The United States Medicines Agency is concerned regarding a “growing public health problem”. US health authorities announced Tuesday, February 28 measures to better control the import of xylazine, an animal tranquilizer increasingly found in drugs taken by humans, with devastating consequences.
Also nicknamed “tranq” or “zombie drug”, xylazine is increasingly consumed in the United States in combination with other drugs, such as fentanyl, heroin, methamphetamine or cocaine. Consumers are not necessarily aware of its presence in their drug.
Authorized since 1972 by the American Medicines Agency (FDA) as a sedative and veterinary analgesic, xylazine is used to calm animals, for example horses, in order to facilitate their management or once morest pain. But in humans, it can slow down “breathing, blood pressure, heart rate” and reduce “body temperature at critical levels”alert the FDA.
Worse still: its consumption can cause “skin sores and patches of dead, rotting skin”, including elsewhere than at the level of the injection, she added. These wounds “can easily become infected and, without treatment, lead to amputation”.
Up to 26% of fatal overdoses in Pennsylvania
Source of increased concern: naloxone, an antidote that can resuscitate a person in the process of overdosing on an opiate, is not effective once morest the effects of xylazine. Experts still recommend trying to give naloxone to anyone who overdoses, as the two drugs can be taken together. It is difficult to tell the difference between an overdose caused by xylazine, or an opiate like fentanyl.
It is particularly widespread in the northeast of the country. According to a study, 26% of fatal overdoses in Pennsylvania in 2020 involved xylazine, and 20% in Maryland, a neighboring state of the capital Washington.
L’“import alert” launched will make it possible to place deliveries of xylazine “under increased surveillance by the FDA”, who can seize them in the event of non-compliance with the law. In particular, the FDA will ensure that the pharmaceutical ingredients used to manufacture xylazine and the finished product are “properly labeled, untampered with, and for legitimate veterinary use”.
“This action is part of a larger effort launched by the agency to address this issue”, said the boss of the FDA, Robert Califf, quoted in the press release. The agency says it is working with partners at the local and federal level, and has promised to keep the public informed of the progress of the work being undertaken.
The World with AFP