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East Asian Arch Psychiatry 2021;31:49-50 | https://doi.org/10.12809/eaap2039

CASE REPORT

Kratom Dependence: a Case report

CL Lai, AYK Wu


Chi-Lun Lai, Department of Psychiatry, Pamela Youde Nethersole Eastern Hospital, Hong Kong
Anna YK Wu, Department of Psychiatry, Pamela Youde Nethersole Eastern Hospital, Hong Kong

Email: dr.laichilun@gmail.com

Submitted: 21 May 2020; Accepted: 30 April 2021


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Case presentation

In April 2019, a 30-year-old unemployed man was admitted to the emergency department of Pamela Youde Nethersole Eastern Hospital for a suicidal attempt by overdosing various medications (including benzodiazepines, sleeping pills, and anti-depressant) secondary to kratom withdrawal symptoms including restlessness, myalgia, rhinorrhoea, and diarrhoea.

Since teenage, the patient had experienced intense social anxiety, worried about being the centre of attention, and avoided social interaction. After graduating with an associate degree, he worked as a librarian to minimise interactions with people but quit months later owing to the fear of people making enquiries. He lived with his family and idled at home for years. In his mid-20s, he started buying kratom through the Internet for self-medication to relieve social anxiety. Initially, he consumed about 3 g of powdered kratom per day,  dissolved  into  water  for  drinking,  and  experienced relief of anxiety. Later, he developed tolerance and gradually increased the daily consumption up to 50 g. Attempts to reduce consumption had been made, but the emergence of withdrawal symptoms (anxiety, myalgia, diarrhoea, and yawning) prompted him to continue consumption.

In June 2017, his family arranged for him to receive a course of detoxification in a psychiatric hospital in mainland China. He was discharged 1 month later with escitalopram

10 mg daily, bupropion 150 mg daily, clonazepam 3 mg at bedtime, and zolpidem 10  mg at bedtime. However, he started consuming kratom again after a short period of abstinence, as he considered that kratom had a better effect on social anxiety. His family tried to cut off financial support to him.

Upon admission to our hospital, physical examination and blood tests for levels of urea and electrolytes and functions of liver and thyroid showed normal results. Urine drug screening showed citalopram, zopiclone, zolpidem, and diazepam metabolites. Liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry was specially requested and it detected mitragynine in the same urine sample. The patient was diagnosed with social phobia and kratom dependence. Symptomatic treatment (with diazepam, paracetamol, and loperamide) for withdrawal symptoms was offered, but the patient requested a transfer to psychiatric hospital in China after a short stay.

The patient complied poorly with psychiatric follow- up examinations at our hospital. He remained idle at home with a chaotic lifestyle. He continued to use kratom and self-adjusted psychiatric medication such as addition of benzodiazepine and hypnotics. He started to use cough mixture to help quit kratom. He gradually developed dependence of cough mixtures, with complication of acute retention of urine that necessitated emergency treatment.

One year after first admission to our hospital, the patient was admitted again with a suicidal attempt secondary to intense withdrawal symptoms.  He received a course of detoxification along with psychological intervention. He was discharged after 1 month of hospital stay.

Discussion

Mitragynia speciosa, commonly known  as  kratom, is a herb related to the coffee tree family, Rubiaceae.1 It is traditionally used by people in Southeast Asian countries for fatigue, pain control, cough, diarrhoea, and opioid withdrawal.2-4 Kratom is sold in the forms of raw or chopped leaves, powder, gum, capsules, and tablets for tea brewing, chewing, oral ingestion, and inhalation by smoking.1,4,5 The most abundant biologically active alkaloid in kratom is mitragynine (66%), followed by paynantheine, speciogynine,

7-hydroxymitragynine, speciophylline, and 20 other alkaloids.1,2,4,6   Mitragynine and 7-hydroxymitragynine are agonists of μ- and δ-opioid receptors, causing opioid-like activity.1,3,4  Although 7-hydroxymitragynine accounts for only 2% of the total alkaloid content, it is significantly more potent than mitragynine.1,7  In animal studies, mitragynine stimulates the postsynaptic α-2 adrenergic receptor and blocks stimulation of the serotonergic 5-HT2A   receptors, contributing to stimulant activities.3,5,8

Depending on the strain and dosage, kratom can produce opioid or stimulant-like effects.3,6,8  Proportional differences in the active alkaloid in different strains of kratom provide different relative strengths of stimulant and opioid effects.3 Plants with white and green veins indigenous to Malaysia have more stimulating and mood-enhancing effects, whereas plants with red veins from Bali have a more analgesic effect.3 At a low-to-moderate dose (1-5 g of raw leaves), kratom has a mild stimulant effect along with reduced fatigability, increased alertness, sociability, and sexual desire.3,6,8 Anxiety and internal agitation are common adverse effects. At a dose of 5-15 g of raw leaves, the opioid effect emerges, with analgesic effect and slight euphoria.3,6,8

At higher doses, users may experience sweating, dizziness, nausea, and dysphoria, followed by calmness, euphoria, and a dreamlike state.3,8  Psychotic symptoms after kratom use are infrequent (4%).9

Prolonged use of kratom can lead to dependence.1,4,8 Chronic high-dose users may experience withdrawal symptoms such as nausea, insomnia, yawning, rhinorrhoea, myalgia, diarrhoea, and arthralgia mimicking opioid withdrawal.3,4,6 Although withdrawal symptoms are generally mild even for heavy users,3  they were severe and distressing in our patient. Animal studies have suggested chronic exposure to kratom could impair working memory and memory consolidation.4 However, impairment of cognitive functions such as motor, memory attention, and executive function  has  not  been  observed in  humans.10

Other adverse effects include liver toxicity, hypothyroidism, and seizure.1,3,4  Mortality related to kratom has been reported11  but mostly associated with concurrent use of other drugs.3

Owing to similar pharmacodynamic properties of kratom and opioid, treatment strategy for opioid misuse is recommended for kratom misuse.1,12  Benzodiazepine, antihistamine, antiemetics, antidiarrheal, laxative, and analgesics   are   prescribed   for   symptomatic   relief   in kratom  withdrawal.1,12    For  acute  intoxication, naloxone, an  antagonist  of  opioid  receptors,  is  used  for  reversal of  the  opioid  effect.12    Buprenorphine-naloxone is  used for maintenance treatment.12  In addition, psychosocial intervention is important for long-term abstinence.

The legal status of kratom differs among countries. It is listed as a controlled substance in Denmark, Sweden, Singapore, Australia, and New Zealand,3,8  but it is not controlled and listed as a ‘drugs and chemicals of concern’ by the United States Drug Enforcement Administration.13

In Hong Kong, kratom is not a controlled substance under the Dangerous Drugs Ordinance or the Pharmacy and Poisons Ordinance; therefore, its use and possession are not regulated. Kratom is easily accessible online and offline, with a cost of HK$150 for 50 g.14  Kratom is an emerging substance with abuse potential, higher public awareness is warranted. Laboratories of Hospital Authority should consider testing kratom’s active alkaloids (Mitragynine and 7-hydroxymitragynine) in urine drug screening to monitor the trend of kratom use.

Declaration

The authors have no conflict of interest to disclose.

References

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