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Showing posts with label MDPV. Show all posts
Showing posts with label MDPV. Show all posts

Sunday, June 03, 2012

Zombie Apocalypse: Bath Salts Investigated by Congress as CDC Denies Zombies Exist

original post from: http://www.policymic.com/articles/9152/zombie-attack-bath-salts-investigated-by-congress-as-cdc-denies-zombies-exist

Zombie Apocalypse: 

Bath Salts Investigated by Congress as CDC Denies Zombies Exist

by Alex Marin





As fears of a possible “Zombie Apocalypse” grow by the minute in light of increasingly gruesome reports of cannibalism, the Center for Disease Control and Prevention has been forced to intervene in order to preserve whatever is left of our collective sanity.

“CDC does not know of a virus or condition that would reanimate the dead (or one that would present zombie-like symptoms),” CDC spokesman David Daigle said on Thursday, after a string of strange incidents involving seemingly non-human behavior over the last week.

In Miami, police shot a naked man after he ate the face of another man on the side of a highway. In Maryland, a college student told investigators he ate the heart and brain of a dismembered body found in his home.

In Hackensack, a man stabbed himself and threw pieces of his intestines at police. And in Canada, police are searching for a gay porn actor who allegedly killed a young man with an ice pick, dismembered the body and then raped and ate flesh from the corpse.

And now even Congress has weighed in. The Miami cannibal attack may, if lawmakers have their way, be the final straw in the fight to making sure synthetic drugs such as bath salts and synthetic marijuana are classed alongside heroin and LSD.

"Looking at the Miami incident, we've seen people do some very bizarre acts on bath salts," says Florida Republican Rep. Sandy Adams, who helped push the Combating Dangerous Synthetic Stimulants Act of 2011 through the House last December. The bill would federally ban MDPV and mephedrone, two chemicals found in "bath salts," and dozens of other chemicals found in synthetic drugs.

Last week, the Senate passed a Food and Drug Administration bill that would ban many of the same chemicals. But so far, both houses haven't been able to pass an identical bill. The hang ups have been deciding exactly which chemicals to ban, and determining if there should be "mandatory minimum" sentences for synthetic drug traffickers.

Zombie Apocalypse - Cannibal Attack - Bath Salts






It's the "zombie apocalypse" that everyone is talking about—including Congress. The Miami cannibal attack may, if lawmakers have their way, be the final straw in the fight to making sure synthetic drugs such as bath salts and synthetic marijuana are classed alongside heroin and LSD.

"Looking at the Miami incident, we've seen people do some very bizarre acts on bath salts," says Florida Republican Rep. Sandy Adams, who helped push the Combating Dangerous Synthetic Stimulants Act of 2011 through the House last December. The bill would federally ban MDPV and mephedrone, two chemicals found in "bath salts," and dozens of other chemicals found in synthetic drugs.

[Maryland Man Arrested After Killing, Eating Roommate]

Last week, the Senate passed a Food and Drug Administration bill that would ban many of the same chemicals. But so far, both houses haven't been able to pass an identical bill. The hang ups have been deciding exactly which chemicals to ban, and determining if there should be "mandatory minimum" sentences for synthetic drug traffickers.

Adams, who spent time working in the Orange County, Fla. Sheriff's office before going into politics, was imperative in getting Florida to ban synthetic drugs earlier this year. She says that hopefully the Miami incident will be the wake-up call Congress needs to get something done.

"I think that now we have to come together with the Senate and resolve whatever differences we have," she says. "We need to put a law in place that helps stop the sale and distribution of something this dangerous."

Maine Senator Susan Collins was a cosponsor of the Senate bill that recently passed. In a statement, she said Congress "cannot afford to wait to address this problem any longer."

[What are Bath Salts?]

"The longer Congress goes without enacting a permanent ban on these chemicals, the more our citizens are put at senseless risk," she says.

Many, but not all, states have taken recent measures to ban the drugs. While the Drug Enforcement Agency took emergency measures last year to make many synthetic drugs illegal, manufacturers can simply alter the chemical makeup to skirt the ban.

