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Title: Current%20Trends%20K2/Spice,%20


1
Current Trends K2/Spice, Bath Salts Others
  • Ken Dickinson, M.S., R.Ph.
  • 610-291-3109
  • kdickinson_at_gaudenzia.org

2
Introductions
  • Presenters
  • Rodney Ken
  • Attendees
  • Experience with Bath Salts and K2/Spice
  • Expectations or goals for this workshop

3
Objectives
  • History and background of new synthetic designer
    drugs
  • Epidemiology and current trends
  • Effects and dangers of these drugs
  • How sold, what they look like and how used
  • Legal, prevention and treatment issues

4
(No Transcript)
5
Designer Drugs Background
  • Trend started in late 1970s
  • Drugs of abuse are classified by DEA
  • Drugs of abuse work according to structure
  • Analogs
  • Can design an analog to have same or similar
    activity but not listed as a controlled
    substance
  • Not subject to legal penalties and restrictions

6
Mephedrone Methamphetamine
7
Federal Drug Schedules
  • Federal Controlled Substances Act (CSA) of 1970
  • Schedule I No medical use, high abuse potential
    (heroin)
  • Schedule II Accepted medical use, high abuse
    potential (OxyContin, Ritalin)
  • Schedule III Accepted medical use, less abuse
    potential than I or II (Vicodin)
  • Schedule IV Accepted medical use, less abuse
    potential than I-III (Valium, Xanax)
  • Schedule V Accepted medical use, lowest abuse
    potential (Robitussin AC)

SOURCE ATTC National Office, CONNECT to Fight
Prescription Drug Abuse.
8
Designer Drugs
  • designer drugs  (in  designer drugs (chemistry))
    ...to see a marginally different version appear,
    using substances not covered in the original law.
    In the United States this problem was addressed
    in the Anti-Drug Abuse Act of 1986, which
    contained a Controlled Substance Analogue
    Enforcement Act (commonly called the Designer
    Drug Act), which prohibited the manufacture of
    substantially similar analogues of banned
    chemicals.

9
Designer Drugs Evolution
  • Internationally do not have such laws
  • Being manufactured in other countries
  • Many designer drugs do not test ()
  • A way to Beat the Bladder Police

10
Designer Drugs
  • Todays trend
  • Make an analog that is not listed in laws
  • Since legal can make an distribute as an everyday
    household product e.g. Bath Salts Plant
    Food, potpourri, incense, jewellery cleaner,
    hummingbird attractant, etc.
  • Then label not for human consumption
  • Market via social media and retail outlets

11
Web Sites
  • www.erowid.org
  • www.lycaeum.org
  • www.hightimes.com
  • http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Synthetic_cannabis
  • www.k2info.org

12
K2 Products
13
Herbal Incense
  • Crushed non-psychoactive herbal plant matter
    treated with one or more synthetic cannabinoids
  • First generation K2, Spice, Black Mamba
  • Second generation K3, Splice, Apocalypse,
    Cloud 10, Destiny

14
Synthetic Marijuana (JWH- 018)
  • Known as Spice or K2
  • K2 originated at Clemson University, where
    researchers developed synthetic cannabinoids in
    an effort to create therapeutic drugs. But the
    cannabinoids also have effects akin to THC, the
    key ingredient in marijuana
  • K2 is largely created by individual sellers, it's
    anyone's guess what else is added to the mix.

15
K2
  • For 35, users can buy 3 grams of K2 "incense"
    with nothing more than a credit card or PayPal
    account.
  • Did not have drug test or it
  • Now do but extra expense and only some labs
  • Smokable herbal blends marketed as "legal highs"
    have become increasingly popular and as easy to
    buy as cigarettes. (before 03.01.11)

16
K2 Spice
  • K2 contains synthetic chemicals, known as JWH-018
    and JWH-073, that mimic THC by acting on the
    cannabinoid receptors in the brain
  • Other analogs detected
  • HU-210
  • AM-2201
  • CP-47, CP-497, C6, C8, C9

17
K2 Data
  • American Association of Poison Control Centers
  • Reported in article June 2012
  • Year 2010 2, 906
  • Year 2011 6,959
  • Year 2012 up to May 31 2,883

