Very interesting. I understand.I've never heard of this concotion.
The UK armed services did use ketamine for a few years but it was deemed too unpredictable. People with weapons spun on K apparently resulted in a few close calls. So now I think buccal fentanyl is now used bu both the UK and US military.
That combination is going to result in a casualty who is highly dependent on others. So for small unit opearations, surely not a good idea. Even if someone has lost a leg, as long as the bleeding is controlled, the other two members of their section could get them out.
I can maybe believe that they are provided with that amount of medication but fixed-ratio compound medications pose their own problems. You don't give opiates if a severe head injury is diagnosed but I think ketamine is still considered safe. I'm no expert, but I had the MARCH HALT protocol drilled into me.
I guess Hitchen's Razor applies.
I've always been fascinated by pharmacopeia in military from the methamphetamines, barbs, morphine to ketamine and now buccal fent !
I've read somewhere that they start using ketamine in afghanistan or vietnam, and I've seen videos of ukrainians soldiers using ketamine on wounded soldiers..
thank you for you insight.
You are right about diamorphine being unstable, I've read in books that back in the hippie days the diamorphine vials tend to be greenish or yellowish, suggesting difficulty to store for a while?
@Dextro .45 Your name should be Bromptom .45 :D
I take all the same exact things as you except the methadone and oxy.. instead kratom ,. is it a bromtpon coktail ?\
OT :
I quit hard opiods such as heroin and methadone with the help of ket. But the amoubt needed is insane dont rely only on ket as said presioulsy. adfter almost a year of daily ket, I started to experience tough body ache that eventually led me to more opioids abuse... It's hard to not fall into ketamine addiction and just replace an addiction with an even less functionnal one that is ket..