According to one bath salt manufacturer's website, certain products marketed as bath salts are banned in all states, others in 20 states, while some still enjoy complete legality, depending on the product's chemical makeup.

State bans can help local law enforcement prosecute synthetic drug dealers, manufacturers, and users, according to Adam Myrick, a spokesperson with the South Carolina Department of Health & Environmental Control, which played a part in banning synthetic drugs earlier this year.

"We echoed the action that had been taken by [the DEA]," Myrick says. "That state designation enables state and local law enforcement to make arrests that otherwise could only be done by federal agents."

A federal ban would also make transporting the drugs across state lines illegal. While Florida has a ban on many synthetic drugs, Adams says it used to be easy to drive to Alabama, where bath salts could, until recently, be purchased in convenience stores.

"If you do a federal ban, you won't be buying them online, if you live in Tallahassee, you won't be able to drive to Alabama or Georgia [and buy them]," she says.

Although the Miami incident served as a painful reminder of the dangers of bath salts and other synthetic drugs, Adams says it's certainly not the first time a psychotic episode has been attributed to the substances.

"These chemicals cause really severe reactions—a lot of them are violent…This is not an isolated incident, these are real things that are happening all the time." she says. "It's something we need to get focused on and get resolved."

Jason Koebler is a science and technology reporter for U.S. News & World Report. You can fol

low him on Twitter or reach him at jkoebler@usnews.com
Video: 'Naked Zombie' Cannibal Was Likely High on Bath Salts
Most Americans Are Immune to Swine Flu
How Doctors Are Using Social Media to Connect With PatientsTags: Miami, drugs

Friday, January 20, 2012

A-PVP - Legal Substitution of MDPV


a-PVP

α-Pyrrolidinopentiophenone or α-PVP is legal substitution of MDPV. MDPV itself is a research chemical also known as Methylenedioxypyrovalerone, 3,4-methylenedioxypyrovalerone. It is sometimes called as PV, Super Coke, Magic, MDPK.

a-PVPNovelty of the season!
14530-33-7
CAS: 14530-33-7
It’s a unique substitution of MDPV, legal all over the world!
Alpha-Pyrrolidinopentiophenone – is one of chemical stimulators that was discovered in 1960s. This chemical substance is closely related to pyrovalerone which is a drug that has psychoactive effect. Alpha-Pyrrolidinopentiophenone has psychoactive stimulating effect on central nervous system. The systematic chemical name of alpha-Pyrrolidinopentiophenone is 1-phenyl-2-(1-pyrrolidinyl)-1-pentanone. Its chemical formula is C15H21NO. Other chemical properties are not studied enough. Alpha-Pyrrolidinopentiophenone is classified as a stimulant that can be also called psychostimulant. Stimulants are chemical products which affect mental or physical functions, sometimes they affect both. a-PVP improves productivity, wakefulness, motivation, locomotion and endurance. Usually stimulants have temporary effect on psychoneurotic system. They are also called ‘uppers’ because of their stimulating effect on every kind of human activity. Many stimulants have relaxation effect and even may cause euphoria for short period of time. Chemical companies also warn you that a-PVP is not for human consumption it can be used for the purposes of chemical research only. It can damage your health if consumed.
copied from original website at https://www.buzz-wholesale.com/chems/a-PVP

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

U.S. Senate plans to vote on bath salts amendments

U.S. Senate plans to vote on bath salts amendments - Milford, DE - Milford Beacon


Washington D.C. —

The United States Senate is expected to vote tomorrow on an amendment to their minibus appropriations spending bill that would help fight the bath salts epidemic on a federal level.

Senator Chris Coons (D-Del) and co-sponsors Olympia Snow (R- Maine) and Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn) introduced the bipartisan legislation today that would require stronger coordination of federal law enforcement with state and local agencies to respond to the growth of synthetic drug use.

“The increased use of bath salts has ruined many lives and is growing as a destructive cancer in some of Delaware’s close-knit communities,” Coons said.

