Bay of Plenty Times

Deadly drug detected

Health teams alarmed to see return of ‘zombie’ cannabis

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Adeadly drug known for inducing zombie-like behaviour and playing a part in more than 70 Kiwi deaths has been found in the community again, putting authoritie­s on high alert.

Scientists detected the chemical compound —called Amb-fubinaca — in three seized synthetic cannabis samples originatin­g from Northland, the Bay of Plenty and Christchur­ch.

The chemical’s effects are reported by researcher­s to be 75 times stronger than THC, the psychoacti­ve compound found in cannabis.

It’s meant users have often overdosed quickly from very small doses of the drug.

Of 58 cases of Amb-fubinaca intoxicati­on identified in Auckland, 93 per cent of victims died at the place they were using the substance, drug informatio­n group High Alert said.

However, Amb-fubinaca appeared to then temporaril­y disappear from the market with the last previous detection made in New Zealand in November 2019.

That was what made the three recent detections extremely alarming, High Alert said.

“The unusually wide geographic range of these most recent detections causes concern there could be a wider re-emergence of Ambfubinac­a in the community,” it said.

“This is particular­ly concerning as

Amb-fubinaca has been one of the most lethal illicit substances in New Zealand in recent years.

In September last year, Chief Coroner Deborah Marshall revealed after a coronial inquiry that at least 75 people across the country had died after taking synthetic drugs between June 2017 to 2019.

Amb-fubinaca was involved in 80 per cent of those deaths.

It also became infamous for inducing zombie-like behaviour, and fuelling an outbreak in New York in 2016 that gained it worldwide notoriety.

Other serious adverse effects are reported to include aggression, difficulty breathing, harmful thoughts, suicidal feelings, hallucinat­ions, psychotic episodes, seizures, and death.

Associate professor Chris Wilkins, a drug researcher from Massey University, said Amb-fubinaca was extremely dangerous.

“Its risk in synthetic cannabinoi­d products is exacerbate­d by unregulate­d black market production and manufactur­ers with limited or no expertise in chemistry,” he said.

He said greater research was needed to understand why some Kiwis used synthetic cannabinoi­ds.

“It is also worth noting that most people who use synthetic cannabis have reported they prefer to use natural cannabis, and consequent­ly greater legal access to cannabis could be considered,” Wilkins said. “Countries with more liberal cannabis laws are less likely to report synthetic cannabinoi­d use and related deaths.”

Doug Sellman, professor of Psychiatry and Addiction Medicine at the University of Otago, also said that one of the downsides of banning natural cannabis was the emergence of highly potent and dangerous synthetic alternativ­es.

These were often deliberate­ly made into highly potent varieties that meant smaller quantities could be more easily hidden and transporte­d illegally.

“This phenomenon is exactly what happened in the United States during prohibitio­n of alcohol (1920-1933) when very high potency alcohol produced illegally at the time for ease of transport and sale was associated with a concerning number of deaths,” Sellman said.

 ?? Photo / File ?? A deadly chemical compound has been detected in synthetic cannabis shipments seized across New Zealand.
Photo / File A deadly chemical compound has been detected in synthetic cannabis shipments seized across New Zealand.

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