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Kratom - Mitragyna Speciosa
Information on this page was obtained from
several different sources and is given for historical purposes only.
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Kratom refers to the plant Mitragyna
speciosa Korth., a tree indigenous to Thailand; it is mostly grown
in the central and southern regions of the country, and only rarely
in the north. The Mitragyna genus, part of the family Rubiaceae, is
found in tropical and sub-tropical regions of Asia and Africa. Asian
Mitragynas are often found in rainforests, while the African species
(which are sometimes still classed in a separate genus, Hallea) are
often found in swamps. Most species are arborescent, some reaching
heights of almost 100 feet. The genus was given its name by Korthals
because the stigmas in the first species he examined resembled the
shape of a bishop's mitre. This genus is characterized by a globular
flowering head, bearing up to 120 florets each. During the flower
bud stage, the developing florets are surrounded and completely
covered by numerous overlapping bracteoles. Mitragyna species are
used medicinally as well as for their fine timber through the areas
they grow.
Mitragyna speciosa itself reaches heights of 50 feet with a spread
of over 15 feet. The stem is erect and branching. Flowers are
yellow. Leaves are evergreen, and are a dark glossy green in color,
ovate-acuminate in shape, and opposite in growth pattern. Kratom is
evergreen rather than deciduous, and leaves are constantly being
shed and being replaced, but there is some quasi-seasonal leaf
shedding due to environmental conditions. During the dry season of
the year leaf fall is more abundant, and new growth is more
plentiful during the rainy season. When grown outside their natural
tropical habitat, leaf fall occurs with colder temperatures, around
4 degrees Celsius.
Kratom prefers wet, humusy soils in a protected position. Being a
heavy feeder, it requires very rich, fertile soil. It is drought
sensitive, and if grown out of its native habitat, sensitive to
frost. Propagation is by very fresh seed or cuttings. There is a low
strike rate, due to an endogenous fungus which attacks xylem tissue.
Over 25 alkaloids have been isolated from kratom. The most abundant
alkaloids consist of three indoles and two oxindoles. The three
indoles are mitragynine, paynanthine, and speciogynine - the first
two of which appear to be unique to this species. The two oxindoles
are mitraphylline and speciofoline. Other alkaloids present include
other indoles, and oxindoles such as ajmalicine, corynanthedine,
mitraversine, rhychophylline, and stipulatine.
Mitragynine is the dominant alkaloid in the plant. It was first
isolated in 1907 by D. Hooper, a process repeated in 1921 by E.
Field who gave the alkaloid its name. Its structure was first fully
determined in 1964 by D. Zacharias, R. Rosenstein and E. Jeffrey. It
is structurally related to both the yohimbe alkaloids and voacangine.
It is more distantly related to other tryptamine-based psychedelic
drugs such as psilocybin or LSD. Chemically, mitragynine is
9-methoxy-corynantheidine. It has the molecular formula C23H30N2O4
and a molecular weight of 398.5. Physically the freebase is a white,
amorphous powder with a melting point of 102-106 degrees and a
boiling point of 230-240 degrees. It is soluble in alcohol,
chloroform and acetic acid. The hydrochloride salt has a melting
point of 243 degrees.
The alkaloid content of the leaves of Mitragyna speciosa is about
0.5%, about half of which is mitragynine. An average leaf weighs
about 1.7 grams fresh or 0.43 grams dried. Twenty leaves contain
approximately 17mg of mitragynine. All leaves appear to contain
mitragynine, speciogynine, paynanthine, and small quantities of
speciociliatine. Oxindole alkaloids usually occur only in small or
trace ammounts.
Kraytom is traditionally only used in Thailand, although some use in
Malaysia has been reported. Other names are ithang, kakuam, and in
southern regions, thom. Use dates far enough back that its beginning
can't be determined. In addition to being used as a narcotic drug in
its own right, it is often used as a substitute for opium when opium
is unavailable, or to moderate opium addiction. In folk medicine, it
is often used to tread diarrhea. A small minority of users use it to
prolong sexual intercourse.
Users distinguish different types of kratom, two main kinds being
distinguished by the color of veins in the leaf - red or
green/white. The green-veined variety is supposed to have a stronger
effect. One study which surveyed Thai kratom users found that most
users preferred a mixture of both, followed by red-veined alone and
then white-veined alone. Growers in Australia report that both red
and white veining occurs at different times in different plants
which were all cloned from the same mother plant. They have not yet
undertaken comparisons between the two.
Nearly all kratom use is by chewing fresh leaves. Other ways it is
taken include grinding up and eating fresh, dried, or reconstituted
dried leaves. Some villagers use the leaves in cooking. When
preparing fresh leaf, the vein is extracted and sometimes salt is
added to try and prevent constipation. Consumption of the leaf is
usually followed by drinking something hot, such as warm water or
coffee. Leaves can also be smoked, made into a tea, or a crude resin
extraction can be made. This resin extract is made by preparing a
water extract of the leaves, boiling it down, and then shaping it
into small balls which are rolled in a material such as flour, then
stored until use. This is apparently a quite popular method of
consumption.
Users of kratom tend to be peasants, laborers, and farmers who use
the plant to overcome the burdens of their hard work and meager
existences. Female users are apparently quite rare. Age of usage
onset seems to be higher than for other drugs. Some studies have
found no addiction problems in villagers using kratom, while others
apparently have. It seems likely that if used in doses high enough
for mu receptor crossover (discussed below), addiction is a strong
possibility. Heavy users may chew kratom between 3 and 10 times a
day. While new users may only need a few leaves to obtain the
desired effects, some users find with time they need to increase
doses to 10-30 leaves or even more per day.
