Stories about Kratom | Resources | Whole Earth Gifts https://www.wholeearthgifts.com/category/stories-kratom/ Premium Quality Kratom at the Markets Most Competitive Prices Mon, 09 Nov 2020 23:09:50 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 https://www.wholeearthgifts.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/cropped-WEG-Transparent-150x150.png Stories about Kratom | Resources | Whole Earth Gifts https://www.wholeearthgifts.com/category/stories-kratom/ 32 32 Restaurant in North Carolina adds Kratom to the menu https://www.wholeearthgifts.com/restaurant-adds-kratom/ https://www.wholeearthgifts.com/restaurant-adds-kratom/#respond Fri, 30 Oct 2020 14:25:19 +0000 https://www.wholeearthgifts.com/?p=10466 The post Restaurant in North Carolina adds Kratom to the menu appeared first on Whole Earth Gifts.

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EMMY TRIVETTE | The Daily Tar Heel | 10.30.20

Linda’s to add breakfast, coffee, alcohol alternatives to its menu

Linda's to add breakfast, coffee, alcohol alternatives to its menu 

Customers have a drink outside the recently reopened Linda’s Bar and Grill on Franklin Street on Tuesday, Oct. 27, 2020.

Restaurant adds kratom

Linda’s Bar and Grill, one of Chapel Hill’s most frequented restaurants, reopened last week and now plans to begin serving breakfast in addition to its classic specials like loaded tots.

The restaurant, which closed in August due to COVID-19 complications, will update its menu with everything from a Linda’s Breakfast —two eggs any style — to french toast, bagels and pancakes with sides.

Linda’s owner Chris Carini said this is the second time he has basically started the restaurant from nothing after the University’s brief reopening and closing in August.

“I wish the University would have done a better job because they cost a lot of people, a lot of money,” Carini said.

Carini said the University closing in August after a week of classes cost his business about $50,000. So after selling most of his belongings to make up for the lost money, Carini said he is now happy to say the bar and grill has officially reopened.

Linda’s is open Tuesday through Saturday from 11:30 a.m. to 10 p.m., with window service and outdoor seating options. Starting next week, it will be open at 10 a.m. to serve breakfast.

“I was like, ‘Holy crap that’s the idea, that’s the one, that’s how we do it,’” Carini said. “That’s how we get people to come back and then we don’t have to be open till four in the morning.”

George Hanna, a Linda’s regular, has been coming to the bar and grill since 2011, around the same time Carini bought the place. Hanna lives in Raleigh, but said a Linda’s breakfast might be worth a special trip to Chapel Hill.

“Every time they come out with something new, as far as the food goes, it’s been fantastic,” Hanna said.

The Linda’s menu will also include diverse coffee options. Carini hopes when the cold weather comes, Linda’s downbar will be able to open for those who are looking for a quiet space to study and get their daily dose of caffeine.

Alongside the breakfast and coffee, Carini said he’s including plant-based supplements kratom and kava, to mix with tea or other non-alcoholic drinks the eatery offers.

Carini’s friend, Jacob Torbert, pitched the kratom and kava idea. As a military veteran, Torbert said he’s found more and more people who aren’t interested in the big partying and drinking culture that normally surrounds military involvement.

“One of the big reasons I got into kava and kratom was because I found it just helped me a lot with some of the things I was experiencing,” Torbert said. “It tends to help me with pain, it gives me a little bit more energy, it helps me focus. I feel like it helps make me more productive.”

Restaurant adds kratom

Kratom alerts or focuses the consumer, while kava acts as more of a relaxer. The two hit the same receptors as drugs or alcohol without the intoxicating effects, creating an alternative for those who may want to avoid certain substances.

Carini said the kratom and kava options offer an opportunity for those who don’t want to drink to still be social in a bar environment. It may take a little bit for the new options to catch on, but Carini said he thinks they should draw in a large crowd once they do.

“I get to help my buddy, and some of his brothers in arms, I get to help some college students to ‘get their learn on’ and hopefully give them another place to hang out,” Carini said. “And it keeps us open, which at the end of the day, that’s really all we got to do.”

