Researchers: The Herb kratom to Treat Pain and Opioid Addiction Not Safe for Use

Researchers: The Herb kratom to Treat Pain and Opioid Addiction Not Safe for Use

Researchers have found that the herb 'kratom', which is increasingly being used to treat pain and opioid addiction, is not safe for use. And 'potentiate kratom' can lead to feelings of toxicity

In the study published in the journal Pharmacotherapy, researchers from Binghamton University observed that those using kratom experienced several side effects including toxicity, vomiting, hallucinations, and agitation, among others.

Kratom, a herbal supplement derived from a plant that grows throughout southeast Asia, is used to treat opioid use disorder, treat/prevent withdrawal or treat pain.

"Although it is not as strong as some other prescription opioids, kratom does still act as an opioid in the body. In larger doses, it can cause slowed breathing and sedation, meaning that patients can develop the same toxicity they would if using another opioid product," said William Eggleston, Assistant Professor at the varsity.

Researchers have found that the herb 'kratom', which is increasingly being used to treat pain and opioid addiction, is not safe for use. Pixabay

"It is also reported to cause seizures and liver toxicity. Kratom may have a role in treating pain and opioid use disorder but more research is needed on its safety and efficacy. Our results suggest it should not be available as a herbal supplement," Eggleston said. If you want to learn more about one of the most popular red strains of Kratom, you can check online. Users often potentiate kratom to increase their effects. This can lead to feelings of toxicity".

For the study, the research team conducted a retrospective review of data containing reported cases of kratom exposures to determine the toxicities associated with its use.

A total of 2,312 kratom exposures were reported, with 935 cases involving kratom as the only substance. Kratom most commonly caused agitation (18.6 percent), tachycardia (16.9 percent), drowsiness (13.6 percent), vomiting (11.2 percent), and confusion (8.1 percent).

Serious effects of the seizure (6.1 percent), withdrawal (6.1 percent), hallucinations (4.8 percent), respiratory depression (2.8 percent), coma (2.3 percent), and cardiac or respiratory arrest (0.6 percent) were also reported.

The findings suggest kratom is not reasonably safe and poses a public health threat due to its availability as a herbal supplement. (IANS)

Related Stories

No stories found.
logo
NewsGram
www.newsgram.com