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this post was submitted on 17 Jun 2023
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I work in Addiction Medicine and xylazine is not a new problem; the media is just now picking up on it. Certain states are not supportive of harm reduction (access to naloxone, syringe service programs, etc) which only makes xylazine in the drug supply worse.
Xylazine is not approved for use in humans. It is used as a sedative in veterinary medicine, which is why it's referred to as "tranq" on the street. The closest drug we have in humans is clonidine. We are not sure how xylazine works in humans. Xylazine was previously studied in humans to treat hypertension; however, it was not approved by the FDA due to causing severe hypotension and bradycardia. It's still extremely important to administer naloxone to suspected opioid ODs even if xylazine use is suspected even though naloxone has no affect on xylazine.
Xylazine is also cytotoxic and causes necrotic wounds and ulcerations in people who inject drugs.
Great write up! In harm reduction, we are also encouraging rescue breathing due the respiratory deppresant effects of the drug. A narcan every two minutes and rescue breathing until their breathing returns to normal (one breath every five or six seconds) seems like best practice right now.
I also like your write up because it avoids inflammatory language like 'flesh eating drug', 'zombie drug', and whatever else news media uses to get ad money.
Thanks for all the info! It's especially helpful to know that naloxone/narcan is still recommended even if the fentanyl has been mixed with xylazine.