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This Week in AsiaLifestyle & Culture

Japan battles ‘zombie juice’ drug scourge – after Hong Kong’s space oil, Singapore’s Kpods

Etomidate, a medical anaesthetic, has now hit Japan’s party scene, sending young people to hospital with alarming symptoms

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A Japanese woman uses a vape at an event in Tokyo. Photo: AFP
Julian Ryall

A night out in Okinawa ended in an ambulance ride for one young woman, her body unresponsive after a single puff from an e-cigarette.

She had joined a growing cohort of Japanese youth being ensnared by “zombie juice”: a potent sedative sweeping Asia’s party scene that is now causing alarm in Japan.

Etomidate, a drug once reserved for use in operating theatres, has increasingly found its way into the hands of young club-goers, smuggled in by criminal syndicates and inhaled through flavoured e-cigarettes.

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Its metamorphosis from medical anaesthetic to illicit party drug has been well documented. Called “space oil” in mainland China and Hong Kong – and “Kpods” in Singapore – etomidate has quietly infiltrated Asia’s nightlife, its effects amplified when vaped, sometimes in combination with cannabis, ketamine or other illicit substances.
A sample of etomidate vape cartridges is displayed at Hong Kong police headquarters in Wan Chai earlier this year. Photo: Eugene Lee
A sample of etomidate vape cartridges is displayed at Hong Kong police headquarters in Wan Chai earlier this year. Photo: Eugene Lee

In response to its rising use in Japan, the Health Ministry issued a sweeping new ordinance that outlawed etomidate’s manufacture, import, sale, possession and use, effective May 26.

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