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Opioids SR-17018 Is the future of opioid detox medication. Painless easy cheat to avoid withdrawal that is too good to be true, but it is legit and real.

You feel it somewhat but I don't think you can get any euphoria with it without chasing dangerously stupid high dosages... It's not very effective as an analgesic either.
I think what you feel is the absence of withdrawal if that makes any sense. I waited till I had the sniffles and sore muscles to start my first dose and it took nearly 300mg to be comfortable having 80mg/day methadone dose. But the speed at which you can taper is the most attractive benefit next to the repairs to the receptors being repaired. 2 weeks and I was off opiates all together with basically zero acute symptoms.

But yeah. What you said.

Honestly, for someone who has fuckered their tolerance all to shit with zenes and/or fent it's a great way to enjoy heroin and or oxy again. At the very least saving you quite a bit of money if you learn from your egregious mistakes of "overdoing" it a llittle to often... I mean it happens. I still dabble with some good ol' downtown Julie brown. I am just at a point In my life where I am in the drivers seat and not some bureaucrat or self-righteous family member slash hypocrite. For now.

"Let thy be void of judgement and I shall offer thine same courtesy, bitches..." - me
 
What "existing things" can do the same things more effectively?

From what I've read, I don't think the peptide industry seems absurd at all. I mean, as a BJJ black belt I'm a part of the Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu and MMA community, and my teacher and others have used Peptides like BPC-157 and T500 TO GREAT EFFECT for their injuries.

My instructor said something that was REALLY bothering him (I forget what it was) and that within a week of taking BPC it was completely healed when he feels like it could have taken MONTHS to heal on its own.

I personally am very excited to try them.
look into retatrutide if your looking to tone up and look like Bruce Lee. Mfrs getting SHRAAeEEDdeD on that shit and it looks natural and not all top heavy with football helmet shoulders like this damn juice does.

Hope you found some of that SR bro, I guess when you asked they stopped answering emails by then. Yeah their bad... If you still pulling goose eggs I may have a compass orientation for ya that would prove helpful
 
So like, how does someone quit buprenorphine (Subutex) or Suboxone from it? I am on Subutex (no naloxone) 3mg a day and have quit 8mg before and had 3 weeks withdrawal one time. But that was before my nervous system was shot. Last time I tapered and quit I jumped at 2mg and used a vicodin bridge for 10 days and still had 6 weeks of withdrawals (5 weeks after my bridge), which I tried using kratom extracts for, but i just swapped one thing for another so here I am, back on buprenorphine.

I also quit benzos 7 months ago and quit phenibut high daily doses 15 months ago. My nervous system still hates me. I am not sure how to use SR-17018 to quit Subutex, even though I used to be able to take 2mg once a day no issues... now I take 1mg 3 times a day. I can't seem to tolerate it once a day after I went to detox 15 months ago.

So either I wait until my GABA tone returns to normal flexibility or find a magic elixir like SR-17018... which I hear is great for everything, but I have yet to read any good Suboxone/Subutex anecdotes. The one I saw on Reddit, the user was banned before I could ask questions.

But I tracked down this post here on BL. Anyone help? You can DM me u/djpurity666 on Reddit there as well as reply to this here.
 
I'm on a reading spree about this one today and as usual late to the party. I wish I would have found out about this last year.

Some questions:

1) I'm hearing conflicting reports about this being not that great for quitting kratom. Has anyone here used it to avoid w/d from kratom and can you comment on how effective it was? Currently I am consuming about 200-250-ish grams of kratom a week and can not sleep longer than 4-5 hours at a time due to waking up with watering eyes, running nose and all the usual symptoms of withdrawal. I've tried to taper but I'm an addict with legit pain issues and it isn't going as well as I want. I've been taking kratom daily since 2017 or 2018.

2) I'm taking 22.5mg of 7-HO and 2.5mg of Pseudo every other day on top of the above lately because I'm a junkie. I've been buying both as tablets. 5 tablets last me 6-8 days (I usually buy one pack a week). Not the brightest idea but again I'm a junkie and it helps with "break through" pain I've been getting from tapering kratom down lately (my old kratom habit was 50+ grams per day).

3) As I'm late to the party I see the prices for SR-17 have gone up and it's starting to get banned in a lot of locations. I've been looking around for the last week or so and I can not find any sources for raw powder. Only tablets that are priced much higher than I'll be able to afford. I'm willing to pay $200+ if this really work as people say but the tablets I've found would cost far more for a 2-3 week supply and I'm not trust worthy that they're even real. Does relatively cheap ($60-$75 per gram) vendors exist still or have the scalpers already ruined it for everyone? Again, I'm not asking for a source I just want to know if I'm wasting my time looking for one. Every lead I've gotten so far leads to "Please DM me" and a ton of deleted posts because moderators going to moderate.

4) Has anyone here with chronic pain they've been controlling with opioids/kratom gone through the routine and can you tell me if your pain levels were reduced afterwards and/or more easily controlled with OTC drugs like ibuprofen? Does the reduction in tolerance allow your natural endorphins to return and help control your day-to-day pain levels?