18
Description of the Drug
  • Mixture of herbal and spice plant products
  • Leaf can be marshmallow leaf, parsley, etc.
  • Sprayed with synthetic cannabinoids
  • Marketed as incense and not for human
    consumption
  • No regulations to list ingredients or age
    requirements to purchase

19
Alarming Fact
  • Tests show that even the same brand may have
    different drugs in different amounts-at
    different times
  • User has no way of knowing what or how much they
    are taking

20
s
  • Dr. Huffman Dr. Huestis (Chief of
    Chemistry/Drug Metabolism at National Institute
    for Drug Abuse) indicate that when taking these
    drugs, it is hijacking the part of the brain
    important for many major functions temperature
    control, food intake, perception, memory and
    problem solving.
  • Many people taking these high-potency drugs are
    affecting important functions throughout their
    bodys-hormone functions for example.
  • Doctors also express concern that the drugs may
    involve acute toxicity levels, possibly long
    term, as well as impacting cannabinoid receptors
    that regulate bodys immune system.

21
K2 Impact
  • Retailers selling the drugs report a recent
    (2011) increase in sales from app. 1000 daily up
    to 10, 000 daily.
  • Medical reports indicate that K2/Spice drugs
    potentially result in users developing a rapid
    and powerful addiction on a level not usually
    found among smokers of real marijuana.
  • Recently linked (Dec 2011) to over 352 nationwide
    emergency room incidents-includes suicide
    attempts, extremely elevated heart rate/blood
    pressure, comas, seizures, and anxiety attacks.

22
Incense EmporiumOnline K2/Spice Ad (Current)
  • Note from the owners  On Dec 24, the federal
    government banned certain ingredients commonly
    found in K2 - our products have been
    scientifically analyzed and certified not to
    contain any of the controlled ingredients, for
    more information please click on the "Contact Us"
    above. Thanks for being loyal Incense
    Emporium customers! 
  •  Buy 1 Get 1 FREE on all Herbal Incense!!! Buy
    whatever you HERBAL INCENSE would like and we
    will automatically double it when we package it
    for shipping.  It's that simple!  Buy 2,
    Get 4...Buy 5, Get 10...Buy 100, Get 200...No
    Limits!!!  
  • 129.99 for 2 ounces...that's only 65 per
    ounce!!! Our products are NOT FOR HUMAN
    CONSUMPTION  Must be 18 to purchase

23
HU-211 and HU-2101
24
JWH-073 and JWH-0181
  • JWH-018 and JWH-073
  • JWH-018 and JWH-073 are synthetic cannabinoid
    agonists without the classical cannabinoid
    chemical structure
  • In vitro studies show that JWH-018 and JWH-073
    binds to the brain cannabinoid receptor CB1 with
    higher affinity than ?9-THC which binds with
    almost equal affinity to CB1 and CB2 receptors
  • Behavioral pharmacology studies show that JWH-018
    and JWH-073 both have ?9-THC-like activity in
    animals

25
Missouri K2 Administration Study
  • Bob Welsh- PI
  • IRB Human subjects approval
  • Six subjects smoked K2 Summit
  • Each contained JWH-018 JWH-073 or CP47, 497
  • Subjects performed Standardized Field Sobriety
    Tests, cognitive tests Drug Recognition Expert
    Exam
  • Blood, urine and oral fluid collected

26
K2 Study (contd)
  • Onset of effects in about 2-3 minutes
  • Dry mouth
  • Light headedness
  • Blurred vision
  • Agitation, Motor restlessness
  • Time dilation (?)
  • Theory in physics, time travel

27
K2 Study (contd)
  • Drug Recognition Expert Exam
  • Increased pulse and blood pressure
  • Lack of convergence
  • Movement of the two eyes so coordinated that the
    images of a single point fall on corresponding
    points of the two retinas
  • No horizontal or vertical gaze nystagmus
  • Pupils normal, muscle tone normal

28
K2 Study (contd)
  • Field Sobriety Tests
  • 3 to 4 inches of sway, leg body tremors
  • Loss of balance
  • Loss of motor coordination

29
Missouri Study Self Reported K2 Effects
  • Tachycardia
  • Dry Mouth
  • Felt Impaired, subjective thought disruption
  • Changes in perception
  • Impaired sense of time
  • Mild anxiety, paranoia
  • Sedation Post-intoxication exhaustion