The minibus, formally known as House Resolution 2112, includes legislation for federal Department of Justice spending, said Ian Koski a spokesman for Sen. Coons’ office.

The amendment introduced today is only one of many that is preparing to make its way to the Senate floor to be voted on.

If the amendment is not considered or does not pass, there are other efforts being made by the federal government to fight bath salts.

Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-NY) introduced the Combating Dangerous Synthetic Stimulants Act of 2011, that Coons is co-sponsoring, which would make possession and sale of MPDV and mephedrone, two of the ingredients in bath salts, illegal.

Thursday, September 22, 2011

Maine senators co-sponsor federal bath salts bill

original source: http://bangordailynews.com/2011/09/20/politics/maine-senators-co-sponsor-federal-bath-salts-bill/

Maine’s two U.S. senators have taken notice of the bath salts epidemic in the state and are co-sponsoring federal legislation that would ban the synthetic drug.

“Disturbing reports of violent and self-destructive behavior are just the tip of the iceberg,” Republican Sen. Olympia Snowe said Tuesday of the dangerous stimulant, which began to surface in Maine last February.

She and fellow Republican Sen. Susan Collins both support the passage of the Combating Dangerous Synthetic Stimulants Act, proposed by Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., which would ban methedrone and methylenedioxypyrovalerone, known as MDPV, key ingredients of bath salts.

Bath salts are a lab-made drug that can cause hallucinations, convulsions, psychotic episodes and thoughts of suicide, police officials in Maine and other states are reporting.

“We’re seeing extreme paranoia” in people who have taken the drug, Thomaston Police Chief Kevin Haj said Tuesday. They often believe that someone is after them, he added, and also exhibit signs of psychosis.

Bath salts users are a danger to themselves, others and the law enforcement and emergency medical personnel dispatched to help them, Haj said.

Users of the drug also experience increased heart rates, agitation, anxiety, a diminished requirement for sleep and lack of appetite, Maine police and doctors have said.

“Maine hospitals reported 29 overdoses of bath salts in the month of July compared with zero six months ago,” Snowe said. “Bangor Chief of Police Ron Gastia recently reported his police department typically sees 1 to 3 incidents of bath salts use each day.”

In recent months, Bangor-area police have dealt with numerous people who believed others were out to kill them, a man who attempted to grab an officer’s gun, a woman with a knife who followed a couple in downtown Bangor and a man who attempted suicide by cop — all after consuming the drug.

A Bangor transient was charged Monday night after she knocked on a stranger’s door and told the woman who answered that she was looking for her mother, Bangor police Sgt. Allen Hayden said Tuesday. The Sanford Street resident immediately called police.

Responding officers knew right away that “something was not right in the way she was acting,” the sergeant said of Casandra Bean, 20.

Bean was found in possession of bath salts and given two tickets, one for possession of hallucinogenic drugs and one for sale and use of drug paraphernalia. She was not arrested, Hayden said.

Bath salts became illegal in Maine at the beginning of July, but those caught with the drug are issued a civil offense and dealers face only a misdemeanor charge.

Maine legislators, led by Gov. Paul LePage, are looking to stiffen bath salts penalties and the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration is working to make three of the main components of the stimulant a Schedule 1 drug, the same class as heroin and LSD.

The DEA’s ban will take effect in early October and remain in place for at least one year while the agency and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services study a permanent ban on methedrone, MDPV and Methylone, another ingredient of bath salts.

The federal bill supported by Snowe and Collins would make two of those components illegal much faster and on a permanent basis. They are urging quick congressional approval.

“With the use of this drug rapidly increasing, the longer we wait to permanently ban the substance, the more we put people at senseless risk,” Collins said Tuesday.

The bill has been placed on the Senate’s legislative calendar.

Public forums have been held in Bangor and Presque Isle in recent weeks to educate residents about bath salts, also known on the streets of the Queen City as “monkey dust.” Another forum, hosted by the Piscataquis Public Health Council, is scheduled for 6:30-7:30 p.m. Wednesday atFoxcroft Academy in Dover-Foxcroft.