@EmmyTrivette

@DTHCityState | city@dailytarheel.com 

Restaurant adds kratom

 

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Meet Christopher McCurdy, Researcher Who Could Determine Future of Kratom https://www.wholeearthgifts.com/meet-christopher-mccurdy-researcher-who-could-determine-future-of-kratom/ https://www.wholeearthgifts.com/meet-christopher-mccurdy-researcher-who-could-determine-future-of-kratom/#respond Mon, 19 Oct 2020 12:00:28 +0000 https://www.wholeearthgifts.com/?p=8773 The post Meet Christopher McCurdy, Researcher Who Could Determine Future of Kratom appeared first on Whole Earth Gifts.

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Future of Kratom… 

DECEMBER 13, 2019 6:28AM

Meet Christopher McCurdy, Researcher Who Could Determine Future of Kratom

Future of Kratom

Christopher McCurdy during a 2017 address at a U.K. conference on the ethnopharmalogic search for psychoactive drugs.

Christopher McCurdy during a 2017 address at a U.K. conference on the ethnopharmalogic search for psychoactive drugs.

Proponents tout Kratom, a popular herbal substance of Southeast Asian origin, as a potentially life-changing pain reliever that can help those hooked on opioids kick their dangerous habits. Other users claim that kratom is also addictive and suggest that its effects are nearly as problematic as the narcotics they’d been trying to leave behind — which explains why it continues to be targeted by the federal Food and Drug Administration.

The FDA has even taken part in the seizure of a shipment bound for Denver, where the city’s health department banned kratom for human consumption in late 2017. But despite such actions, the herb is currently selling by the ton in Colorado.

So is kratom a miracle drug that could follow the trail toward greater acceptance blazed by medical marijuana? Or will it trigger a countrywide crackdown that could drive the product underground?

The man most likely to provide the answers to these questions is Christopher McCurdy, a professor of medical chemistry for the University of Florida College of Pharmacy. If there’s one person in the United States who’ll determine whether kratom remains in the legal shadows in this country or becomes a fully regulated substance whose sales are authorized from coast to coast, it’s him.

Why? Since December 2018, McCurdy’s UF institution has received two grants from the National Institute on Drug Abuse totaling $6.9 million to study the various effects of kratom and its alkaloids, and McCurdy is the lead investigator in these analyses. If his findings suggest medical efficacy, additional research of the sort that could result in an eventual blessing from the feds is all but assured. But should he and his colleagues determine that the risks outweigh the benefits, the movement to mainstream kratom may well be doomed.

At this point, McCurdy, who rarely gives interviews, isn’t tipping his hand in terms of which way he’s leaning. “Right now, our approach is, ‘Let’s get the science. Let’s see what it tells us,'” he says. “If science tells us it’s bad news, we’ll definitely report that. But if the science tells us there’s great potential, or some potential, to help those suffering from addiction, we definitely want to tap that and find out as much as we can.”

Kratom advocates believe this verdict is already in. Mac Haddow, senior fellow on public policy with the American Kratom Association, who is currently pitching legislation dubbed the Kratom Consumer Protection Act in Colorado and other states, told us, “The science resonates. The science is so powerful in terms of kratom’s potential beneficial effects, and that it’s safe.”

Still, Faith Day, the founder and co-owner of Lakewood’s Clean Kratom Wellness Center, sees the need for the kind of oversight that could flow from McCurdy’s research. In her words, “There’s just a lot of sketchy players out there. We need the government to be able to work with the kratom community so we can provide safe access to this product. It’s been put in such a bad light because of all of these issues: contamination issuesheavy metals.”

For his part, McCurdy didn’t set out to become the key to kratom. “I’ve been involved for a long time in health care and research,” he says. “I started life as a pharmacist and decided to go to graduate school after I had some research experience in pharmacy school.

McCurdy entered graduate school and worked on treatments for Alzheimer’s disease and nicotine dependence through a natural product called lobeline, he says. “That got me interested in going on and doing a post-doctoral fellowship with a guy named Phil Portoghese at the University of Minnesota. He was one of the fathers of opioid chemistry and really helped to define the opioid systems as we know them today. I learned from him that you can essentially spend an entire year on a molecule or a plant.”