It really seems too good to be true. But we the sweeping bans happening so far it makes me think there is something to it that might make it worth my time.

I have been considering attempting the iboga route to kick what is now a 3+ decade opioid addiction/dependence for the last 5-6 years or so. I've just been too afraid to go through with that and have had issues sourcing legit iboga as well. I've heard very positive stories of people getting off for life with iboga who claimed their desire to take opioids all together was gone afterwards. Where with SR-17 I'm reading a lot of stories of people that were tempted to go back to using their opioid of choice again afterwards because their tolerance was now reduced to the point where they could obtain nods again. So I'm still torn between one or the other.

I'm also curious to hear if anyone here has tried both iboga and SR-17 and how they compared. Obviously, it would be a horrible idea to take them at the same time but I'm wondering if anyone here used iboga in the past, got back on opioids after the afterglow wore off then used SR-17 instead on their second attempt.

I'm going to have to attempt one of these soon because something has to change soon and I'm terrified my access to opioids is going to get taken away overnight soon with the way the political landscape has been changing so rapidly lately. In the past I've cold turkey'd oxycodone and heroin multiple times, bupe and methadone. No matter how horrible the acute withdrawals were I was never able to stay off of opioids for longer than 6 months. I'd always slip up and go back due to chronic pain. I need something to keep me off for good. I'm getting to the point where I've seriously considered eating a bullet lately because I'm so sick of the daily ups and downs of being forced to consume this crap just to function and I'm tired of hiding it from my loved ones and spending so much money on the habit.
 
So like, how does someone quit buprenorphine (Subutex) or Suboxone from it? I am on Subutex (no naloxone) 3mg a day and have quit 8mg before and had 3 weeks withdrawal one time. But that was before my nervous system was shot. Last time I tapered and quit I jumped at 2mg and used a vicodin bridge for 10 days and still had 6 weeks of withdrawals (5 weeks after my bridge), which I tried using kratom extracts for, but i just swapped one thing for another so here I am, back on buprenorphine.

I also quit benzos 7 months ago and quit phenibut high daily doses 15 months ago. My nervous system still hates me. I am not sure how to use SR-17018 to quit Subutex, even though I used to be able to take 2mg once a day no issues... now I take 1mg 3 times a day. I can't seem to tolerate it once a day after I went to detox 15 months ago.

So either I wait until my GABA tone returns to normal flexibility or find a magic elixir like SR-17018... which I hear is great for everything, but I have yet to read any good Suboxone/Subutex anecdotes. The one I saw on Reddit, the user was banned before I could ask questions.

But I tracked down this post here on BL. Anyone help? You can DM me u/djpurity666 on Reddit there as well as reply to this here.
If you need advice Re: how to detox off Suboxone using SR-17, I can help you with that

Below dosing schedule is very effective. My girl used a very similar dosing schedule to detox off 100 mg methadone without any issues. Including myself I know 5 people who have detoxed avoiding any acute withdrawals + mitigating PAWS following this exact schedule or one very similar. I can't promise it will fully eliminate PAWS for everyone, if you've been dependent for a particularly long time it may also be beneficial to use nightly LDN after finishing with SR17

Phase 1: Taper off usual opiate & Transition on to SR-17018

First night: 75 mg SR-17018

2nd day: 3x 50 mg SR-17018, 20% lower opiate
3rd day: 3x 50 mg SR-17018, 20% lower opiate
4th day: 3x 50 mg SR-17018, 20% lower opiate
5th day: 3x 50 mg SR-17018, 20% lower opiate
6th day: 3x 75 mg SR-17018, no more opiate

Phase 2: SR-17018 Maintenance, Tolerance Reduction, & MOP Resensitization

7th day - 12th day: 75 mg SR-17018 3x per day

Phase 3: Smooth Taper to Freedom

13th day: 65 mg SR-17 3x per day
14th day: 55 mg SR-17 3x per day
15th day: 45 mg SR-17 3x per day
16th day: 35 mg SR-17 3x per day
17th day: 25 mg SR-17 3x per day
18th day: 15 mg SR-17 3x per day
19st day: 5 mg SR-17 3x per day

Edit: As for Kratom, that one may be a little tricky for some due to its effects on other receptors. I suspect for those who have trouble using SR-17 for kratom may be easier to use Bernese method for Suboxone induction first, wait a week or two until you feel stable, then use the SR-17 to detox from that.