The Knox County Community Health Coalition, Rockland District Nursing Association and Rockland Police Department will host a community training session about bath salts from 4 to 5:30 p.m. Oct. 24 at the Rockland City Council chambers.

Tuesday, September 13, 2011

Senator says DEA will place emergency nationwide ban on deadly ‘bath salts’


Senator says DEA will place emergency nationwide ban on deadly ‘bath salts’

Posted Septemeber 9, 2011 
source: http://www.empirestatenews.net/News/20110909-8.html


WASHINGTON – The United States Drug Enforcement Administration is moving to place a ban on the possession and sale of chemicals or products that contain Mephedrone, methylenedioxypyrovalerone (MDPV) and Methylone – the key ingredients of ‘bath salts’. In January, Schumer called on the DEA to ban Mephedrone and MDPV, and had subsequently introduced the Combating Dangerous Synthetic Stimulants Act of 2011 to ban them if the DEA had not acted. With today’s DEA announcement, these chemicals will be made illegal for a least one year while the agency and the United States Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) continue to study whether these chemicals should be permanently banned. Bath salts have a similar effect on the body as cocaine and methamphetamines. The dangerous ingredients in the drugs can be snorted, smoked, and injected.

“I am pleased the DEA has finally heeded our call to ban these drugs by making them illegal controlled substances. While this is a solid first step, we need to ensure that these drugs stay off the market for good,” said U.S. Senator Charles Schumer. “I will push to permanently ban these drugs until the threat of this scourge is removed from our neighborhoods, our schools, and from store counters across the country.”

Bath Salts are sold online, at convenience stores, and in smoke shops under names like Tranquility, Zoom, Ivory Wave, Red Dove and Vanilla Sky. According to numerous reports, the chemicals found in these bath salts and plant foods cause effects similar to those caused by cocaine and Methamphetamines, including hallucinations, paranoia, and suicidal thoughts. In one case, a user was reported to have resorted to self-mutilation after abusing the substance. In several cases, users have died after overdosing or because of violent behavior.

The synthetic chemicals in bath salts are uncontrolled substances with no known medicinal purpose. The harmful impact of these powders has been recognized around the country, and a majority of states in the US have banned the substance. Countries around the world have also banned the substance, including the United Kingdom, Australia, Canada, and Israel.

In January, Schumer announced that he would be introducing legislation to ban the drugs. Schumer’s legislation would make bath salts illegal in the United States by adding the active ingredients to Schedule I of the Controlled Substances Act, which classifies drugs that are illegal and cannot be prescribed under any circumstances.

Wednesday’s announcement indicates the DEA will ban the possession and sale of bath salts nationwide. In 30 days or more, the DEA plans to issue the order, which will classify these drugs as Schedule I substances. The DEA exercised its emergency scheduling authority to temporarily control these stimulants, banning them for one year once the final order is given. The DEA reports that they had been receiving an increasing number of reports from poison centers, hospitals, and law enforcement regarding these products.

Monday, August 15, 2011

Combating Dangerous Synthetic Stimulants Act of 2011 on THOMAS

See PDF of bill (images below)


See also:  Queens Campaigner- Schumer bill to outlaw dangerous bath salts






Texas Legislation

as copied from website link


GENERAL RULES:


The controlled substances in question are typically banned or scheduled on a case-by-case basis as the governments catch up with what the latest substance being used is. However, there can be complications with analog drug acts that are in force on the federal level and several states. The Federal Analog Act is a law that has serious concerns with its vague language along with the serious weakness of being limited to banning substances intended for “internal use”.

Typically, there is no law for a specific license to sell bath salts, plant feeders, incense, or potpourri among the states. These goods are too prolific for effective enforcement of licenses. The common practice is to ban the substances in the goods. These can be identified by chemical tests and is a lot less burdensome than asking every general goods store to have a license for a handful of products.