The knowledge of molecular biology and pharmacology and the opioid system made him think that if he could try to come up with drugs to treat dependence, he could carve out a career. Future of Kratom

Over the course of his work, McCurdy continues, “I came across a compound called salvia before much was published about it. I found it to be a kappa-opioid receptor antagonist and a potent hallucinogen. Years later, there was a big YouTube craze because of a video showing Miley Cyrus smoking the stuff. I was funded by the National Institute on Drug Abuse to study that, and I was invited by officials at NIDA to give a presentation on naturally occurring opioid compounds. I started digging into the literature and looking to see what might have been published — and that’s when I came across kratom. It was probably 2004,” when he was a staffer at the University of Mississippi School of Pharmacy.

Christopher McCurdy, right, examines a flash of kratom with his late wife and fellow researcher, Bonnie Avery.

Christopher McCurdy, right, examines a flash of kratom with his late wife and fellow researcher, Bonnie Avery.

He soon realized “there was something very interesting about this plant and the alkaloids within it. It was relatively unexplored from a scientific perspective, so we didn’t know if there was any legitimacy about the claims made over the years about it either warding off withdrawals after people ran out of opiates in Thailand and Mali, where it had been traditionally used, or if it was helpful for people trying to wean themselves off illicit opioid use. I was interested in that early on.”

So, too, is Roxanne Gullikson, facility director for Portland, Maine’s Greener Pastures Holisticare, a residential treatment center that uses kratom as part of a formal and comprehensive addiction treatment regimen, as well as follow-up care. “We have counseled patients in recovery facing a surgery who are terrified of waking up with a morphine pump in their arm — afraid that it could send them back into active addiction,” she told us last year. “And this has happened. We’ve had patients tell their doctor, ‘I can’t do opiates. It would be dangerous.’ And then they wake up with pain medication connected to them. So having a supply of kratom on hand to address their pain can be very important.” Future of Kratom

To see if he could replicate such effects, McCurdy made contact with a kratom vendor and purchased “a single batch from the same harvest — 25 kilos of leaf material that we’ve been using for about the last fifteen years. I hadn’t gotten a lot of funding at that point, but we started trying to isolate out these different alkaloids to see if they actually had analgesic activities. Were they similar to morphine? Were they less or more potent? There had only been a few papers that highlighted some of the chemistry over the years, so I wanted to replicate what was already in the literature and start understanding if these compounds had some possible treatment potential for addiction.”

Progress was slow in part because “I was basically using my own startup funds,” he explains. “I had a little support from a grant we had. But no one was really interested in kratom. They thought it was this strange thing out there and didn’t really feel there was potential behind it to study, because it was probably just another opioid, and we don’t need another opioid. That argument still goes on — but I think the real research that’s needed is going to involve humans, and that will take a long time.”

Indeed, McCurdy reveals that he tried to launch human clinical trials related to kratom way back in 2008, but “everything came to a grinding halt when they found we couldn’t say where our raw material was going to come from. That’s one of the greatest problems in advancing the research, and it’s going to be there until we can get authenticated and unadulterated kratom that hasn’t been exposed to pesticides or chemicals. These are tricky things, and having a chain of custody for that material will be problematic, because everything has to be imported into the U.S.”

True enough — and vendors have the same issue. Clean Kratom Wellness Center’s Day notes that “we are not directly importing from Indonesia. That’s illegal. We’re buying it from inside the country from companies that provide us with lab testing. But not everyone does.”

The two NIDA grants, which McCurdy describes in musical terms (“In one, we study each individual instrument, and in the other, we study the whole symphony”), have provided opportunities to get around some of these issues. For instance, he divulges, ‘We’ve started growing trees at the University of Florida. The Environmental Horticulture department is involved in this process, and we’re really starting to get an understanding of how these plants are growing, what the biochemical pathways are for synthesis, and how it can be influenced. And if we want to do a clinical product — if we can grow it from seed to commercial product — then we have a chain of custody control. That’s where I think we’re really going to make some progress and find out if we can really get to human trials. NIDA is very interested in taking mitragynine, the major alkaloid, and developing it for human clinical trials as quickly as we can, to see if it can aid with opioid cessation and trying to address the opioid crisis.”

