News

7-OH occurs naturally at low levels in the kratom plant, but the FDA is most concerned with products that contain 7-OH in ...
But kratom is no run-of-the mill caffeine drink. Medical experts say it can be highly addictive, producing effects similar to ...
The opioid-like substance is sold in gummies, tablets and drinkable shots, mainly in gas stations and convenience stores.
The FDA has released a report to educate the public regarding the dangers of 7-OH and its distinction from the kratom plant ...
The FDA announced that it is urging the Drug Enforcement Agency to "classify 7-OH as a Schedule 1 substance, placing it on a ...
The Trump administration is recommending that a compound called 7-OH be scheduled as an illicit drug, Food and Drug ...
When federal health regulators last week announced plans to control a compound found in the kratom plant, they made one big distinction: "We're not targeting the kratom leaf or ground up kratom," Food ...
The FDA plans to add the compound to Schedule I under the Controlled Substances Act, meaning the product has a high misuse ...
The FDA is recommending the government move 7-OH to Schedule I, alongside other drugs like heroin and cocaine. 7-OH can bind to opioid receptors, and can lead to “respiratory depression, physical ...
The synthetic variant is legal and has opioid-like effects. One official called it “a recipe for a public safety disaster.” ...
As FDA Commissioner Makary stated, the agency is “not focused on natural kratom leaf products,” which contain only “trace ...
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration took a step to add the opioid-like psychoactive compound 7-OH found in the kratom plant ...