Following substances are banned in Texas state:
CP-47,497: 5-(1,1-dimethylheptyl)-2-[(1R,3S)-3-hydroxycyclohexyl]-phenol
CP-47,497 C8 homologue: 5-(1,1-dimethyloctyl)-2-[(1R,3S)-3-hydroxycyclohexyl]-phenol (cannabicyclohexanol)
HU-210: (6aR,10aR)- 9-(Hydroxymethyl)- 6,6-dimethyl- 3-(2-methyloctan-2-yl)- 6a,7,10,10a-tetrahydrobenzo [c]chromen- 1-ol
JWH-018: 1-pentyl-3-(1-naphthoyl)indole
JWH-073: 1-butyl-3-(1-naphthoyl)indole
JWH-200: 1-[2-(4-morpholinyl)ethyl]-3-(1-naphthoyl)indole


Following substances are legal unless marked for internal use:
Buphedrone: 2-(methylamino)-1-phenylbutan-1-one, also known as α-methylamino-butyrophenone
Ethcathinone: (RS)-2-ethylamino-1-phenyl-propan-1-one, also known as ethylpropion
Mephedrone: (RS)-2-methylamino-1-(4-methylphenyl)propan-1-one, also known as 4-methylmethcathinone (4-MMC), or 4-methylephedrone
Methylone: (±)-2-methylamino-1-(3,4-methylenedioxyphenyl)propan-1-one, also known as "M1", 3,4-methylenedioxy-N-methylcathinone, bk-MDMA, MDMC


Our herbal blends, bath salts and pills are completely compliant to Texas state laws and Federal laws and possession, sale, import, export below mentioned products is completely lawful:

Blend and incense:
iHigh Black
iHigh White
Solid Incense 3g
Afghan Incense
Afghan Buzz
Afghan Fire
Afghan Ice

Party pills:
Diablo
Elevate
Exotic
Giggle
Hypnotic
Storm
Hummer

Party powder:
White Lady powder
C Original powder
Freebase powder


Information source and current status of pending bills:
Bills pending banning synthetic marijuana, methylone, mephedrone, MDPV, 3-FMC, 4-FMC, and 4-MMC have passed. Both bills take effect 9/1/2011. Synthetic marijuana classified by pharmacological effect and structure.

http://www.capitol.state.tx.us/BillLookup/history.aspx?LegSess=82R&Bill=...

http://www.capitol.state.tx.us/BillLookup/history.aspx?LegSess=82R&Bill=...

The above information reflects the legal situation in ALL cities and counties in TEXAS including the following:

Houston | San Antonio | Dallas | Austin | Fort Worth | El Paso | Arlington | Corpus Christi | Plano | Laredo | Lubbock

Why Snorting "Bath Salts" Is Popular -- and Dangerous

By Niki D'Andrea
published: January 13, 2011


The hottest new drug on the streets is perfectly legal — and totally dangerous, according to everyone from the DEA to local toxicology experts.



Sold on the Internet and at head shops under names such as Ivory Wave, Cloud 9, Vanilla Sky, and White Lightning, "bath salts" sound so sweet and innocent. But the alleged potent effects of these particular bath salts don't come from dumping them in the tub for a relaxing soak. The packets contain small amounts of white crystalline powder, and they're labeled with warnings like "novelty only" and "not for human consumption."

But there have been more than a hundred reports nationwide of people smoking, snorting, eating, or injecting the bath salts — with ill effects ranging from paranoia to seizures. Doing so is said to produce effects similar to highs from ecstasy (heightening of the senses, sexual arousal) and stimulants like cocaine and methamphetamine (euphoria and increased energy).

Local DEA spokeswoman Ramona Sanchez says they haven't received any calls related to bath salts in Arizona yet, but Banner Good Samaritan Medical Center reports two cases related to ingestion of bath salts in Phoenix, one in September and one in December. Both involved 22-year-olds who were admitted to the emergency room with "agitation, increased heart rate and blood pressure."

The bath salts are being sold widely — and legally, for now — in the United States. They are marketed here much in the same manner as "herbal incense" (also called spice). Spice was sold for "aromatherapy only" and also labeled "not for human consumption," but chemical compounds sprayed on the herbs (five of which were federally banned in December) replicated a marijuana high when people smoked it. Spice blends are still sold in head shops, but they don't have the banned compounds in them anymore.

