Chattanooga Times Free Press

Report on Prince’s death leaves unanswered questions,

- BY CARLA K. JOHNSON

The report from the medical examiner who conducted Prince’s autopsy is tantalizin­g for what it doesn’t say.

The single-page document lists a fentanyl overdose as the cause of death, but it offers few clues to indicate whether the musician was a chronic pain patient desperatel­y seeking relief, a longtime opioid user whose habit became an addiction or a combinatio­n of both.

Blanks for contributi­ng causes are marked “na” for “not applicable.” A space for “other significan­t conditions” is also marked “na.”

Authoritie­s probably know much more than they are willing to discuss publicly as they seek the source of the fentanyl and consider criminal charges. For now, details in the report, combined with what’s known about Prince’s final days, hint at a fuller picture.

Among those details is a note that Prince’s body had scars on the left hip and right lower leg. The report doesn’t say, but it’s possible the scars were evidence of past surgeries for joint pain. At least one friend has said Prince suffered years of hip and knee pain from his athletic stage performanc­es.

In many ways, the 57-year-old superstar fit the descriptio­n of a chronic pain patient who got hooked on opioids, said Andrew Kolodny, director of Physicians for Responsibl­e Opioid Prescribin­g. Opioids lead to tolerance, and some patients seek out stronger drugs after initial dosages stop working.

“We see far more overdose deaths in middle-aged people receiving legitimate prescripti­ons,” Kolodny said, citing a 2013 study of 250 deaths. In the study, most overdose victims were middle-aged adults who had been prescribed opioids for chronic pain.

Survivors told researcher­s their loved ones, in the year before they died, had been misusing their medicine, taking more than prescribed or using painkiller­s to get high.

Less than a week before Prince died, his plane made an emergency stop in Illinois on a flight back to Minnesota following a concert in Atlanta. The Associated Press and other media organizati­ons, citing anonymous sources, reported that first responders gave him an antidote commonly used to reverse suspected opioid overdoses.

Fentanyl is a powerful opioid prescribed by doctors to patients who develop a tolerance to other narcotics. It’s also a street drug with ties to labs in China that produce fentanyl equivalent­s for global distributi­on.

Heroin-spiked fentanyl is marketed with brand names such as “China White” or “Fire.”

Nothing in the report explains whether Prince used a pharmaceut­ical product or a street drug. The report is silent on whether it was prescribed by a doctor or obtained illegally.

“Was it a lozenge? Was it a skin patch?” said Dr. Yashpal Agrawal of the College of American Pathologis­ts. What’s more, there are numerous ways to misuse and overdose on fentanyl, by applying multiple skin patches or eating one, Agrawal said.

The report says nothing about other drugs Prince may have been taking. Some prescripti­on drugs can affect the way fentanyl is processed by the body, increasing its toxicity, Agrawal said.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Prince performs at the Billboard Music Awards in Las Vegas in 2013.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Prince performs at the Billboard Music Awards in Las Vegas in 2013.

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