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By Pat Anson
Federal and state efforts to ban the sale of 7-hydroxymitragynine (7-OH) products may be having the unintended effect of increasing sales of the kratom extract, which is a potent pain reliever.
The owner of Kansas City-based American Shaman, the largest U.S. producer and seller of 7-OH products, says sales have increased since the FDA sent a warning letter to his company in July alleging its 7-OH tablets were being sold illegally as adulterated dietary supplements.
“We’re busier than ever,” says Vince Sanders, who estimates that millions of Americans are using 7-OH for pain relief and as a mood enhancer. “More people are familiar with it now than there were a year ago. All this press just makes more and more people educated about it, and more people go out and try it.”
7-hydroxymitragynine is a naturally occurring alkaloid found in kratom, an herbal supplement used in southeast Asia for centuries as a stimulant and pain reliever. Kratom contains only trace amounts of 7-OH, but Sanders has developed a process that makes it more concentrated and potent.
Although technically not an opioid, 7-OH has opioid-like effects. Last summer, the FDA asked the DEA to classify 7-OH as an illegal Schedule One controlled substance, claiming it was a dangerous and addictive substance “more potent than morphine.” While the DEA has yet to act on that request, Florida, Ohio, California, and several other states and municipalities have recently moved to ban 7-OH sales.
While there are anecdotal reports that 7-OH is addictive, there is little solid evidence that people are overdosing or being harmed by it. And American Shaman continues to sell it, even though thousands of its tablets have been seized by the FDA.
Sanders believes 7-OH may be at least partially responsible for the recent decline in drug overdoses, because it keeps pain sufferers from turning to more dangerous substances like illicit fentanyl and other street drugs. Some use it as an alternative to Suboxone to treat opioid withdrawal symptoms.
“There’s probably roughly 75,000 people walking the earth today that wouldn’t be here, and hundreds of thousands of others that have used 7-OH to completely stop taking a street drug,” Sanders told PNN..
“This isn’t some party drug. It’s not like, ‘Oh my gosh, I feel so high. This is incredible.’ That’s not what 7-OH does. 7-OH is tremendous for pain and it definitely is a mood enhancer. It puts you in a better mood, but it doesn’t make you high, like alcohol, marijuana or a traditional opioid. It doesn’t have that effect.”
7-OH is so effective that Sanders advises pain sufferers to use it sparingly in small amounts, and to take a break from it at least once a week to avoid building a tolerance that requires higher doses.
“If you take it appropriately, you won’t build a tolerance. You’re not going to build an addiction to it. My 82 year old mother has been using it for nearly two years now. She needed a dual hip replacement, but refused to get it. She was almost to the point of not being mobile, she was in so much pain. But now she gets along like normal. It’s amazing. Just takes her pain away.”
Are pain patients using 7-OH? We posed that question to PNN readers on our Facebook page and got some mixed responses.
“It absolutely works! Gets me through an eight hour shift every single day,” said one poster.
“Best pain relief I ever had,” said another.
“Very effective, but it is addictive. It’s helped a lot of people, but it’s hurt some people as well,” warned one poster.
“Can’t stop taking them. It’s been over a year (and) trying to get down to below 100 mg a day is tough. I cannot have a normal digestion process anymore. Sucks and costs a lot of money,” warned another 7-OH user.
Some drug testing companies have started looking for 7-OH in blood and urine samples. Clinical Reference Laboratory in Kansas tested for it in a random batch of 1,000 samples from across the country. Surprisingly, 7-OH was detected more often than fentanyl and prescription opioids like oxycodone and morphine.
“We found a 1.09% positive rate, which is, depending on the population, higher than all the other opiates we test for combined,” CEO Robert Thompson told the Kansas City Star. “That was pretty concerning to me.”
As perplexing as 7-OH may be to health officials and drug regulators, there’s another kratom extract called pseudoindoxyl that’s even more potent and gaining in popularity. Derived from the alkaloid mitragynine, pseudoindoxyl also has opioid-like effects, but without the respiratory depression and risk of overdose that comes with traditional opioids.
“For pain relief, it’s better than 7-OH. The science would indicate that it’s probably five times more potent for pain than 7-OH,” says Sanders, who sells pseudoindoxyl chewable tablets on American Shaman’s website.
He has yet to get any warning letters telling him to stop.
