Cornel N. Stanciu, MD, MRO, FASAM, FAPA Assistant Professor Dartmouth’s Geisel School of Medicine Hanover, New Hampshire Director of Addiction Services New Hampshire Hospital Concord, New Hampshire
Bryan G. Hybki, MD PGY-4 Psychiatry Resident Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center Lebanon, New Hampshire
Thomas M. Penders, MS, MD Affiliate Professor East Carolina University Brody School of Medicine Attending Psychiatrist Walter B. Jones Alcohol and Drug Abuse Treatment Center Greenville, North Carolina
Acknowledgment The authors would like to acknowledge the contribution of Karen Goodman, MSLIS, MA, Medical Librarian at the Dorothy M. Breene Memorial Library, New Hampshire Hospital, who assisted with the literature search and procuration of the studies needed for this article.
Disclosures The authors report no financial relationships with any companies whose products are mentioned in this article, or with manufacturers of competing products.
There is a lack of quality control of commercially available kratom preparations. The FDA has found kratom products that exceeded the level of safe exposure to nickel and lead.35 There have also been reports of Salmonella outbreaks associated with kratom products.36
Detecting kratom use
Mitragynine is a lipophilic alkaloid that is poorly soluble in water37 and eliminated primarily in urine.12 Based on data from treatment center admissions, kratom can be detected in urine samples for 5 to 6 days after use.24,38,39 However, kratom is not detectable by a standard urine toxicology screen; therefore, a high degree of suspicion and special confirmatory testing are necessary. The breakdown products of mitragynine can be detected through gas chromatography coupled with mass spectrometry (GC/MS), liquid chromatography with linear ion trap mass spectrometry, or electrospray tandem mass spectrometry.40-42
A familiar withdrawal syndrome
Abrupt discontinuation of high-dose, long-term kratom use can produce withdrawal symptoms.13 Symptoms of kratom withdrawal resemble those of opioid withdrawal. These include physiological symptoms (mydriasis, nausea, sweating and chills, muscle and body aches, tremors and twitches, diarrhea, rhinorrhea, and lacrimation) and psychological symptoms (insomnia, restlessness, irritability/hostility, fatigue, anxiety, mood disturbances, and hallucinations).13 Symptoms are first noted starting 12 hours after the last use of kratom, and can last up to 7 days.43 Withdrawal intensity has been positively correlated with the daily amount of kratom consumed, as well as the duration and frequency of use.13,16
In 2 case reports, the newborns of women who used kratom during pregnancy experienced neonatal abstinence syndrome.44,45 In these 2 reports, symptoms such as jitteriness, irritability, feeding intolerance, and vomiting emerged on postpartum Day 2. The newborns were admitted to a neonatal ICU and started on a standard opioid protocol with IV morphine and subsequently tapered with an oral formulation over 5 days.44,45
Helping patients who use kratom
The best approach to treating a patient who is experiencing kratom withdrawal is symptomatic management, as would be appropriate for a patient experiencing opioid withdrawal.13 However, the use of agents such as methadone or buprenorphine for patients undergoing kratom withdrawal has not been thoroughly evaluated; very few reports have been published.46,47
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