- Tips for Spending Holiday Time With Family Members Who Live with Dementia
- Tainted Cucumbers Now Linked to 100 Salmonella Cases in 23 States
- Check Your Pantry, Lay’s Classic Potato Chips Recalled Due to Milk Allergy Risk
- Norovirus Sickens Hundreds on Three Cruise Ships: CDC
- Not Just Blabber: What Baby’s First Vocalizations and Coos Can Tell Us
- What’s the Link Between Memory Problems and Sexism?
- Supreme Court to Decide on South Carolina’s Bid to Cut Funding for Planned Parenthood
- Antibiotics Do Not Increase Risks for Cognitive Decline, Dementia in Older Adults, New Data Says
- A New Way to Treat Sjögren’s Disease? Researchers Are Hopeful
- Some Abortion Pill Users Surprised By Pain, Study Says
Reports of U.S. Cases of Flesh-Eating Drug Questioned
TUESDAY, Oct. 29Has the new “flesh-eating” drug of abuse known as krokodil reached the United States?
The drug is dubbed krokodil, the Russian word for crocodile, because it originated in that country and can cause horrific skin lesions resembling reptilian skin. Recent media reports have suggested that the home-cooked drug, which carries the scientific name desomorphine, has now reached addicts in the United States.
But drug enforcement agents say they aren’t sure, and they continue to collect and test drug samples from areas where doctors have seen patients with suspicious skin lesions.
So far, a sample sent from Chicago, where doctors report that they’ve treated five patients who may have used the drug, including two sisters who have been widely photographed and interviewed about their experience, proved to be heroin.
“We’re checking this out. We’re very, very concerned about it. We would hate to see something like this catch on here,” said Barbara Carreno, a press officer at the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration.
Krokodil has been a scourge in Russia for the last decade, where it’s cooked at home as an alternative to heroin.
Carreno said the drug flourished in rural areas in Russia, where addicts didn’t have access to purer narcotics. However, heroin is relatively easily accessible and cheap in the United States, so there would seem to be less of an incentive to mix up the more caustic concoction here, she said.
Krokodil is made by combining codeine pills with common ingredients such as gasoline, red phosphorus from match tips, alcohol, and iodine. Experts say the result is a highly addictive drug that’s also highly corrosive to the body.
A high from a drug like morphine lasts four to six hours. But the high from krokodil lasts only about 90 minutes, added Stephen Dewey, director of the Laboratory for Behavioral and Molecular Neuroimaging at the Feinstein Institute for Medical Research in Manhasset, N.Y. Dewey studies how addictive drugs affect the brain. Typically, he said, “the shorter the high, the more addictive the drug.”
Users who inject krokodil quickly suffer the consequences.
“It kills the blood supply to the skin, so the skin starts to decompose and come off,” Dewey explained.
Photos of victims have been horrific. They show users with open sores that sink deep into the flesh, skin on legs and arms blackened and rotting, or fingertips eaten away as if by acid. Krokodil gets its street name from its tendency to turn human skin green and scaly.
Users who can’t break the habit face amputations and death. Doctors in Oklahoma say a local man died from using krokodil last year. They say autopsy detected traces of desomorphine and other drugs in his system.
Through September, six cases of suspected krokodil abuse had been reported to U.S. poison control centers in 2013, said Brett Schuster, a spokesman for the American Association of Poison Control Centers in Alexandria, Va. Recent media reports have suggested there may be even more.
So far, however, none of the cases has been confirmed.
“We don’t want to question anything that doctors are finding. I can only say that we, so far, have not gotten a sample that has turned out to be krokodil,” Carreno said.
More information
For more on krokodil, head to the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration.
Source: HealthDay
Copyright © 2024 HealthDay. All rights reserved.