The speedy high from ingesting bath salts is said to come from two synthetic compounds, mephedrone and methylenedioxypyrovalerone (MDPV). The federal Drug Enforcement Administration was alerted to their presence in 2009, when they showed up in lab tests on substances seized by law enforcement officers in six states. Last year, the DEA published reports on both compounds, noting that each was "related in chemical structure" to illegal hallucinogenic substances like MDMA (ecstasy) and illegal stimulants like cathinone and methamphetamine.

Mephedrone, first synthesized and reported in a French academic journal in 1929, didn't appear on the designer drug market until 2003, when an underground chemist named Kinetic rediscovered and published the formula on the website The Hive (the site shut down in 2004). It's been banned in numerous places, including Israel and Europe. MDPV has reportedly been sold as a "research chemical" since 2008. It has been banned in Finland, Denmark, and Sweden. Neither compound is currently a federally controlled substances in the United States, which makes "bath salts" containing them legal to buy and sell — but far from perfectly safe.

Side effects of snorting bath salts include increased heart rate and chest pain, agitation and paranoia, dizziness and vomiting, and profuse sweating. Poison-control centers around the country have reported receiving more than 160 calls about bath salts in the past three months. Much of the buzz has come from Louisiana, where at least 84 people have been hospitalized after ingesting them. It's been quiet in Phoenix so far — only two reported emergency room visits from bath salts — but they already seem to be a popular product here.

During the last week of December, New Times visited seven Phoenix head shops and called four others looking for bath salts. Every one New Times contacted (with the exception of Trails and Herb 'N' Legend, which doesn't carry them) was sold out.

Herb 'N' Legend owner Tim Martin says he's decided not to carry bath salts because "as a retailer in this business, I'm concerned about the attributes of what's being said — if it's addictive or even deadly. As a father, I can't let this get to anyone. People will do anything for a dollar, and it's sick."

When we finally found a bag of bath salts at DJ's Smoke Shop in Mesa, it was the last on their shelves. The clerk said that five minutes earlier, a man came in and bought the rest — seven 250 milligram bags of bath salts, totaling nearly $240.

Dr. Daniel Brooks, co-medical director of the Department of Medical Toxicology at the Banner Good Samaritan Poison and Drug Information Center in Phoenix, is familiar with mephedrone and MDPV as "relatively novel synthetic stimulants" but says that little academic research has been done on them and that they've never been tested on humans. Medical professionals aren't 100 percent certain how these compounds are metabolized or how they'll react with other drugs. The ingredients in bath salts aren't listed on the packages, so users have no way of knowing what they're actually ingesting.

"We see patients that are often sent to us after overdoses and adverse drug effects. I don't have specific numbers and such, but a lot of the patients that come to us saying they bought an illicit substance, like . . . spice or mephedrone; especially these newer drugs that are out on the market, we often run tests and find other drugs in their system," Brooks says. "I think that's the main problem with using illicit substances. Anything that's not regulated . . . you never know what you're getting. They could say it's spice, but it's really methamphetamine. Or they can say it's mephedrone, but it's some prescription anti-psychotic."

"There's a risk of having to trust your supplier — and who knows who your supplier is? — or their ability to make these compounds," Brooks says. "It's always pretty much clandestine labs set up in a trailer or an apartment or a house — or wherever they're making these things — and just distributing them with or without adulterants."

"The big risk of adverse effects [with stimulants] always occurs in the dose, and how much you take, and the concentration, which you may not know," Brooks says. One risk of using synthetic speed in Phoenix is hyperthermia. "You get all revved up and your temperature can go up to 103, 104, 105 degrees, and that can lead to seizures and liver disease and kidney disease."

But Brooks adds that most of the time, "these drugs can be treated with basic supportive care," and he hasn't seen a lot of cases of extremely sick mephedrone and MDPV users in Arizona.

Other states haven't been so lucky. Last month in Kansas, 21-year-old Elijah Taylor ran onto Interstate 135, waving his hands, before he was struck and killed by a van. In his pocket, police discovered a container of Blue Magic Bath Salts. Toxicology tests are pending.

