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United States News Title: 45 Congressmen Ask DEA Not to Ban Kratom Next Week A large and bipartisan contingent in Congress is asking the Obama administration to delay the sudden ban poised to take effect next week on possessing kratom, a Southeast Asian tree leaf product that supporters describe as a near-miraculous treatment for pain, depression and addiction to opiates and legal narcotics. Reps. Mark Pocan, D-Wis., and Matt Salmon, R-Ariz., recruited 45 signers in the House of Representatives on Friday afternoon for two letters, which will be sent Monday to Chuck Rosenberg, acting administrator of the Drug Enforcement Administration, and Office of Management and Budget Director Shaun Donovan. This significant regulatory action was done without any opportunity for public comment from researchers, consumers and other stakeholders, the lawmakers say in the letter to Rosenberg. This hasty decision could have serious effects on consumer access and choice of an internationally recognized herbal supplement. The letter to Donovan asks him to overrule the DEA, which is invoking a rarely used emergency power with just 30 days notice, warning the action "will put a halt on federally funded research and innovation surrounding the treatment of individuals suffering from opioid and other addictions. Susan Ash, founder of the American Kratom Association consumer group, which organized a Sept. 13 protest at the White House, says she remains hopeful that the ban won't go into effect for two compounds in kratom that would essentially ban the plant. I feel a lot of hope because the amount of congresspeople who are paying attention to this issue and the media and the public are really weighing in our favor its finally coming to light who the average kratom consumer is, Ash says. Those users include recovering heroin, cocaine and alcohol addicts, fibromyalgia patients, and people with arthritis and cancer, according to a sampling of attendees at the White House protest. Some veterans with post-traumatic stress disorder and people with depression say it has helped them, too. AKA Executive Director Paul Pelosi Jr. says he believes the DEA has been surprised by a deluge of user pleas to keep kratom legal and that "I think everyone's looking for a way to save face like, 'How can we come back from this?'" Pelosi has tried kratom but does not regularly use it. He says he believes that between 4 million and 5 million Americans may be using kratom an estimate higher than the hundred thousand or so others offer, which he bases on his understanding of industry sales figures. "Its pretty safe. It may be slightly addictive, but theres no overdose or safety issue, so I think the DEA was unaware people use it in a kava shop, a cafe and that veterans use the leaf naturally," he says. "Its not just a couple of teens trying to get high. Theres limited party use for this. Indeed, preliminary scientific analysis shows that kratom, despite DEA concern about safety and anecdotal reports about dependence potential, could offer substantial harm reduction -- particularly as accidental overdoses of opioids including legal painkillers and illegal drugs like heroin killed more than 28,000 in 2014 alone. Andrew Kruegel, associate research scientist at Columbia University, says research has shown significant differences between the two about-to-be-banned compounds mitragynine and 7-hydroxymitragynine and traditionally abused drugs that act on opioid receptors in the brain. "Both mitragynine and 7-hydroxymitragynine are partial agonists of the mu opioid receptor, and that is the same target that heroin, morphine and fentanyl bind to," Kruegel says. "But the key thing from the science side is they activate this receptor in a different way. For one, they are partial agonists, which means they stimulate the receptor to a lower level
no matter how high you go with the dose." "In animal studies, both mitragynine and 7-hydroxymitragynine produce almost no respiratory depression," he adds. "Of course this hasnt been rigorously studied in humans because there have been no clinical trials, but anecdotal evidence which is quite substantial suggests that people arent dying of respiratory depression." Kruegel says the reason for a lack of respiratory depression, a primary cause of death in heroin and other opioid overdoses, is that the compounds appear to be biased agonists that only trigger one opioid pathway called the G protein pathway and not another pathway associated with respiratory depression and constipation. Kruegel says mitragynine and 7-hydroxymitragynine preliminarily appear "similar in terms of pharmacology" to a drug called Oliceridine that currently is undergoing Food and Drug Administration-approved phase three trials in humans. Columbia University researchers currently are scrambling to complete research for a paper on kratom's effects on non-opioid receptors, and are busily boiling leaf matter in alcohol to extract the mitragynine and use chemical reactions to convert it into non-Schedule I analogs. "We obviously can't have kilograms of kratom around here when the ban goes into effect," Kruegel says. If the ban does go into effect, Kruegel says he would like to apply for a special Schedule I license to continue research, but he points out the hoops to jump through are onerous as marijuana researchers have lamented for years including installation of a safe that costs about $10,000. Despite the backlash, the DEA's knees aren't buckling, though sympathetic statements one spokesman offered the Washington Post last week gave some advocates hope. "I want the kratom community to know that the DEA does hear them," spokesman Melvin Patterson told the Post. "Our goal is to make sure this is available to all of them." With a week to go before the ban is scheduled to take effect, however, spokeswoman Barbara Carreno says she has received no indication there will be a reversal. "It's not that the DEA is unsympathetic to people who have chronic pain or who are addicted to opioids," she says. "We are people just like everyone else who get in a car accident and break our femurs and get cancer and have surgery and are in need of pain medicine.