In the meantime, McCurdy and his team are “studying the individual alkaloids within the plant, because the chain of custody doesn’t really matter in that. We’re taking leaf material or extracts we’ve purchased from various sources in the U.S., and we’re able to isolate each compound in large quantities, so we can understand how the individual alkaloids from the plant can affect an animal — rats, specifically, but we’ve also started doing some studies with beagle dogs — that’s metabolizing the compound and ultimately getting the compound out of its system. Our ultimate goal is to get this to human testing one way or another, either by purified alkaloids that can go into individual drugs, or to see if these individual compounds have real potential that can be explored and fed into some sort of standardized botanical or formulated product.”Future of Kratom

Oliver Grundmann, another University of Florida prof, is contributing knowledge about how kratom is being consumed in America today. “He published one of the largest surveys done of kratom users,” McCurdy notes, “and the majority of them said they used it to improve mood, as well as to stay off of legal or illicit opioids — and some used it for chronic pain treatment. But there’s a huge difference between how it’s used here and how it’s used in Southeast Asia. Here, the products are all made from dried leaf material, and the drying process of the leaf is changing the chemistry and composition of the leaf. I can’t tell you exactly how or to what extent, but we’ve analyzed freshly prepared teas from Mali, and the chemical profiles are different from teas we’ve made from leaf material purchased in the U.S.”Future of Kratom

Earlier this year, McCurdy visited Mali and saw “people picking leaves fresh off the tree. Then they’d put them into low boiling water for three or four hours until they’re reduced down, and use the tea that they brewed throughout the day, usually in 500 milliliter bottles. They’ll pour it out and use that bottle throughout the day, diluting it half and half — half juice with half warm water. And they’ll use it between three and six times a day. That’s why people compare it to coffee — because traditional use is really similar to the way we in the U.S. consume coffee or tea. And the tree itself is in the coffee family.” Future of Kratom

Regarding charges that kratom is habit-forming, McCurdy cites java again. “In Southeast Asia, it’s socially acceptable to drink this tea, just like it is here with coffee — and they’re both addictive in that setting. If some people don’t get their coffee, they get withdrawal symptoms, and that’s pretty much what happens in Southeast Asia with mitragyna speciosa [kratom’s scientific moniker]. They get a bad feeling or a headache or something like that. But because the products are different in the U.S., that may be different, too — because it’s become a whole other beast.”

For this reason, McCurdy doesn’t fault the feds for their kratom cautiousness. “I think the FDA and the DEA [Drug Enforcement Administration] and the CDC [Centers for Disease Control and Prevention] are doing what they need to be doing to protect the public. We don’t understand the science behind the products on the market. We don’t know how many of them are truly mitragyna speciosa, even though they’re labeled that way, and we don’t know how safe these products are from a bacterial or fungal or pesticide or heavy-metal standpoint. A lot of vendors are not testing these materials. They’re just buying it straight from the importer and repackaging and selling it without paying attention to any of the good manufacturing processes that are really required for botanical supplements. There’s a huge industry trying to make a buck off that because it’s the latest fad, and that’s a sad thing. Somebody has to step in and regulate the process.”

Haddow, Day and Gullikson want that, too. But McCurdy stresses that “those of us in the science field want to make sure there’s a scientific basis for any type of decisions that will be made in either making this a scheduled substance or advancing it into further human clinical research.”

Future of Kratom

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Kratom: The Bitter Plant That Could Help Opioid Addicts, if the DEA Doesn’t Ban It | Simon and Nick Stockton | Wired.com | 11.30.16 https://www.wholeearthgifts.com/kratom-could-help-addicts/ https://www.wholeearthgifts.com/kratom-could-help-addicts/#respond Fri, 09 Oct 2020 17:52:31 +0000 https://wholeearthgifts.com/?p=3461 The post Kratom: The Bitter Plant That Could Help Opioid Addicts, if the DEA Doesn’t Ban It | Simon and Nick Stockton | Wired.com | 11.30.16 appeared first on Whole Earth Gifts.

