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US cracks down on ‘tranq’ drug linked to fatal overdoses

  • Xylazine is used largely as a veterinary tranquilliser, but also goes by the street name ‘tranq’
  • US health regulators aim to prevent the drug from entering the US market for illicit purposes

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A nurse applies a bandage to the leg of a serious ‘tranq’ user in Philadelphia’s Kensington neighbourhood. Injecting the drug can cause severe skin wounds that could lead to amputation. Photo: TNS
Agence France-Presse

The United States announced a crackdown on unlawful imports of xylazine, an animal tranquilliser known as the “zombie drug” and which is increasingly linked to overdose deaths.

Xylazine, which also goes by the street name “tranq”, has recently been found in illicitly manufactured fentanyl, heroin, cocaine and other drugs, presenting a “growing public health concern,” the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) said on Tuesday.

“This action aims to prevent the drug from entering the US market for illicit purposes, while maintaining availability for its legitimate uses in animals,” it said in a statement.

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According to the National Institute on Drug Abuse, the percentage of all drug overdose deaths involving xylazine increased from two per cent to 26 per cent in the northeast state of Pennsylvania from 2015 to 2020.

Xylazine is typically used by veterinary surgeons to sedate large animals such as horses and deer but the drug is not approved for use in humans.

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It can slow breathing, blood pressure and heart rate to critically low levels and cause skin ulcers and abscesses that can lead to amputation.

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