In some parts of the country, it was said that parents would choose
to give their daughters in marriage to men who used kratom rather
than men who used marijuana. The belief is that kratom users are
hard working, while marijuana users are lazy. This belief is also
maintained by many of the users themselves, who report beginning use
because of a desire to work more efficiently, and who say using
kraytom gives them a strong desire to do work.
The Thai government passed the Kratom Act 2486 which went into
effect on August 3, 1943. This law makes planting the tree illegal
and requires existing trees to be cut down. This law was not found
effective, since the tree is indigenous to the country. Today,
kratom is classed in the same enforcement group as cocaine and
heroin by Thai law, and has the same penalties. One ounce of extract
is punishable by death. As with prohibition laws elsewhere in the
world, this has succeeded only at increasing black market prices. A
related species, Mitragyna javanica, is often used as a substitute
to get around the law, but it is not considered as effective. The
dominant alkaloid in this species is mitrajavine, which has not yet
been pharmacologically tested.
While the main alkaloids in kraytom are structurally related to
psychedelics, there appears to be no psychedelic activity. The
dominant effects seem to be similar to opiate drugs, and include
analgesia and cough suppression. These effects are roughly
comparable in strength to codeine. Mitragynine suppresses opiate
withdrawal, but its effects are not reversed by the opiate
antagonist nalorphine. These opiate-like effects appear to be
mediated mostly by delta and mu opioid receptors. In lower dosages,
mitragynine exhibits a yohimbine-like binding to alpha-adrenergic
receptors, as well as some binding to the delta opioid receptors. As
doses increase, binding to delta receptors increases, and in yet
higher doses, crossover to mu receptors occurs. Interestingly, mu
crossover is increased by the presence of opiate drugs. While delta
receptor selective opiate drugs have little abuse potential, it
seems that they could be used as a primer which would allow
mitragynine to more effectively bind to the mu receptor, which
mediates the euphoric high produced by narcotics such as morphine.
Other effects of mitragynine are a reduction in smooth muscle tone,
local anesthesia, and central nervous system depression. Acute side
effects include dry mouth, increased urination, loss of appetite,
and constipation coupled with small, blackish stools. Unlike
opiates, mitragynine does not appear to cause nausea or vomiting.
Heavy use can result in a prolonged sleep.
Side effects from long term use include anorexia and weight loss,
insomnia, and a darkening of the skin, particularly on the cheeks,
giving an appearance similar to a hepatic face. Among addicts, 30%
report limited sexual desire and the need to use a combination of
kratom and alcohol to become sexually stimulated. One study found 5
people who had psychotic conditions which may or may not have been
revealed by very heavy kraytom use. As discussed earlier, addiction
seems to be a possibility if high doses are used. Some withdrawal
symptoms reported by addicts include hostility, aggression, wet
nose, inability to work, flow of tears, muscle and bone aches, and
jerky limb movement.
While one study of Thai users reported that it is sedative in low
doses changing over to stimulation in higher doses, this seems to be
incorrect. Most other sources say that it is a stimulant in lower
doses, becoming sedative in higher doses, which is consistent with
mitragynine's receptor binding profile. Effects come on within five
to ten minutes after use, and last for several hours. The feeling
has been described as happy, strong, and active, with a strong
desire to do work. The mind is described as calm. The Swiss
biologist Claude Rifat experimented with a low dose of three smoked
leaves and reported the effects reminded him somewhat of SSRIs, in
that it blocked motivation, induced indifference, made doing
everything boring, and brought on a strong laziness. It seems likely
that these two almost opposite results may be influenced by cultural
expectations.
Inspired by traditional use, H. Ridley reported In 1897 that the
leaves of Mitragyna speciosa were a cure for opium addiction. In
more recent times, mitragynine has been used in New Zealand for
methadone addiction detox. Kratom was smoked whenever the patient
experienced withdrawal symptoms, over a 6 week treatment period.
Patients reported a visualization effect taking place at night in
the form of vivid hypnagogic dreams. While working on plans for
ibogaine experiments in the USA, Cures Not Wars activist Dana Beal
suggested that mitragynine could be used as an active placebo for
comparison in the study. Acting Deputy Director of the NIDA Charles
Grudzinskas rejected the proposal, however, saying that even less
was known about mitragynine than ibogaine.
Although chemically similar, ibogaine and mitragynine work by
different pathways, and have different applications in treatment of
narcotic addiction. While ibogaine is intended as a one time
treatment to cure addiction, mitragynine used to gradual wean the
user off narcotics. The fact that mitragynine's mu crossover is
increased by the presence of opiate drugs may be exploitable in the
treatment of narcotics addiction, because it directs binding to
where it is needed, automatically regulating the attachment ratio
and modulating it towards the delta receptors over a short time.
Within a few days, the addict would stop use of the narcotic they
are addicted to, and the cravings and withdrawal will be moderated
by the binding of mitragynine to the delta receptors. Mitragynine
could also perhaps be used as a maintenance drug for addicts not
wishing to quit but trying to moderate an out of hand addiction.
In 1999, Pennapa Sapcharoen, director of the National Institute of
Thai Traditional Medicine in Bangkok said that kratom could be
prescribed both to opiate addicts and to patients suffering from
depression, but stressed that further research is needed.
Chulalongkorn University chemists have isolated mitragynine which
researchers can obtain for study.
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Kratom-Mitragyna speciosa
This is what they call instant or super. Has been independently analyzed and found to contain and average of over 300mg of alkaloids per 25gm. This product is not sold for human consumption. However is someone were to consume it. A dose would be 3-5 grams. Less if smoked.
1/2oz
$35.00
1oz
$60.00
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