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Kratom could help addicts

Kratom: The Bitter Plant That Could Help Addicts—if the DEA Doesn’t Ban It

Kratom could help addicts
ARIANA CAMPELLONE GREW 
up in East Greenwich, Rhode Island. It is a small community, affluent and charmingly New England. Heroin was very available there, and very good.By age 15, Campellone was a daily user. She stopped going to school, stopped doing much of anything besides scoring drugs, doing drugs, stealing stuff, selling stuff, scoring more drugs, doing more drugs. “This was the beginning of the New England heroin epidemic,” she says. “Everyone I knew was overdosing, dying, lives falling apart, people contracting diseases from sharing needles.”

That experience was mirrored around the country. In 2014, overdoses from heroin or prescription opioids killed 30,000 people—four times as many than in 1999. Today, 3,900 new people start using prescription opioids for non-medical purposes every day. Almost 600 start taking heroin. The yearly health and social costs of the prescription opioid crisis in America? $55 billion.

Campellone kicked her habit at 19—with rehab, suboxone, and a lot of willpower—and moved out west, to the San Francisco Bay Area. She began working at a natural remedy shop in Berkeley. Her bosses and co-workers introduced her to a plethora of plant-based products, among them a tart-tasting leaf called kratom. It gives a slight, euphoric high. Like the feeling that remains when you spin around in circles, after the dizziness wears off. It was also a decent painkiller, so she’d take it when she was hurt, or on her menstrual cycle.

And, on two occasions, she used it to help with the withdrawal symptoms following heroin relapses. “Nothing really feels good when you’re withdrawing from heroin, so no matter what you’re taking, you’re still in pain and it’s pretty excruciating,” says Campellone. But kratom helped some.

Campellone never needs a prescription to get kratom. Nor does she have to visit a dealer. She buys it from an herbal remedy store—about $20 for a 4 ounce packet, which lasts about a week. When she takes too much, she gets a stomach ache. And when she does not take it, she doesn’t crave it like she craved heroin. Mostly she doesn’t think about it; it just sits in her cabinet. So, she was surprised when, on August 30, the DEA announced that it was pursuing an emergency scheduling of mitragynine and 7-hydroxymitragynine, the active alkaloids in kratom. Campellone was one of perhaps 4 or 5 million Americans who were being told, for maybe the first time, that this leaf posed an “imminent danger to public safety.”

The DEA Takes an Exception to Kratom Kratom could help addicts

Biologically, kratom acts enough like an opioid that DEA considers it a threat to public safety. The agency planned to use a regulatory mechanism called emergency scheduling to place it in the same restrictive category as heroin, LSD, and cannabis. This category, Schedule I, is reserved for what the DEA considers the most dangerous drugs—those with no redeeming medical value, and a high potential for abuse.

Kratom leaf

GETTY IMAGES

Before they finalized the scheduling, something surprising happened. An advocacy group called the American Kratom Association (yes, AKA) raised $400,000 from its impassioned membership—impressive for a nonprofit that typically raises $80,000 a year—to pay for lawyers and lobbyists, who got Congress on their side.

On September 30, representatives both conservative and liberal—from Orrin Hatch to Bernie Sanders—penned a letter to the DEA. “Given the long reported history of kratom use, coupled with the public’s sentiment that it is a safe alternative to prescription opioids, we believe using the regular review process would provide for a much-needed discussion among all stakeholders,” they wrote.

It worked. The DEA lifted the notice of emergency scheduling, and opened a public comment period until December 1. When was the last time the DEA backed off anything? “This is unusual,” says Gantt Galloway, a Bay Area pharmacologist specializing in treatments for addictive drugs. Galloway could not recall another instance when the DEA responded to public outcry like this.

