Danger Of Xylazine, Horsebius Drug Given By P Diddy Before Harassing Victims
JAKARTA - Recently, 120 people claimed they were victims of Sean Diddy Combs alias P Diddy. The youngest victim P Diddy was a minor aged 9 years. P Diddy fed the victim with xylazine drugs.
Xylazine is a type of horse anesthetic. He mixed this horse sedative in the drinks of the victims before sexually abusing them. Until finally, the victims became unconscious.
What is xylazine? Reporting from the National Institute on Drug Abuse page, Xylazine is a sedative, pain reliever, and pressure on the central nervous system approved by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for use in horse medicine. This drug is not intended for human use.
Illegal Xylazine is often mixed with illegal opioids, the most frequent fentanyl, but this drug is not an opioid. Xylazine is also known as a "tranq" or, if combined with a fentanyl or other opioid, "tranq dope." Xylazine can be used by injecting, inhaling, and swallowing.
Xylazine can make people sleepy and cause breathing, heart rate, and blood pressure to slow down to a very low level. When people consume xylazine with fentanyl, it increases the risk of fatal overdose. However, extreme sedimentation from xylazine can cause people to stop breathing.
Most of the overdose deaths attributed to xylazine and fentanyl also involve other substances, including cocaine, heroin, benzodiazepin, alcohol, gabapentin, and prescribed opioid drugs.
SEE ALSO:
Effects After Using Xylazine
When xylazine is injected or consumed, the compounds in it can immediately reach the central nervous system in the brain. This drug makes people sleepy, slows brain activity, relaxes muscles, and slows down heart rate and breathing.
In certain doses, the effect of xylazine can be life-threatening, especially if it is used with other presidential stores such as opioids (including fentanyl), alcohol, and benzodiazepin.
People who have used xylazine also report other effects. The use of xylazine repeatedly feels wounds on the skin and muscles ("soft tissue") which are painful and difficult to treat. If left untreated, the wound can grow and be infected and cause tissue patches to die and die.
In rare severe cases, the affected body parts may have to be amputated. People with these wounds may require sustained wound treatment and pain care. Wounds can appear at the injection site.
However, these wounds often appear in other parts of the body, and some doctors report that these wounds occur even when people inhale xylazine but don't inject it.
Sharing syringes to use any drug can cause negative health effects. This includes an increased probability of other bacterial infections, such as heart infections called infective endocarditis, and falling ill with viruses, such as HIV or hepatitis C.