30
On Line Reported K2 Effects
  • Strong dysphoria-Panic attacks-Heavy body
    load-Extreme nausea -Fear, Panic,
    Anxiety-Strong aural hallucinations--Racing
    heart (higher doses)
  • Heart attack

31
On Line Reported K2 Effects
  • Self mutilation
  • Paranoia
  • Auditory visual hallucinations
  • Delirium
  • Agitation

32
On Line Reported K2 Effects
  • Marijuana-like effects
  • Euphoria
  • Giddiness
  • Silliness
  • Impaired short-term memory and concentration
  • Increased appetite
  • Most angiogenic substance I ever ingested

33
K2 Products
34
K2 Products
35
How Diagnosis is Made
  • Mainly supported by clinical history rather than
    presentation or mental status exam
  • Duration of intoxication or high is relatively
    short (30 min. or less)
  • Do not typically present acutely intoxicated to
    an outpatient visit
  • Unlike marijuana do not have a typical or
    signature smell

36
How Diagnosis is Made
  • Usually access system via behavioral crisis
  • Criminal Justice system
  • Crisis Centers, ERs Psychiatric Hospitals
  • ERs are seeing and identifying more due to acute
    intoxication
  • Toxicology testing continues to improve

37
User Report 1
  • This is the worst experience I have ever had
  • The most angiogenic substance I have ever used
  • Nausea, vomiting, heart pounding like I am going
    to have a heart attack
  • Not sure if I just said that, thought it, or read
    it
  • Two hours later will never take this again

38
User Report 2
  • Three individual hits from a small pipe
  • Organic, no chemical odor or taste
  • Five minutes feels like cannabis
  • Ten minutes like an intense cannabis high
  • More than three puffs might be too much

39
Why the Discrepancy in Reports?
  • Use of other drugs with incense
  • Varying potency
  • Overdose
  • Presence of different cannabinoids
  • Knock-offs
  • User/environment characteristics
  • Set setting, etc.

40
K2 Overview
  • No quality control
  • Manufacturing process may be associated with
    adverse effects
  • Subjective effects most closely resemble those of
    very powerful marijuana
  • Almost complete lack of scientific study
  • Street information very inconsistent

41
K2 Treatment Issues
  • High rates of addiction (K2info.org)
  • Withdrawal due to physical addiction
  • Treated with sedatives and clonidine
  • Before D/A treatment need to be medically and
    psychiatrically safe and stable
  • Residual effects for weeks (or months) due to
    long half-life fat storage

42
Withdrawal Case StudyWebMD
  • German male 20 y.o. used Spice Gold daily for 8
    months
  • Due to tolerance increased dose 10 fold
  • Felt need to continue use daily
  • When unable to get drug experienced
  • Unrest, drug craving, nightmares, sweating,
    nausea, tremor, headache, high BP, tachycardia

43
Withdrawal Case StudyContd
  • Began using again
  • When wanted to stop checked into hospital
  • Experienced classic withdrawal that lasted 7 days

44
K2 Harm Reduction Tips
  • Not all incense blends are created equal.
  • JWH-018 is more expensive than real pot
  • Herbal incense blends are harsh
  • JWH-018 does not mix well with alcohol
  • The high last no more than 30 minutes

45
K2 Testing
  • Many labs have a test for the first generation
    JWH chemicals
  • In February 2010, Redwood Labs, California
    developed a saliva test for JWH-018, JWH-073 and
    JWH-250
  • Saliva and urine tests recently developed for
    second generation JWHs
  • http//www.redwoodtoxicology.com/documents/service
    s/3369_sc_sellsheet.pdf

46
K2 Testing
  • Following a single low dose exposure, synthetic
    cannabinoids can be detected up to 72 hours in
    human urine.
  • In case of chronic exposure the window of
    detection is much longer

47
Maryland Law K2 Bath Salts
  • On March 1, 2011, the possession and distribution
    of 5 synthetic cannabinoid compounds became
    illegal in the U.S. per an emergency ban by the
    U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration
  • Maryland no enactment yet for K2 as of Sept 25,
    2012
  • Local bans such as Ocean City
  • July 21, 2012 Bath Salts now Schedule I in
    Maryland

48
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49
Mitragyna Speciosa
  • Used in
  • Malaysia
  • Thailand
  • Indonesia
  • Local names
  • Ithang
  • Biak Biak
  • Ketum
  • Kakuam