As of this writing, those comments number nearly 11,000. They are from: people who use kratom to relieve chronic pain or endometriosis or gout; people who use kratom to treat depression or wean off opioids or alcohol; people who said it saved their life. “It doesn’t allow you to escape your problems,” says Susan Ash, founder of the AKA, who used kratom to treat pain and escape an addiction to prescription opioids. “It instead has you face them full on because it doesn’t numb your brain at all, and it doesn’t make you feel stoned like medical marijuana does. And yet it’s effective on so many things, like pain and anxiety and depression.”

Kratom could help addicts

That promise is part of the problem. Scientists know practically nothing about kratom—how its compounds work in concert, what it can actually treat, how addictive it might be, what counts as a safe dose. And certainly not enough to back up all the life-changing claims extolled in public comments, and by the many kratom users we interviewed. In the absence of good science and the slightest hint of regulation, Ash and potentially millions of other users are winging it. And should the DEA follow through on its promise to schedule kratom, these people will become criminals overnight.

For Ash, that’s completely unacceptable. “I want the future to look like this is your next coffee,” she says. “I’d like it to be sold in Starbucks. I’m not even kidding.”

An Herb Wades Into an Opioid Crisis Kratom could help addicts

Kratom is not an opioid—actually, it is in the coffee family—but its active molecules bind to the same neuronal receptors as opioids like heroin, codeine, oxycodone, and morphine. Typically, those drugs give users a feeling of euphoria and dull their pain—that’s why David*, a former boarding school teacher, started using prescription opioids to treat his discomfort from ski injuries. He became addicted, and when his prescriptions ran out, he switched to heroin. “I became a high functioning user,” he says. “My addiction was never detected at my place of employment, although I do think my behavior became more erratic.”

When David eventually committed himself to rehab, his doctors weaned him off heroin using suboxone, a combination of two drugs—buprenorphine, a partial opioid that quenches the body’s chemical thirst, and naltrexone, which blocks any euphoric opioid feelings. But suboxone can give users symptoms of withdrawal, not to mention a dulled sense of reality. And users like David can still find ways to abuse it. “Dependence on that was different from heroin, and it became easier to take more suboxone to a higher high, or selling it to score heroin again,” he says.

As of this writing, though, David has been clean for 18 months—success that he attributes to kratom. Since it binds to the same receptors as opioids, kratom users report similar euphoric and pain-killing effects, but they’re muted. After other 12 step recovering addicts introduced David to the plant, it helped him rebuild his life—he did eventually lose that boarding school teaching job—and deal with the physical pain that got him hooked on opioids to begin with.

Since it mirrors opioids in other ways, the concern is that kratom is also addictive. But again, the real science is sparse. David and several other users we spoke with said kratom is habit forming, to some degree, though one survey in Southeast Asia found that for people using it to kick an opioid addiction, the dependence is far less likely to disrupt their lives. “When I take kratom, that addictive part of me kicks in and it becomes habitual,” says Jeffrey*, another former opioid addict. “It doesn’t throw my life out of control, but it bugs me when people say things like, ‘it’s not more addictive than coffee.’ I think that hinders us making inroads with the regulators.”

Kratom could help addicts

There is no doubt, however, that kratom is less harmful than opioids—even take-home synthetics like suboxone. When opioids kill, they do it through respiratory depression—they slow your breath until you stop breathing entirely. But kratom’s chemical composition doesn’t appear to produce the same effects. “The two main alkaloids in kratom, mitragynine and 7-hydroxy, appear to have a low ceiling for respiratory depression,” says pharmacologist Jack Henningfield of the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, who with the consulting firm Pinney Associates has advised the AKA on kratom scheduling. “And that’s why if you look hard, it’s very difficult to find deaths attributable purely to kratom.”

Notice he said “purely.” In its initial notice of emergency scheduling for kratom, the DEA did link the drug to 15 deaths between 2014 and 2016. But that accounting ignores the fact that all but one of those people had other substances in their systems. Folks using kratom to wean themselves off opioids may still be taking those opioids.