In October 2010, 29-year-old Jarrod Moody committed suicide in Missouri, allegedly after a binge on Ivory Wave bath salts. Moody had reportedly been off painkillers for two years when he developed an addiction to Ivory Wave. His father told media he found several packets of the bath salts in his son's room. Moody's friends and family described him as emaciated, paranoid, and sleepless in the days leading to his death.

Although mephedrone and MDPV are not currently controlled in the United States, both were placed on the DEA's list of "Drugs and Chemicals of Concern" last year. And possession or use of substances containing them and sold for human consumption could be prosecuted under the Federal Analog Act.

Analogs are chemical compounds derived from another compound, which often differ by a single element. Mephedrone and MDVP are both analogs of cathinone, a chemical similar to amphetamine and derived from the khat plant. Cathinone has been illegal internationally since the 1971 Convention on Psychotropic Substances in Austria.

Because they involve analogs of a controlled substance, law enforcement cases involving mephedrone and MDPV can be prosecuted under the Federal Analog Act — if the substances were intended for human consumption. But the bath salts believed to contain these compounds are marketed and sold strictly as toiletries — and they're the most expensive on the market. Considering that 20 ounces of regular bath salts sells for about $7 on Amazon.com, the bath salts sold in head shops for as much as $120 a gram make a ridiculously expensive soak in the tub.

Tuesday, July 26, 2011

Methylenedioxypyrovalerone

See more on Wikipedia at 
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Methylenedioxypyrovalerone






Methylenedioxypyrovalerone (MDPV) is a psychoactive drug with stimulant properties which acts as a norepinephrine-dopamine reuptake inhibitor (NDRI). Reportedly, it has been sold since around 2004 as a designer drug. It is also known as MDPK, MTV, Magic, Maddie, Black Rob, Super Coke and PV.[1] In 2010 it was reportedly sold as a legal drug alternative and marketed in the United Statesas "bath salts" (under such names as Aura, Blue Silk, Bonzai Grow, Charge Plus, Euphoria, Hurricane Charlie, Ivory Wave, Lovey Dovey, Ocean, Pixie Dust, Red Dove, Scarface, Vanilla Sky, White Dove, White Girl, White Lightning).[2][3] Media warnings and law enforcement officials refer to it as a "dangerous but legal drug", "copy-cat cocaine", "the devil", "poison", and "synthetic speed".[4][5.............................





Saturday, July 23, 2011

Dateline MDPV Video 3

Dateline MDPV Video 3


Dateline MDPV Video 2

Dateline MDPV Video 2

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/21134540/vp/43139226#43139226


Dateline MDPV Video 1

Dateline MDPV Video 1 - "Bath Salts"


MDPV - bath salts, etc

Here's some information on another known legal "research chemical", "designer drug" with the main ingredient of MDPV.

http://www.thepoisonreview.com/?s=mdpv


The Big Business of Synthetic Highs

June 19, 2011, 6:12 pm

The cover story of the current issue of Bloomberg Businessweek a long article in about the business aspects of synthetic highs such as “Spice”, “K2″, and bath salts, an industry estimated to gross many billions of dollars yearly.  The article focuses on one company — Pandora Potpourri of in Columbia MO – with two employees, four sales reps, and an annual profit of $500,000 from $2.5 million in revenue.  The article is fairly interesting, but has nothing that should surprise regular readers of The Poison Review.

Thanks to DoseNation for bringing this article to my attention.


Related posts:

NBC’s Dateline goes undercover top investigate the “bath salt” industry

“Bath salts” in Michigan

Were “bath salts” involved in a double murder/suicide in Washington State?

Dr. Oz on bath salts (MDPV)

NBC’s Today Show reports on bath salts (MDPV)

Death in Britain: “Ivory Wave” (MDPV) or diabetic ketoacidosis

“Ivory Wave” identified as MDPV

It’s not your mom’s bath salts

To read my Emergency Medicine News column on bath salts, click here.


Posted in Medical by Leon