50
Kratom Pharmacology
  • Mitragynine
  • Structurally similar to some hallucinogens
  • No hallucinogenic activity or effects
  • Acts on opioid receptors

51
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52
Kratom Opioid Treatment
  • Currently used for heroin and methadone
    dependence in some countries
  • New Zealand
  • Thailand
  • Used in detox to manage withdrawal symptoms from
    opioids

53
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54
Kratom
  • Seems to be a stimulant in lower doses
  • Mitragynine
  • Seems to be sedative in higher doses
  • 7 hydroxymitragynine
  • Often produces a mixed effect
  • Onset 5 t o 10 minutes
  • Duration several hours

55
Kratom Side Effects
  • Short term (immediate)
  • Dry mouth
  • Increased or decrease urination
  • Loss of appetite
  • Nausea and/or vomiting
  • Side effects
  • Anorexia/weight loss
  • Depression
  • Addiction

56
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57
Mephedrone(4-Methylmethcathinone)
58
Bath Salts
  • Toxic psychoactive drugs disguised or
    pretending to be Bath Salts
  • They are NOT
  • Some people have snorted real BSs

59
Bath Salts Are
60
What are Synthetic Cathinones?
  • Synthetic cathinones are related to the parent
    compound cathinone.
  • Since the mid-2000s, unregulated ring-substituted
    cathinone derivatives have appeared in the
    European and American recreational drugs market.

61
What are Synthetic Cathinones?
  • The most commonly available synthetic cathinones
    sold on the recreational market in the period up
    to 2012 appear to be 3, 4-Methylenedioxypyrovalero
    ne (MDPV), mephedrone, and methylone.
  • These products are usually encountered as highly
    pure white or brown powders. Cathinone
    derivatives are claimed to have effects similar
    to those of cocaine, amphetamine or MDMA
    (ecstasy), but little is known of their detailed
    pharmacology.

62
Khat
  • Native to tropical East Africa and the Arabian
    Peninsula
  • Fresh Leaves/tops chewed or consumed as tea
  • Stimulation and euphoria
  • Part of social culture in many countires (coffee,
    tea, coca or khat)

63
Khat
  • Coca ---------------cocaine
  • Khat ----------------cathinone (Schedule I)
  • Cathinones Structure similar to amphetamines
  • Euphoria
  • Anorexia
  • Stimulation
  • Dilated pupils
  • Hypnagogic hallucinations when wearing off

64
Mephedrone Background
  • Discovered 1929
  • Rediscovered 2003 web site The Hive
  • Was a replacement for Ecstasy
  • Sold as plant food later bath salts
  • Manufactured in clandestine labs
  • Methylenedioxypyrpvalerone (MDPV)
  • Known as substituted cathinones

65
MDPV Timeline
  • MDPV was developed in the 1960s, and has been
    used for the treatment of chronic fatigue, but
    caused problems of abuse and dependence.
  • 1969 Boehringer Ingelheim files a patent
    application for MDPV.
  • 2005 MDPV appears as a recreational drug first
    mention on Drugs-Forum.
  • 2007 First seizure of MDPV as a recreational
    drug, by customs officials in the German state of
    Saxony. The drug had been shipped from China.
  • 2008 First seizure of MDPV in the United States.

66
MDPV Timeline
  • 2009 MDPV made illegal in Denmark.
  • 2010 MDPV made a controlled drug in the UK,
    Sweden, Germany, Australia and Finland. First
    reports of the widespread retail marketing of
    'bath salts' containing MDPV in the US. The US
    considers both Mephedrone (July, 2010) and MDPV
    (December, 2010) "a drug and chemical of
    concern".
  • 2011 2012 MDPV sale and possession are banned
    in most US states with legislation being
    introduced in Maryland an other states.

