WARNING. Adverse reaction with oxycodone.
Ok... so yeah bare with me on this because everyone needs to take some precautions if they plan on taking opiates before, during, or after they consume Methoxetamine. What my friend did was quite risky and there is a pretty epic story that goes along with why he made the decision to consume 60mg oxycodone IV after a long day with Methoxetamine but I'm going to skip the story and just give you all the facts on what happened. I understand that this will be frowned upon by many people but for the sake of harm reduction, I need everyone to read this. This will also give some input on how methoxetamine is working in the body because this was one really weird reaction. My friend is alive and well and even though it looked as if he may die, he was actually in an unconscious state for about 15 minutes which was triggered by the injection of 60mg oxycodone.
Ok lets clear a few things up.
Friend A = Person receiving IV oxycodone, best friend
Friend B = Person administrating oxycodone, other best friend, registered nurse
Me.
My friend A has a high opiate tolerance. He has IV'ed around 120-150mg oxycodone only once before which was a 2 years ago as an experiment because he oh so enjoys consuming it intranasally/orally. He used to use oxycodone/opiates 7 days a week and then take a two week break so he has never had withdrawls before, smart guy just knows how to manage himself. Oh, and it has been 3 days since he last consumed 60mg oxycodone which was taken intranasally.
Since this, it has been two weeks. So i'm thinking that his tolerance was naturally lower and I also believe that the methoxetamine had potentated the oxycodone
Since he has been doing Methoxetamine everyday for 7 days now, he has built up a tolerance so by the end of the day somewhere along the line of 125-150mg Methoxetamine is consumed. These doses are obviously spaced out throughout the day in lines of 20-30mg which are ingested intranasally.
He has been doing methoxetamine for 2 months now, taking a two week break after he goes on his little 1 week binge, something that has completely changed his life for the better. His life is almost what I would call "perfect" as of right now but this event almost changed this.
This IV dose was administrated by my other best friend who is a registerd nurse. Thank God he was here because he acted quickly and professionally to this bad situation. He did everything properly too, alcohol swabs, clean needle, saline solution from hospital and micro-filtered to two 30mg roxies.
My friend is rather small but buff because he works out daily. 5'5 and around 130pounds 12-15% body fat, etc you get the point.
So, here comes the injection, my friend A is smiling and feels safe because this is all being done properly. The shot is administered and within 20-30 seconds he passes out/nods out completely. My friend B quickly starts something called a "sternum rub", something that is done on an unconscious person to inflict pain which also simultaneously causes a person who is breathing shallow to take deep breathes. My friend A does not respond which is a clear sign that he is completely unconscious. We monitor his heart rate is surprisingly a little above average, estimated to be around 100-120 BPM and he is very warm temperature wise.
The only reason that we didn't call 911 was because he was breathing a little shallow and his pulse was great.
My friend B picks friend A up while telling me to run to the bathroom and run a cold bath. We carry friend A to bathroom and drop him in cold water. My friend A's eyes actually prop open while friend B is constantly rubbing his knuckles(sternum rub) into friend A's chest. After about 5 minutes in tub, friend A's finger tips start to twich, he's slowly coming back. His eyes open up and stay open 4-5 times which my friend B has to manually close himself.
My friend A finally starts shaking his hands and feet and he is becoming conscious of everything that is going on. It took around 15 minutes before my friend A was able to make sounds with his mouth. My friend starts to look around and blink on his own after around this time aswell.
Friend A starts to cry and the first thing he tells us is that he loves us
SO...this was a close call, something that my friend will NOT be doing ever again and in the sake of harm reduction he wanted me to come inform everyone here about this so no one else makes this mistake.
Friend A's point of view of what happened:
Friend A claims that he was consciously aware of what was going on as soon as he hit the water. He felt the sternum rub and was able to hear us the entire time from the point on but was UNABLE to respond. Why was this and what do they call this? Friend A was able to consciously think on his own and understood what was going on. He tried so hard to open his eyes, move his fingers and even speak but was physically unable to. Is this was people talk about when they describe a K-Hole? None of us has ever done Ketamine but this looked like a complete disassociate/anesthetic state to me. This was ironically very peaceful for him and even though he was pretty shook up, he made a full recovery after he fell asleep a few hours later, just to ingest a little more Methoxetamine when he woke up.
If this enlightens just one person, I will be happy.
Me and my friends are calling this a M-hole as of right now because we don't know what else to call it.
I am expecting a little disappointment here but please just help me/us out on what went wrong here and why did this happen? I understand that this sounds like an opiate overdose but it clearly didn't seem like one because of the lack of shallow breathing and above average pulse.
Oh, and my friend has ingested 80-100mg oxycodone with his methoxetamine a few times before intransally and has never had anything come close to this. He always starts with 60mg oxycodone and usually does atleast 1 more 30mg roxy, always intranally.
Peace everyone. Be safe with this magnificent chemical. Thanks for reading through all of this.