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Florida bans kratom compound 7-OH amid warnings of a potential new opioid crisis. What does this mean for consumers?
The 7-OH alkaloid is one of the plant's most potent active compounds. According to information distributed by the attorney ...
Florida has declared 7-OH, a concentrated kratom byproduct, illegal due to its high potential for abuse and lack of accepted ...
Florida officials have taken emergency action to ban 7-OH, a synthetic drug extracted from kratom, by reclassifying it as a ...
Almost on a whim last September, John Henry bought his first bottle of kratom. Standing in line at a gas station near the ...
Feel Free and similar products contain synthetic kratom compounds like 7-OH, which act like opioids and are not federally ...
Kratom is sold in gas stations, vape shops and convenience stores across the nation. The plant is related to the coffee plant ...
OH, a component found in kratom plants have been classified as a Schedule I drug by the Office of the Attorney General on ...
Florida has become the first state in the nation to take an aggressive stand against a potent derivative of kratom.
The crackdown is not on the Kratom plant itself. Rather, it targets a highly concentrated byproduct that officials say is more potent and more dangerous.
The FDA wants to classify 7-OH as a controlled substance alongside heroin, while states enact their own kratom restrictions.
OH, which is naturally found in kratom. We wanted to know more about both of these substances, so we checked in with a research professor at the University of Washington for insight.