67
Mephedrone/MDPV Appearance
  • Distinctive odor
  • Fishy
  • Vanilla
  • Stale urine
  • Bleach
  • Circuit boards

68
Mephedrone MDPV Use
  • Capsules, tablets or white granuels
  • Can be swallowed, smoked, snorted, injected
  • Prominent use in Europe
  • Out of 70 Dutch users of mephedrone, 58 described
    it as an overall pleasant experience and 12
    described it as an unpleasant experience

69
Mephedrone/MDPV Effects
  • Duration
  • Total 2 5 hours
  • Onset 15-45 minutes
  • Coming up 15 30 minutes
  • Plateau 15 30 minutes
  • Coming down 30 90 minutes
  • After effects 2 4 hours

70
Mephedrone/MDPV Desired Effects
  • Mental and physical stimulation
  • Euphoria, mood lift
  • Feelings of empathy, openness
  • Increase in sociability, desire to talk with
    others
  • Pleasurable rushing
  • Sense of being sped up

71
Mephedrone/MDPV General Effects
  • General change in consciousness (as with most
    psychoactives)
  • Decreased appetite
  • Pupil dilation
  • Unusual body sensations (facial flushing, chills,
    goosebumps, body energy)
  • Change in body temperature regulation
  • Sweating
  • Increase in heart rate and blood pressure

72
Mephedrone/MDPV Toxic Effects
  • Strong desire to re-dose, craving to recapture
    initial euphoric rush
  • Uncomfortable changes in body temperature
    (sweating/chills)
  • Heart palpitations, sense of racing heart
  • Impaired short term memory
  • Insomnia

73
Mephedrone/MDPV Toxic Effects
  • Severe paranoia
  • Psychosis
  • Hypersexuality
  • Aggression
  • Hallucinations
  • Anxiety and depression
  • Seizures

74
PA Criminal Intelligence Center
  • February 2011, Schuylkill County PSP, Schuylkill
    Haven members were attempting to serve a mental
    health warrant and noticed the subject was
    fidgety and talking very fast.
  • The subject admitted to taking methamphetamine
    earlier in the day and snorting two lines of
    TranQuility bath salts approximately three hours
    prior to PSP arrival.
  • The subject related he felt no pain, was
    invincible, and likened the effects to that of a
    cocaine overdose. He was unable to perform any
    field sobriety tests

75
PA Criminal Intelligence Center
  • February 2011, Lebanon County PSP, Jonestown
    members responded to a burglary where a subject
    broke a window and jumped through a glass door.
  • After he was confronted by the occupant, the
    subject ran outside and kicked in a garage door.
  • While being interviewed by troopers, he jumped
    onto the hood of the patrol car, rolled off, and
    went into a fetal position. The subject was
    incoherent, claimed he was being electrocuted,
    and was eventually transported to the hospital.

76
Another PA Story
  • March 2011, two Pennsylvania men were found dead
    in the woods after missing for two weeks.
    Toxicology reports indicate that they had taken
    bath salts prior to their deaths. The bath salts
    probably led to their disorientation and they
    died from exposure and hypothermia.

77
More Bath Salts Tragedy
  • January 2011, a 48 year old Florida woman was
    jailed after shed attacked and attempted to
    behead her 710 Y.O. mother with a machete. The
    woman was high on bath salts she purchased from a
    local head shop
  • Remember they are
  • Potent
  • Lethal
  • Highly addictive

78
One More Story
  • November 2010-a 21 year old Louisiana man snorts
    a packet of Cloud 9 Bath salts and endures
    several days of delirium and paranoia. He cuts
    his own throat with a kitchen knife only to
    survive and then shoots himself later when he had
    visions of army soldiers swarming his house.

79
Bath Salt Data
  • American Association of Poison Control Centers
    of calls
  • June 9, 2012 report
  • Year 2010 304
  • Year 2011 6,138
  • Year 2012 to May 31 1,320

80
Berks PA County Head Shop Bust
81
Same Head Shop
82
Mephedrone/MDPV Treatment Issues
  • Similar to strong amphetamine addiction
  • Similar to PCP abuse/addiction
  • Stabilization and Safety highest priority
  • Safety of client
  • Safety of staff and others

83
Mephedrone/MDPV Treatment Issues
  • If psychotic or dissociated need to medicate
  • Neuroleptics
  • Haldol for emergency stabilization
  • Atypicals (Seroquel/Respirdol/etc.) for ongoing
    stabilization
  • Decease sensory exposure
  • Rock or Rave medicine
  • Talking down bad trips
  • De-escalation techniques

84
Excited Delirium
  • Delirium Defined
  • Acute change in mental status characterized by
    impairment of attention.
  • Excited Delirium Defined
  • Delirium with continuous agitation

85
Excited Delirium
  • Diagnostic Criteria for Delirium
  • Disturbance of consciousness with reduced ability
    to focus, sustain, or shift attention.
  • A change in cognition such as memory deficit,
    disorientation, language disturbance
  • The disturbance develops over a short period of
    time (usually hours to days) and tends to
    fluctuate.

