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7-OH occurs naturally at low levels in the kratom plant, but the FDA is most concerned with products that contain 7-OH in ...
The Food and Drug Administration wants to ban an opioid-like substance sold in gas stations and convenience stores.
Makers of the controversial herbal supplements, while amenable to regulations, have been plagued by infighting.
With federal regulators cracking down on illegal kratom formulations, Super Speciosa emerges as a GMP-certified brand ...
U.S. health officials warn about the dangers of synthetic kratom in common products as one central Ohio mother turns her ...
First it was federal health officials… now local police are warning about the addictive danger of a product sold at most vape ...
OH and the leaf of the kratom plant are not analogous, but as the former is a derivative of the latter, it has opioid-like qualities that make its susceptibility to abuse concerning.
OH, a synthetic compound found in kratom products, as a Schedule I controlled substance due to its high potential for abuse.
The FDA says 7-OH is addictive and dangerous enough to warrant classifying the drug as a controlled substance. Experts say it ...
"Let's not allow another wave of the opioid epidemic to catch us blindsided again," said the FDA Commissioner.
U.S. health officials are warning Americans about the dangers of 7-OH, a potent synthetic form of kratom commonly sold in gummies, energy shots and supplements.
The FDA is recommending that certain products containing 7-hydroxymitragynine be controlled under the Controlled Substances Act.