@rurbesho @BroadwayMan123 @austinislosstin @LibraryofLewd @LordAslanThe2nd Many such cases of people overdosing on lower levels found in floyd. https://t.co/P6UBcOQH8L https://t.co/2NHqP6gjI9
@LynkLuv @cfccolumn Where are deadly levels of fentanyl? mean fentanyl overdose threshold is .024 microgram/liter or 24 nanograms/litter; Floyd’s levels were reported at 11 nanograms… so you’re full of 💩 https://t.co/7sFkaegX4m
@puremoronidiot @LangmanVince @mtgreenee https://t.co/fuXw0PzJ0Q Transdermal fentynal doesn't cause death as quickly as intravenous.
and yet he had over 11 nannograms per decileter of fentanyl in his system along with methamphetamines. The average death from fentanyl ranges from 10 ng/dl to 28 ng/dl. He killed himself! https://t.co/nfJ00bfVp6
@EdithPusi @LegalVoter1975 @Truthseeker2344 @BNONews Uh, your buddy had 45.83 times a lethal dose of fentanyl in his system. How embarrassing. https://t.co/ajaTWU3v5I
@AdventistCowboy Joey, the report doesn't say those were lethal levels per se. The range can vary for fentanyl (0.0027–0.12 µg/mL) according to https://t.co/FeO7O4Gz5V. As for meth, the report doesn't mention lethal levels.
@ksorbs And according to the NIH: Deaths came swiftly via the intravenous route. Mean level of blood fentanyl amongst all reported deaths was 0.024 µg/mL. Source: https://t.co/DOZDDTDoxv
@MattWalshBlog @MattWalshBlog Note: NIH says, "Mean level of blood fentanyl amongst all reported deaths was 0.024 µg/mL." Floyd's was 5.6 µg/mL--233 times the mean. You do the math. Source: https://t.co/kMU8RBAH8E
@erick_feiling @MattWalshBlog @TateTheTalisman Here's the link to the NIH paper: https://t.co/kMU8RBAH8E
@JackPosobiec @kylenabecker Despite posts stating that the blood level was insufficient to case death, I found this: https://t.co/Fwm2qPDcim
@JazzDeeApple @SMHonk1983 @JackPosobiec More accurate numbers have a mean of 25 ng/ml: https://t.co/HOIceZQXbB You had to go all the way back to 1991 to find that study, which you are misrepresenting. Even the authors said, "Mean fentanyl concentrations i
@MagnumSocius @Timcast Of those dying from fentanyl overdose in this study, blood toxicology was between .0002 to .38 µg/mL which equals 2 to 380 ng/ml. Benchmark 2 ng/ml. Floyd had 11 ng/ml. He had all the symptoms https://t.co/1XZsPhfMn4 https://t.co/3
@DavidGDoesStuff @Abbrv2Achv @JackPosobiec https://t.co/doaC1fok1i Some data here.
@dvidnzt1 Generally any amount of fentanyl in your system makes it more likely for you to die. Lethal dose of fentanyl is considered 2 mg every place I've seen it listed https://t.co/qa2ldjet59
@dvidnzt1 This meta study from the UK found that 24 ng (.0024 micrograms) was average for fatal overdoses https://t.co/qa2ldjet59
このケースレポートのpubmedページでCited byを見たら系統的レビューがあって、不勉強なので読んでみたらオピオイド乱用が問題になってる北米中心に中毒例が結構あるんだよな。日本の一例報告(40♀)もあった。これは眠剤も併用してたようで相互作用も気になるよな。https://t.co/y1A5Jpuobz
@JazzDeeApple @MrBreaze @Sassychickie In the first source there it's looking at intravenous use from 112 users with little to no opiate tolerance in most of them. There are many more sources showing Oral Overdose of fentanyl averages significantly higher
@Prize97760812 @LetangCult58 @ResistanceBlue1 @MrHRoyal @zim3555 @YobieMr He had nearly 4 times the lowest amount Baker has certified an OD on. He had about half the average amount people overdose on. https://t.co/Aac0LzI6pK
Well, it would be a nice change if a D got one right.
@CzcOramj @georockstar57 @CringeLeft No, whilst he was shown to have more than has caused OD's in some patients it was below the median level in ODs https://t.co/Aac0LzI6pK Given the high amount of metabolised Fentanyl that suggests he was handling the dru
@One76Big @denisewbrady @MantaJeb @RealStormishere Whilst fentanyl has caused overdose in cases as low as 2.4ng/ml (3ng/ml as testified in court) Studies regularly place the median in the range of 20-28ng/ml with oral doses usually being on the higher end.
@BigMamaM98 @DAupperlee @Quietmitten @LtGovGilchrist 4x the lowest dose brought up in the trial. The mean for orally administered fentanyl OD is 28ng/ml, with other drugs in the system the mean (all routes) is 34ng/ml. Floyd had 11ng/ml https://t.co/Aac0L
@Thisgottastop @james_greenhaw This meta-analysis found a mean Fentanyl concentration of 34ng/ml in mixed drug ODs including some as high as 120ng/ml. Fentanyl alone had a mean of 17ng/ml. Those who had ingested fentanyl had a mean of 28ng/ml. https://t.
@patriciantaurus @VoiceofCal @realPitBullDog @212304I362 @KamOnCam_ This isn’t true...yes it takes more to get high, but tolerance increases fatal level. In 1991, a study showed an average level in ODs to be around 3 ng/mL in people with no opioid toleranc
@LimesSriracha @MahkieAvelli @Aized10 @OmarJimenez Correct.The level of fentanyl in a study of opioid users who had overdosed is over 2x the level in Mr. Floyd’s system. The fatal level is much higher for those with opioid tolerance. His levels would be fa
@Bill_the_repub @MehinovicBakir @alan81873275 @jcupapplet @benshapiro The study below more accurately shows that the levels in Mr. Floyd’s blood would not be fatal to him. I appreciate that you likely saw this graphic as “proof” to support your opinion, bu
RT @cheemae4: Our new paper published in the Journal of pain research highlights the need to provide explicit and clear education to those…
Great to be part of this review on fentanyl deaths led by Dr Ejaz Cheema
RT @cheemae4: Our new paper published in the Journal of pain research highlights the need to provide explicit and clear education to those…
Our new paper published in the Journal of pain research highlights the need to provide explicit and clear education to those taking fentanyl with regards to how the drug should be used appropriately and the consequences of overuse, misuse and diversion. h