Its just that science says this is a problem and we need to keep people safe." Carreno says "the analysis we did showed there is enough of a public health problem with kratom" to justify it being placed in Schedule I on an emergency basis, a classification that would last two or three years until removal, permanent listing or scheduling in a lower ranking based on additional research. "I have not been advised it's being reconsidered, but we have not gotten the congressional letter," Carreno says. The DEA said in its notice last month that it believes 15 deaths in the U.S. were associated with kratom. The AKA disputes this and says it hired a toxicologist who reviewed the cases and found that there was no evidence to support the assertion and that most, if not all, of the deaths may have been tied to other drug use. In addition to the congressional letter, lawyers for the AKA are sending the DEA their own letter on Monday, Ash says, though there are no immediate plans for a lawsuit. The AKA has received an influx in donations, Ash says, and the Botanical Education Alliance industry group is also working to combat the ban. Pelosi, son of House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., says he's a volunteer with AKA and that he focuses on the community-organizing aspect of advocacy, rather than lobbying members of Congress. His mother was not among the letter's signers. If the ban does take effect, it's likely to wallop entrepreneurs who have invested hundreds of thousands or millions of dollars in the leaf matter, which generally is powderized for use in teas or pills. Nu Wave Botanicals national sales manager Chris Kratom (a professional rather than legal surname) says he is winding down operations with a business partner. The men operate a warehouse in Utah and two in Texas, he says, and are shipping everything to one of the Texas locations to be cataloged. Kratom, who primarily wholesales product sourced in Indonesia to other distributors, says he personally has more than $100,000 worth of product that he will be unable to sell. His partner has about $1 million worth of unsold kratom. That puts the entrepreneurs in a pickle. Two other businesses with similarly large stockpiles are taking the product to Mexico or Canada, where the plant remains legal, Kratom has heard. But Kratom, whose converts to the product include his Mormon father, currently is leaning toward turning over his supply to the DEA when the ban takes effect. He says he's in contact with the local DEA office and that it's his understanding his choices are to incinerate the supply or hand it over. "I have a family and I don't have an arrest record. ... I'm going to keep it that way," he says. "We want to work with the DEA so in case the hammer goes down on the 30th we have nothing to raid." Kratom says if he gives his product to the DEA he probably can write it off on his taxes and potentially get it back if the DEA decides to delay implementation of the ban. If he took it overseas, he says, he lacks the business connections to sell it and probably would have great difficulty repatriating it if the ban lapses. "Rumor has it," he say, "it doesn't look like they're actually going to do this on the 30th." Though the DEA says publicly it's standing firm, Ash warns the stakes are high. "A lot of people say they are scared to death of relapsing without [kratom]," she says. "And if this ban goes through there's going to be an illicit black market, and who knows what people are going to be putting into this product, so deaths are going to increase by that in itself." Read the letters: The list of lawmakers who signed, provided by Pocan spokesman David Kolovson: Mark Pocan, D-Wis. Steve Cohen, D-Tenn. Tulsi Gabbard, D-Hawaii Julia Brownley, D-Calif. Suzanne Bonamici, D-Ore. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 6.
