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The Food and Drug Administration wants to ban an opioid-like substance sold in gas stations and convenience stores.
OH is not regulated, and so products like chewable tablets or gummies can be legally sold at places like vape shops or gas ...
7-OH occurs naturally at low levels in the kratom plant, but the FDA is most concerned with products that contain 7-OH in ...
7-OH, formally known as 7-Hydroxymitragynine, is banned in China; however, Makary found that in the Biden administration, the ...
OH, which can be found in tablets, gummies, mixed drinks or shots, because of its “high risk of addiction.” It’s been used as ...
Federal health officials are calling for urgent action against a powerful, unregulated substance being sold in gas stations, ...
While several states have enacted the KCPA, products that exceed safe 7-OH thresholds — or contain synthetically derived 7-OH ...
The synthetic variant is legal and has opioid-like effects. One official called it “a recipe for a public safety disaster.” ...
Federal officials promised on Tuesday to crack down on a potent semisynthetic opioid found in convenience store gummies, ...
A new opioid threat you probably haven't heard about is targeting kids. Products containing 7-OH are currently being sold ...
FDA Commissioner Marty Makary said at a press conference Tuesday that scheduling "7-Hydroxymitragynine" (7-OH) kratom extract ...
The U.S. Food and Drug administration is recommending the scheduling of the 7-OH compound as a controlled substance because ...