Enterprise-Record (Chico)

Fentanyl death threat is gaining steam

- Thomas Elias Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com.

Here's a stunning figure from the federal Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion: Six of every 10 counterfei­t pills sold in this country now contain a potentiall­y lethal dose of fentanyl, a 50 percent increase from four out of 10 in 2021.

That means when the 2022 death rates from this very strong and very often faked and polluted opioid come in, they are likely to be far higher than the 5,722 who died in California in 2021, the last full year for which figures are available. In that same year, the national toll topped 107,000.

These were mostly patients suffering pain who took the drug after filling legitimate prescripti­ons.

So common is illicit fentanyl that drug agents in Los Angeles alone last year seized 38 million doses of it, almost one for every person in this state.

With drug enforcers finding just a fraction of all fabricated fentanyl, these figures make counterfei­t fentanyl a very serious death threat, but one that cannot be mitigated by masks or vaccines.

All this from a drug once used mainly as an anesthetic or to treat patients with severe pain, especially after surgery. It also can be used by people suffering chronic pain who don't respond to other opioids.

Properly used via injections, skin patches or lozenges shaped like cough drops, the phony versions of fentanyl are often taken unknowingl­y by persons following up on doctors' scrips for other drugs.

That's one reason for a California law known as AB 2760, signed in 2018 by former Gov. Jerry Brown. This requires prescriber­s to offer patients taking fentanyl a companion prescripti­on for the opioid-reversing agent Naloxone (often called Narcan) if they are taking more than 90 milligrams of fentanyl or a morphine equivalent daily. People with histories of drug misuse who take fentanyl must also be offered prescripti­ons for the Naloxone antidote even if they take much smaller amounts than that.

Addiction is also a danger for patients taking fentanyl for pain. It can induce extreme happiness, drowsiness, sedation, respirator­y depression and arrest, comas and death.

Those addictive qualities all push the massive trade in fake fentanyl, which the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) says is also known as Apace, China Girl, China Town, China White, Dance Fever, Goodfellas, Great Bear, He-Man, Poison and Tango & Cash.

Much of the fake fentanyl sold in America is taken mixed with other drugs like heroin and methamphet­amines. When the other drugs are mixed with fentanyl, NIDA reports, they induce a high with far smaller doses, making drugs laced with fentanyl a considerab­ly cheaper fix for addicts.

That, in turn, can lead to overdoses, which cause breathing to slow or stop. Comas, permanent brain damage or death can follow. No wonder this state tries to place the Naloxone antidote in the hands of as many users as possible.

Mostly concocted in secret labs in China and Mexico, fake fentanyl is also laced with impurities that sometimes lead to other forms of toxicity. A big danger comes when it is secretly added to frequently-prescribed pressed pills of anti-anxiety drugs like Xanax, Valium, Ativan, Klonopin, Librium and Serax, where it can lurk entirely unsuspecte­d by pharmacist­s and patients.

This makes for an unpreceden­ted danger, as non-addicts suddenly become at risk for addiction if inadverten­t doses of impure fentanyl diminish sensitivit­y to other stimuli, making it hard to feel pleasure from anything else.

The only good news here — and it's actually small consolatio­n — is that despite its high death toll from fentanyl, California is among the least-affected states, with just under seven deaths per 100,000 population in 2021, compared with states like West Virginia (81) and Wisconsin (28).

Reality is that even when government enforces purity standards, counterfei­ters have managed to insert doctored pills into enough pharmacy stocks to cause serious trouble.

That's why a new state law requires community colleges and Cal State campuses to distribute fast-acting Naloxone for free, often as a nasal spray.

Merely eyeballing a pill does not reveal whether it's impure, so patients who use morphinere­lated drugs and strong doses of anti-anxiety medication­s should make sure they get the Naloxone anti-dote that's supposed to be available to them and keep some on hand.

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