#1. To: Deckard (#0)
Kratom is a relatively new drug to the US and Europe. It has been used for many years in Southeast Asia as an anti-diarrheal medicine, a painkiller and a recreational drug. Kratom is the popular name for a tree and the drug comes from its leaves. The drug may be bought in leaf form but in this country, it is more likely to be purchased as a capsule filled with powdered leaf material or a chopped up form of the leaf that can be used for tea or smoking. Most people ingest the drug. The effects of kratom come on rather quickly and last between five and seven hours, although high doses can last longer. Kratom is heavily promoted as a legal, undetectable, safe drug that can be used to come off stronger drugs. It is not yet illegal in the US but the breakdown products of kratom can be detected with some drug tests. Because of its legality, the drug tends to be more popular among young people who cannot yet buy alcohol and who may be concerned about being arrested with weed or other drugs. Kratom is included in a newly-defined class of drug called New Psychoactive Substances, so-named by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime. In the 2013 World Drug Report, kratom is on this list along with khat (another plant, this one from East Africa), Salvia divinorum (a plant that is widely available in the US), and synthetics ketamine, mephedrone and others. Many of these drugs are not yet illegal in the US and Europe, despite their dangerous and addictive effects. Even when a drug sends people to the emergency room and even when it is known to be addictive, it takes time to collect and compile all the scientific information that supports a legislative ban. Kratom has sent some people to emergency rooms and there have been calls to poison control centers in the US. Most of the adverse effects of this drug have been felt in Malaysia, Myanmar and Thailand where it is heavily used. The drug is illegal in Thailand. In Thailand in 2011, more than 13,000 people were arrested for kratom-related crimes (5% of all drug-related crimes in that country). The drug is abused for its sedative or stimulating effects. At low dosages, it is a stimulant, making a person more talkative, sociable and energetic. At higher dosages, it creates lethargy and euphoria. But the experience is not pleasant for every user. This drug only began to be seen in the US in 2012, but it is easy to obtain online. Many smoke shops, head shops, convenience stores and gas stations sell this drug. A person using this drug may not expect or want the following undesirable effects of kratom: Since the drug is also addictive, one of the effects can include compulsive use of the drug despite the harm that is being done to ones mental state or life. Addiction effects may include: Withdrawal effects of kratom are very similar to those of opiates like heroin or prescription painkillers. They include: At this point in the US, the numbers are not large for people going to the emergency room with these adverse effects. But the drug is new to this country. If people are not educated about the adverse effects that can be suffered, including addiction, then the drug may become more popular and more damage may be seen. While every drug has different effects, the route back to sobriety is much the same from person to person. The recovery must include relief from incessant cravings near the beginning of rehab. Without this, a person undergoes a sort of daily or nightly torture, with continuous thoughts of using drugs or drug dreams at night. Thats why the Narconon drug and alcohol rehab program has a deep detoxification program very early in the recovery process. This phase of recovery, called the Narconon New Life Detoxification, enables each person to flush out the toxins from past drug abuse that remain locked in fatty tissues. Sauna time, nutritional supplements in an exact regimen and daily exercise combine to drive these residues out. Those completing this step talk about how much more energy they have and many say that their cravings are completely gone. Life skills training follows this step, because it is essential that a person have the tools to create a life he (or she) can enjoy. This protects him from wanting to escape lifes realities by abusing drugs. The goal of the program is a drug-free individual. Find out how someone you care about can recover from addiction at Narconon.
81 FR 81 FR 59929 At 59930:
That doesnt matter to these dumb asshole Paultard dopers. They put drugs as their top priority in life, ahead of all responsibilities one should have as an adult.
This isn't about getting high you feckless simpleton.
Kratom, an Addicts Alternative, Is Found to Be Addictive Itself DELRAY BEACH, Fla. Three shaky months into recovery from heroin addiction, Dariya Pankova found something to ease her withdrawal. A local nonalcoholic bar sold a brewed beverage that soothed her brain and body much as narcotics had. A perfect solution before it backfired. Ms. Pankova grew addicted to the beverage itself. She drank more and more, awakened her cravings for the stronger high of heroin, and relapsed. Only during another stay in rehab did Ms. Pankova learn that the drinks primary ingredient, a Southeast Asian leaf called kratom, affects the brain like an opiate and can be addictive, too. Its preying on the weak and the broken, said Ms. Pankova, 23, a Brooklyn native who received treatment in Delray Beach. Its a mind-altering substance, so people like me who are addicts and alcoholics, they think just because its legal, its fine. Its a huge epidemic down here, and its causing a lot of relapses. Read the remained of the tragic story which gives cause for grave concern by clicking here.
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