Thursday, September 26, 2013

Flesh-eating Russian opiate drug called ‘krokodil’ arrives in Arizona

Flesh-eating Russian opiate drug called ‘krokodil’ arrives in Arizona

By David Ferguson
Thursday, September 26, 2013 10:43 EDT
Hand of krokodil addict via screencap
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A potentially lethal, flesh-eating narcotic compound is catching on in parts of Arizona. Users inject the drug to get high, and the scaly, rotten patches of necrotic flesh it can leave behind have led to the drug being named “krokodil” by its Russian originators, the word for “crocodile.”
According to Phoenix, AZ’s ABC Channel 15, drug addicts in the Phoenix area have been reporting to hospitals showing the cheap drug’s characteristic rotting wounds, which fester from the inside out. Krokodil originated in Russia’s remote Siberia region, where heroin addicts who found it difficult to obtain a regular supply of real heroin synthesized the drug out of codeine-laced headache pills, iodine, red phosphorus and paint thinner.
“In the 12 years that I’ve been doing substance abuse and prevention education, it’s probably the most destructive drug I’ve ever seen,” said counselor Shelly Mowrey to Channel 15.
The necrotic wounds were what alerted Phoenix public officials to the drug’s arrival in their area, Mowrey said. “What they started noticing was all these horrendous, flesh-eating types of wounds on people.”
Users typically die within one to seven years of becoming addicted, she warned, saying that the drug’s appearance in the U.S. is not something to be taken lightly.
The Insquisitr reported that two Arizona users arrived in hospital emergency rooms with “half of their limb gone, bone and muscle showing through clear as day.”
Dr. Frank LoVecchio of the Banner, AZ Poison Control Center told Phoenix’s CBS Channel 5 that the petroleum-based chemicals used as solvent for krokodil are to blame for its toxicity.
“They extract [the drug] and even though they believe that most of the oil and gasoline is gone, there is still remnants of it. You can imagine just injecting a little bit of it into your veins can cause a lot of damage,” said LoVecchio.
Watch video about this story, embedded below via Phoenix’s ABC Channel 15:

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