86
ED Research Findings
  • Excited Delirium often involved psycho-stimulant
    drugs
  • Amphetamines
  • amphetamine derivatives
  • Cocaine
  • Sometimes even the lack of having taken certain
    prescription drugs could cause a similar response
    behavior
  • i.e. lithium in the case of manic depressants

87
ED Research Findings
  • Psycho-stimulant drugs can produce a number of
    potentially lethal effects
  • Psycho-stimulant overdoses can cause
  • cardiovascular compromise
  • Seizures
  • hyperthermia.

88
Mephedrone MDPV Treatment Issues
  • Once stable and safe be aware of cognitive
    impairment
  • May need tincture of time to grasp recovery
  • Supportive non threatening environment
  • Screen for COD (high probability)

89
Bath Salts Overview
  • They are sold mostly on the internet, but can
    also be found in select shops locally.
  • They're known by a variety of names, including
    Red Dove, Blue Silk, Zoom, Bloom, Cloud
    Nine, Ocean Snow, Lunar Wave, Vanilla Sky,
    Ivory Wave, White Lightning, Scarface
    Purple Wave, Blizzard, Star Dust, Lovey,
    Dovey, Snow Leopard, Aura, and Hurricane
    Charlie.
  • While they have become popular under the guise of
    selling as bath salts, they are sometimes sold
    as other products such as insect repellant, or
    plant food with names like Bonsai Grow among
    others.

90
Effects of MDPV
  • MDPV is sometimes labeled online as legal cocaine
    or legal amphetamines.
  • The effects have a duration of roughly 3 to 4
    hours, with after effects such as tachycardia,
    hypertension, and mild stimulation lasting from 6
    to 8 hours.
  • High doses have been observed to cause intense,
    prolonged panic attacks in stimulant-intolerant
    users, and there are anecdotal reports of
    psychosis from sleep withdrawal and addiction at
    higher doses or more frequent dosing intervals.

91
Synthetic Cathinones Effects Summary Sheet
  • Aggression
  • Agitation
  • Breathing difficulty
  • Bruxism (grinding teeth)
  • Confusion
  • Dizziness
  • Extreme anxiety sometimes progressing to violent
    behavior
  • Fits and delusions
  • Hallucinations
  • Headache
  • Hypertension (high blood pressure)
  • Increased alertness/awareness
  • Increased body temperature, chills, sweating
  • Insomnia
  • Kidney pain
  • Lack of appetite
  • Liver failure
  • Loss of bowel control
  • Muscle spasms
  • Muscle tenseness
  • Vasoconstriction (narrowing of the blood vessels)
  • Nausea, stomach cramps, and digestive problems
  • Nosebleeds
  • Psychotic delusions
  • Pupil dilation
  • Renal failure
  • Rhabdomyolysis (release of muscle fiber contents
    myoglobin that could lead to kidney problems)
  • Severe paranoia
  • Suicidal thoughts
  • Tachycardia (rapid heartbeat)
  • Tinnitus

92
Dangers/Legal Issues
  • Dr. Volkow, the NIDA Director stated Because
    these products are relatively new to the drug
    abuse scene, our knowledge about their precise
    chemical composition and short- and long-term
    effects is limited.
  • In February, 2011, Congressman Charles Schumer
    (D-NY) introduced legislation that would add bath
    salts to a list of federally controlled
    substances. September 7, 2011, finally saw this
    legislation in the form of a proposed temporary
    DEA ban.

93
Federal Ban Proposed on 09/7/2011
  • The United States Drug Enforcement Administration
    (DEA) is using its emergency scheduling authority
    to temporarily control three synthetic cathinones
    (Mephedrone, 3,4 methylenedioxypyrovalerone
    (MDPV) and Methylone).
  • Except as authorized by law, this action will
    make possessing and selling these chemicals or
    the products that contain them illegal in the
    U.S. for at least one year while the DEA and the
    United States Department of Health and Human
    Services (DHHS) further study whether these
    chemicals should be permanently controlled.

