blind studies showing how effective it is as an aid to quitting opioids?
You see part of my problem is that when addicts seek help on the streets, it just does not end well. Let's be honest here, the real desire is to use it for other reasons.
If it turns out to be safe after study, its fine with me. Until then, it's a risk. I see nothing about long term use.
Marijuana for instance is known to be safe and I have no problem with it and in fact voted in favor of it. This though, is something quite different. Little is known about it's long term effects or even its short term effects.
originally posted by: Blaine91555
originally posted by: CriticalStinker
a reply to: Blaine91555
Then I suppose me any you never had disagreement
I suspected as much and I should have been clearer up front.
originally posted by: skunkape23
Buy some cuttings and a grow light and grow your own.
There have been different studies showing serious conditions after repeated administration as elevated blood pressure, nephrotoxic effects [41], impaired cognition and behaviour [42, 43], dependence potential [42], and hepatic failure [41, 44]. The onset of liver injury is described to occur within 2 to 8 weeks of starting regular use of kratom powder or tablets, with symptoms of fatigue, nausea, pruritus, and dark urine followed by jaundice [41, 44]. The pattern of liver injury seems to be typically cholestatic and can be severe with serum bilirubin levels rising above 20 mg/dL [44]. Kratom constituents were also identified to be potentially cardiotoxic, ideally potentiating Torsade de Pointes through inhibition of rapid delayed rectifier potassium current (IKr) in human cardiomyocytes [45].
originally posted by: Blaine91555
a reply to: Cravens
Discussing it without discussing the possible negative effects of it though is just promoting it, not discussing it.
originally posted by: r0xor
a reply to: underwerks
I know a little bit about this *cough*
At 4 head shops within 15 miles, they sell potent kratom extract in capsules, brand name of course. $20 for a pack of two (.5 grams per cap), $30 for 3, the 5 pack is $45. 2 of them will floor someone without an opioid tolerance, we're talking full euphoria then nod out, akin to morphine chased with an energy drink. This is because it has more of the 7-hydroxy-mitragnyne in it, the more potent alkaloid with a fraction of one percent in each plant compared to other alkaloids and in my opinion the only one craftable into medication. Why use weaker alkaloids when making an effective, controlled pain medication. Anyways, they use 100:1 extracts and more with different techniques to refine it. That's 100 grams of leaf to make 1 gram of extract. Can't make extracts of a chemical illegal without making the substance itself illegal. Anyways..
Daily kratom use in any form long enough will form a physical dependence and withdrawal akin to an opiate. Regular leaf not so bad, maybe comparable to codeine. Extracts, while very expensive, are honestly comparable to lower doses (high enough to get someone without tolerance itchy and nodding) of hydrocodone or oxycodone. Withdrawal from extract is the same as an opioid.
My opinion? The regular leaf isn't worth choking it down, the extract is nice but too expensive and addictive. Even a seasoned fully functional opioid addict who can weather withdrawals would buy it every day for the rest of their lives if they had the money. You can literally stop a moderate opioid physical addiction by taking it because it's completely cross tolerant, mitragnyne and 7-hydroxy-mitragnyne are full mu receptor agonists, the withdrawals are too.
originally posted by: seeker1963
originally posted by: Slinki
This is going to undermine the efforts of so many who are trying to stay away from opioids. I hate that something like this could stand in the world we live today.
They are so wrong.
Screw the FDA, DEA, and Big Pharma. Aren't they rich enough off the backs of patients-turned-addicts? Makes me so angry.
Works great for alcoholism too, although no one ever brings it up!
originally posted by: Cravens
originally posted by: r0xor
a reply to: underwerks
I know a little bit about this *cough*
At 4 head shops within 15 miles, they sell potent kratom extract in capsules, brand name of course. $20 for a pack of two (.5 grams per cap), $30 for 3, the 5 pack is $45. 2 of them will floor someone without an opioid tolerance, we're talking full euphoria then nod out, akin to morphine chased with an energy drink. This is because it has more of the 7-hydroxy-mitragnyne in it, the more potent alkaloid with a fraction of one percent in each plant compared to other alkaloids and in my opinion the only one craftable into medication. Why use weaker alkaloids when making an effective, controlled pain medication. Anyways, they use 100:1 extracts and more with different techniques to refine it. That's 100 grams of leaf to make 1 gram of extract. Can't make extracts of a chemical illegal without making the substance itself illegal. Anyways..
Daily kratom use in any form long enough will form a physical dependence and withdrawal akin to an opiate. Regular leaf not so bad, maybe comparable to codeine. Extracts, while very expensive, are honestly comparable to lower doses (high enough to get someone without tolerance itchy and nodding) of hydrocodone or oxycodone. Withdrawal from extract is the same as an opioid.
My opinion? The regular leaf isn't worth choking it down, the extract is nice but too expensive and addictive. Even a seasoned fully functional opioid addict who can weather withdrawals would buy it every day for the rest of their lives if they had the money. You can literally stop a moderate opioid physical addiction by taking it because it's completely cross tolerant, mitragnyne and 7-hydroxy-mitragnyne are full mu receptor agonists, the withdrawals are too.
Spoken like a real deal opiate addict. More of this is needed in the Kratom conversation — Underwerks would have you believe you could ‘cold turkey’ a legit opiate addiction with $10/day of Kratom.
That’s naive, dangerous, and borderline malfeasance.
Glad you spoke up. The pie is always in the sky...because you can never reach it. Call it a mitigation or maintenance conduit, but don’t ever intimate it’s anything close to a cure all — without doubt that poster has done a disservice to Kratom’s harm reduction and safe use potential.