And some deaths could be attributed to contamination: Because kratom isn’t strictly regulated, bad actors can and do lace the plant with actual opioids, like the extremely powerful synthetic opioid fentanyl. “You can just imagine, ‘Oh you got pain? Well, we’ve got a special kratom product,’” Henningfield says. “Maybe it has fentanyl in it. That’s scary.” Clearly, the plant needs some kind of regulation. The question is whether the DEA’s scheduling is the right kind.

Regulatory Wranglings Kratom could help addicts

The FDA could help prevent contamination-related deaths by strictly regulating kratom as a supplement, as opposed to the DEA scheduling it as a drug. “FDA has a lot of authority to actually help consumers know that what they’re buying is what is labeled, and have at least some level of assurance,” Henningfield says. “It’s not close to the drug standard, but it’s much better than something that’s illicitly marketed.”

Kratom could help addicts

But the FDA is actually also pivotal in advising the DEA on the scheduling of drugs. “The decision to permanently schedule any drug is not a DEA unilateral decision,” says Steve Bell, a DEA spokesperson. Consider the regulatory pathway of suboxone. The FDA approved the drug in 2002, and the Department of Health and Human Services recommended that the DEA put it in Schedule III, which the DEA accepted. This puts the drug in the same category as Tylenol with codeine: It’s available for doctors to prescribe for narcotic addiction, but is still a controlled substance.

Schedule I, though, is an entirely different rodeo. If the DEA places kratom here, nobody can touch the stuff. Current users, should they continue to use, will be forced to even sketchier sources. And scientists will have a harder time learning how kratom works, and supporting, or refuting, the claims users make with hard data. (Consider marijuana, also a Schedule I drug. Science has a dearth of data on it because getting permits to study the drug is an exercise in bureaucratic insanity.)

All that research costs money. Which is kratom’s catch-22: The DEA wants to schedule the drug because they think it might pose a danger to public health, but the only way to confirm (or refute) the DEA’s worries is with more research—which will be next to impossible should the DEA follow through on its promise to schedule.

One of the few scientists studying kratom is the University of Florida’s Oliver Grundmann, who is finishing up an online survey of nearly 10,000 users. And the data (preliminary, though Grundmann plans to publish a paper in the coming months) reveals a different profile of kratom users than you’d expect from an “illicit” recreational drug.

“The age range is more geared toward an older population,” says Grundmann, “which is more likely to experience work related injuries or acute or chronic pain from another medical condition.” Over half of users are between the ages of 31 and 50. Eighty-two percent completed at least some college. Nearly 30 percent of respondents pull in a household income of over $75,000 a year. Not quite the party drug demographic. And the public comments on the DEA’s scheduling notice reflect that population. Many of those folks are using kratom to either wean themselves off prescription opioids or use the drug alone to treat pain.

Still, that’s self-medication using a product that may be contaminated. “The industry needs to come together,” says Susan Ash of the AKA. “There’s no way the FDA is going to feel comfortable not seeing this as a scheduled controlled substance without a commitment from the industry that there will be proper measures put in place.” Better labeling, for instance, would be a start.

Kratom could help addicts

Grundmann says he understands the DEA’s motivation. “They do not want to have another drug out there that could potentially contribute to the already devastating opioid epidemic that some communities are experiencing,” he says. “But on the other side, we also need to consider that the 4 to 5 million estimated users of kratom may face a health crisis of their own if kratom becomes scheduled.”

Anecdotes and Evidence

Ariana Campellone takes her kratom with coconut milk and protein powder. Then, she mixes, diluting with water to take the lumps out of the mixture. By itself, the stuff tastes awful. Like oversteeped tea, or a mouthful of peat. She thinks the comparison to coffee is a bit overstated. “Coffee gives me a noticeable spike and high, and can feel when I’m coming down,” she says.

The DEA’s public comment period closes tomorrow. The agency says it will consider those comments alongside the FDA’s scientific and medical evaluation before proceeding to schedule. The FDA did not respond in time to comment on this story.

However, if the DEA follows through on its previous intent to schedule, Campellone says she’ll still continue to use kratom. “Just like people have continued to use cannabis where it’s not legal,” she says. In practical terms, it means getting ahold of kratom would probably get more expensive and personally risky. Those costs, those risks—those hassles—might not be worth it to some kratom users. And then the not-so-small community of recovering opioid addicts lose something available, and possibly quite good.

