The hottest designer drug to hit
the underground market is a cousin of bath salts known as flakka.
Placed on the U.S. list of illegal controlled substances in 2014,
flakka’s popularity has surged, especially in Florida, where it arrives
in droves from China through the mail. The drug has reportedly also
shown up in Ohio, Texas and Illinois. Other states, such as New York,
have issued warnings about it.
Flakka is part
of a chemical class of drugs called cathinones, and it’s designed to
mimic the stimulative effects of the cathinone found in the leaves of
the khat plant chewed in some parts of the world.
Flakka
— its chemical name is alpha-pyrrolidinopentiophenone, or Alpha-PVP —
comes in the form of white or pink crystals that can be swallowed,
snorted, injected or vaped. “Vaporizing, which sends the drug very
quickly into the bloodstream, may make it particularly easy to
overdose,” the National Institute on Drug Abuse
warned in April. The term flakka apparently comes from the Spanish
slang for a slender and attractive woman (“la flaca”). The drug is also
referred to as gravel because its white crystal chunks have been
compared to aquarium gravel.The drug has effects similar to
MDMA, also known as ecstasy or Molly. It acts as a re-uptake inhibitor
of the neurotransmitters dopamine and norepinephrine, leading users to
feel “excited delirium.” Some users can have hallucinations that result
in violent behavior, or experience spikes in body temperature (up to
105-106 degrees Fahrenheit) and paranoia. In addition, the drug can
cause muscles to break down, a result of higher body temperatures,
leading to kidney complications and, potentially, the need for long-term
dialysis.
Flakka may be more addictive than meth and some have said it can be more dangerous than cocaine
because it’s difficult to control the exact dose an individual takes. A
small overdose can lead to extreme symptoms, including death. The
effects of the drug can take days to wear off.
Plus, flakka is cheap. A dose can reportedly go for $3 to $5. On the street, one kilo can cost $50,000, but ordered online from China — where it isn’t illegal — one can go for as little as $1,500, according to experts cited by Reuters.
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