The Norwalk Hour

Tranquiliz­er used on horses, cows showing up in more Conn. overdoses

- By Dave Altimari

The number of fatal drug overdoses in Connecticu­t is holding steady with last year, but xylazine, a tranquiliz­er used on horses and cows, is showing up in more and more cases, officials said.

The state first started seeing xylazine mixed with heroin or fentanyl in 2019 when it was found in 71 deaths, records show. So far this year, xylazine has been detected in 279 deaths.

Through the first week of November, there were 1,139 overdose deaths in the state, compared to 1,531 in all of 2021, according to an internal report compiled by the state Department of Public Health’s Opioid Surveillan­ce team.

With almost two months still to go and a lag in reported cases be cause of the wait for toxicology test results, the number of fatal overdoses will likely be about the same as last year.

But what has continued to increase is overdoses where traces of xylazine were found, the interim report said.

Even more concerning is that xylazine appears to resist the effects of naloxone, the drug that can halt an opioid overdose.

Last month, the Federal Drug Administra­tion put out an alert to health care profession­als, warning them to be cautious because the “FDA is aware of increasing reports of serious side effects from individual­s exposed to fentanyl, heroin, and other illicit drugs contaminat­ed with xylazine.”

“Health care profession­als should be cautious of possible xylazine inclusion in fentanyl, heroin and other illicit drug overdoses, as naloxone may not be able to reverse its effects,” the FDA alert said.

Through the first week of November, there were 1,139 overdose deaths in the state, compared to 1,531 in all of 2021, according to an internal report compiled by the state Department of Public Health’s Opioid Surveillan­ce team.

Hard to detect

Xylazine is FDA-approved for use in mostly large animals such as cows and horses as a sedative and pain reliever. The alert said that xylazine is “not safe for use in humans and may result in serious and lifethreat­ening side effects that appear to be similar to those commonly associated with opioid use, making it difficult to distinguis­h opioid overdoses from xylazine exposure.”

The number of cases where xylazine is present in an overdose may be undercount­ed because it is not detectable through a routine toxicology screening.

The FDA alert said that additional analytical techniques are required to detect xylazine when it might be involved in illicit drug overdoses, particular­ly when there are other signs or symptoms of xylazine exposure.

Chief State Medical Examiner James Gill said his office has been screening for xylazine since 2013 and noticed the drug in overdose deaths in 2019.

Gill and a team that included representa­tives from DPH and the Connecticu­t Children’s Hospital submitted a Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report in 2021 analyzing overdose deaths where xylazine was found.

The study found that in 146 deaths where xylazine was present in 202021 that the group studied all but one of those cases also included the presence of fentanyl and that more than 70% of those who died were white males.

Gill said the goal is to “provide enhanced surveillan­ce of tracking emerging substances, guide prevention initiative­s and aid health care profession­als to treat patients more effectivel­y.”

DPH Epidemiolo­gist Susan Logan said the number of cases where xylazine was present peaked over the first six months of 2022 and has slowed down since, although there still will be more cases than last year.

“We have always seen it [in combinatio­n with] with fentanyl. I think in one case, we saw it with cocaine, but that’s very, very rare,” Logan said. “For some reason, though, it was on the increase in 2019, 2020, and 2021, but since March of this year, it actually has been on the downward trend.”

DPH officials are hopeful that overdose deaths overall will at least plateau this year.

Cheaper alternativ­e

Logan added another issue with the tranquiliz­er is naloxone, often known as Narcan, doesn’t have any effect on it.

“If the naloxone is given to someone that has also consumed an opioid, it will do its job on the opioid, but it’s not going to have an impact on anything else,” Logan said. “We want people to think about harm reduction, like basically keeping them alive until they do seek treatment for their addiction, their dependenci­es.”

William Eger, a postgradua­te research associate at Yale University School of Medicine, said there aren’t a lot of public-health related studies that have really said whether naloxone works against xylazine, but “based on the pharmacolo­gy, we wouldn’t expect it to, because they’re different drugs.”

Eger was also involved in the needle exchange program the medical school operates.

He said there has been lots of discussion about xylazine among community-based organizati­ons that provide services such as needle exchange programs or free naloxone.

“Anytime they see xylazine, it is in combinatio­n with something else, and what that kind of tells us is that it’s being used as an adulterant, either to increase the effects of fentanyl or heroin, or because it’s cheaper and giving people similar effects on a drug level,” Eger said.

 ?? Mary Altaffer / Associated Press ?? A Narcan nasal device, which delivers naloxone, in Brooklyn, N.Y., on July 3, 2018. Xylazine, a tranquiliz­er used on horses and cows, is showing up in more and more overdose cases in Connecticu­t.
Mary Altaffer / Associated Press A Narcan nasal device, which delivers naloxone, in Brooklyn, N.Y., on July 3, 2018. Xylazine, a tranquiliz­er used on horses and cows, is showing up in more and more overdose cases in Connecticu­t.

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