*This name has been changed to protect anonymity.

 

The post Kratom: The Bitter Plant That Could Help Opioid Addicts, if the DEA Doesn’t Ban It | Simon and Nick Stockton | Wired.com | 11.30.16 appeared first on Whole Earth Gifts.

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Feds Incinerate 28 Tons of Kratom | Pat Anson | PNN | 2.12.20 https://www.wholeearthgifts.com/federal-government-destroys-kratom/ https://www.wholeearthgifts.com/federal-government-destroys-kratom/#respond Sun, 04 Oct 2020 17:44:00 +0000 https://wholeearthgifts.com/?p=3457 The post Feds Incinerate 28 Tons of Kratom | Pat Anson | PNN | 2.12.20 appeared first on Whole Earth Gifts.

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Federal Government Destroys Kratom

Feds Incinerate 28 Tons of Kratom

 Pat Anson, PNN

Over 28 tons of the herbal supplement kratom were recently destroyed by the federal government, the final chapter in a legal battle over one of the largest seizures of kratom in U.S. history. The federal government destroys kratom.

The U.S. Marshals Office paid a hazardous waste company nearly $30,000 to transport the kratom from South Carolina to Florida, where it was incinerated at an energy-from-waste facility. The kratom had an estimated value of $1 million.

Kratom is a dietary supplement that millions of Americans use to self-treat their chronic pain, anxiety, depression and addiction.  It comes from the leaves of a tree that grows in southeast Asia, where kratom has been used for centuries as a natural stimulant and pain reliever.

Federal Government Destroys Kratom

The incinerated kratom was seized in 2018 after FDA inspectors found large quantities of kratom powder and capsules at a warehouse in Myrtle Beach, SC operated by Earth Kratom, a kratom wholesaler and vendor.

At the time, the federal government was engaged in a public relations campaign against kratom, led by then-FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb. Federal officials claimed kratom was a risky and addictive substance that should not be used to treat any medical condition.

Federal Government Destroys Kratom

“Serious concerns exist regarding the effect of kratom on multiple organ systems. Consumption of kratom can lead to a number of health impacts, including respiratory depression, vomiting, nervousness, weight loss, and constipation. Kratom consumption has been linked to neurologic, analgesic and sedative effects, addiction, and hepatic toxicity,” U.S. Attorneys said in a civil forfeiture complaint that led to the kratom being seized.

Kratom can be sold legally in South Carolina and most U.S. states, but vendors can run into trouble if they claim it can be used to treat medical conditions.

“There’s nothing wrong with our facilities or our product,” explained Brian Stall, supervising manager for Earth Kratom. “We were selling a product for human consumption and they didn’t like that.”

Stall told PNN that Earth Kratom’s lawyers were able to persuade a judge to order the kratom returned, but it was seized a second time by U.S. Marshals. The kratom was wrapped in plastic and remained at Earth Kratom’s warehouse, but was off-limits to the company.

Federal Government Destroys Kratom

“They took all of our product and half of our building at that point,” said Stall. “It was a tough time for us. We’d worked really hard and really believed in the product. It really sucked.”

Earth Kratom’s entire inventory may have gone up in smoke, but it survived the ordeal and remains in business. It sells one of the most popular kratom brands, Trainwreck Kratom, a blend that combines several different kratom strains. PNN’s Crystal Lindell raved about Trainwreck as a pain reliever in a 2018 column.

Federal Government Destroys Kratom

Scott Gottlieb resigned as FDA commissioner in March 2019 and weeks later joined the board of directors at Pfizer. Although the FDA’s campaign against kratom seems to have quieted since Gottlieb’s departure, an import alert remains in effect that allows FDA inspectors to seize kratom products even “without physical examination.”

A recent study funded by the National Institute on Drug Abuse concluded that kratom is an effective treatment for pain, helps users reduce their use of opioids, and has a low risk of adverse effects.

 

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