94
Synthetic Drug Abuse Prevention Act of 2012
  • July 10, 2012 President signed Law making
    temporary law permanent
  • October 1, 2012 Synthetic Drugs now listed as
    Schedule I
  • All substituted cathinones now Schedule I
  • Chemists working on making non-cathinone
    stimulants
  • http//www.ncsl.org/issues-research/justice/synt
    hetic-drug-threats.aspx

95
National vs. State-by-State Bans
  • Just because a federal ban is enacted on a drug,
    it does not mean local authorities will take
    action on this drug.
  • States still need to enact legislation to ban the
    substances in order for state (then local)
    authorities to take action.
  • Federal bans will go after larger distributors,
    but it will be locally determined as to whether
    users and smaller, local distributors (such as
    non-chain convenience stores and gas stations)
    will be sought after without a state ban.

96
Prevention For K2 Bath Salts
  • Heighten awareness via Education
  • Schools, parent groups, community groups, law
    enforcement, medical treatment, etc.
  • Legislation against precursor chemicals
  • Legislation making drugs Schedule I
  • Patrick Meehan Synthetic Drug Control Act
  • Goes into effect October 1 2012!!!
  • Hit the retailers in their pocket book
  • Civil suits by victims (users and families)
  • Authorities appealing to retailers with amnesty
    if stop and destroy

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Urine Detection Information
  • Redwood Toxicology Laboratory shows currently
    they have detection for MDPV and Mephedrone. (see
    w.K2info.org/drugtesting)
  • June 11, 2012 Redwood expanded to test for 21
    designer stimulants
  • http//www.redwoodtoxicology.com/services/designer
    _stimulant_testing.html
  • Atlantic Labs- Bensalem, PA Bath Salts 20.00 and
    K2 15.00.
  • Most labs now testing
  • Check with your lab

98
Urine Detection Information(Expanded to 21 June
2012)
  • Redwood has a 2 panel drug test (MDPV,
    Mephedrone) and a 14 panel drug test which tests
    for the following drugs
  • BZP (Benzylpiperazine)
  • Butylone (ß-keto-N-methylbenzodioxolylpropylamine,
    bk-MBDB)
  • Cathinone (Khat or Benzoylethanamine)
  • Ethylone (3,4-methylenedioxy-N-ethylcathinone,
    MDEC, bk-MDEA)
  • MBDB (Methylbenzodioxolylbutanamine, Methyl-J,
    Eden)
  • mCPP (meta-Chlorophenylpiperazine)
  • MDA (3,4-Methylenedioxyamphetamine,
    tenamfetamine)
  • MDEA (3,4-Methylenedioxy-N-ethylamphetamine,
    MDEA, MDE, Eve)
  • MDPV (Methylenedioxypyrovalerone, Cloud 9, Ivory
    Wave, White Lightning)
  • MDMA (3,4-Methylenedioxymethamphetamine, ecstasy,
    E, X)
  • Mephedrone (4-methylmethcathinone 4-MMC,
    4-methylephedrone, Meph, MCat)
  • Methcathinone (a-methylamino-propiophenone, may
    be confused with mephedrone)
  • Methylone (3,4-methylenedioxy-N-methylcathinone,
    bk-MDMA, MDMC, M1)
  • TFMPP (3-Trifluoromethylphenylpiperazine, Legal
    X)

99
On-Site Testing
  • Many labs now have available
  • On site may be useful in treatment
  • Problem labs report as high as 35-40 false
    negatives with on-site
  • On-site shows no use but when testing for
    accuracy they send to lab for confirm and up to
    40 tested positive.

100
You May Ask Whats Next?
  • Krokodil?
  • In Russia and Europe
  • 2C-1 or Smiles
  • Yahoo reports 09/19/2012
  • Kratom
  • Here today in Maryland Mid-Atlantic States
  • Marketed as Natural substitute for K2 K3

101
Krokodil
  • Opioid- desomorphine
  • Result of attempt to extract codeine
  • Injected can be used by other routes
  • Russia spreading through Europe
  • Tissue breakdown
  • Highly addicting- Usually fatal

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Points to Ponder
  • WHAT
  • Did I learn so far?
  • What do I think about it?
  • How do I feel about it?
  • So WHAT
  • Does this information mean to me professionally
    and personally?????

106
Objectives
  • History and background of new synthetic designer
    drugs
  • Epidemiology and current trends
  • Effects and dangers of these drugs
  • How sold, what they look like and how used
  • Prevention and treatment issues
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