And I do believe there are still vendors in that price range
 
If you need advice Re: how to detox off Suboxone using SR-17, I can help you with that

Below dosing schedule is very effective. My girl used a very similar dosing schedule to detox off 100 mg methadone without any issues. Including myself I know 5 people who have detoxed avoiding any acute withdrawals + mitigating PAWS following this exact schedule or one very similar. I can't promise it will fully eliminate PAWS for everyone, if you've been dependent for a particularly long time it may also be beneficial to use nightly LDN after finishing with SR17

Phase 1: Taper off usual opiate & Transition on to SR-17018

First night: 75 mg SR-17018

2nd day: 3x 50 mg SR-17018, 20% lower opiate
3rd day: 3x 50 mg SR-17018, 20% lower opiate
4th day: 3x 50 mg SR-17018, 20% lower opiate
5th day: 3x 50 mg SR-17018, 20% lower opiate
6th day: 3x 75 mg SR-17018, no more opiate

Phase 2: SR-17018 Maintenance, Tolerance Reduction, & MOP Resensitization

7th day - 12th day: 75 mg SR-17018 3x per day

Phase 3: Smooth Taper to Freedom

13th day: 65 mg SR-17 3x per day
14th day: 55 mg SR-17 3x per day
15th day: 45 mg SR-17 3x per day
16th day: 35 mg SR-17 3x per day
17th day: 25 mg SR-17 3x per day
18th day: 15 mg SR-17 3x per day
19st day: 5 mg SR-17 3x per day

Edit: As for Kratom, that one may be a little tricky for some due to its effects on other receptors. I suspect for those who have trouble using SR-17 for kratom may be easier to use Bernese method for Suboxone induction first, wait a week or two until you feel stable, then use the SR-17 to detox from that.

And I do believe there are still vendors in that price range
Txt

I have the same situation, I will try this as soon as I get a decent amount. I can't find anything in Scandinavia and all of Europe seems to have no reliable source or the price is thousands of euros and still probably fake.

but thanks for this tip, I will continue searching for the substance
 
I feel that the assertion that reference is unimportant to be telling.

Also I feel you failed to note that there are other medicines that ALREADY appear within the BTWC (Biological & Chemical Warfare Convention) element of the WMD definition e.g. succinylchloline. Medical use does not preclude a chemical from being considered a WMD. So it's evident just how much research you put in before responding. NONE. Or maybe succinylchloline is a bit too technical for you...

BOTOX, one of the most widely used agents in cosmetic surgery is is botulinum neurotoxin... also listed in the BTWC.

Since Russian special services used a (thusfar not conclusively proven) mixture of fentanyl derivatives with fatal consequences, although not explicitly listed, carfentanil could already be considered a WMD and certainly the BTWC DOES cover it. I can promise you one thing - you CANNOT legally obtain carfentanil without first obtaining a DEA licence even if you add the word 'Zoo' to you mailing address.

Now I have had call to actually READ these conventions because for one project the highest-yielding synthesis used phosphorous pentasulfide which isn't explicitly listed but IS subject to the Convention's verification measures 'due to it being a phosphorus-containing unscheduled discrete organic chemical (DOC)'. So in short, a LOT of chemicals are actually covered by the BTWC I mean THOUSANDS. Not just precursors but pre-precursors. Phosphorous trichloride being one example I can think of off the top of my head. Used to make nerve agents (and several quite innocent things).

Yes, faking of academic papers does happen but experimental data is provided along with the source(s) of reagents and a detailed description of methodology applied to obtain said data so ANYONE is free to repeat the experiments. It HAPPENS. I believe it was Carl Segan who first noted 'exceptional results need exceptional proof' so the bolder the claim, the closer other researchers will look. I should add that if a repeated experiment yields different results, the first people the latter experimentalist will contact is the original research team (and yes, there have been cases in which original teams quickly retracted papers themselves - which may or may not indicate intentional fraud) but in my experience, they will do their best to work with later researchers in case the latter made an mistake or if an original work fails to address a detail. But that's not fraud.

I think the most famous example I can give is when a team published a paper showing cyclohexanone to act as a catalyst. When repeated many year later, the same catalytic activity was not observed and it turrned out that 2,3-cyclohexenone was a minor impurity found in even Rectapure cyclohexnone at the time the original work took place but decades later, suppliers had found a facile route to remove said impurity. So everyone acted in good faith and the result was a discovery that turned out to be far more valuable than the original work. That the cyclohexENONE is the vital co-catalyst.

The above case? Google FOGBANK. The US military spent about twelve years trying to refurbish it's nuclear weapons but the interstage had different physical properties to the original material and that 2,3-cyclohexenone was why they failed for so long. But was that fraud? Or do we think it's a lack of documentation and loss of institutional knowledge? Most mistakes are not malign.

But intentional fraud is actually quite unusual because it doesn't matter if an experiment proves or disproves a hypothesis - both results are equally valuable. In fact, if one takes on Karl Popper's philosophy to heart, experimentation can never PROVE a statement, only DISPROVE it. An accidental mistake in a paper is generally not detremental to a researchers career. A crime of omission at worst. But intentional fraud can, does and has ended the careers of some extremly high profile researchers. Jan Hendrik Schön is a high-profile example and HOW he was able to commit fraud was investigated and written up. Put simply, he was a nice guy and scientists being people were more liable to trust someone they actually liked. Apparently the keystone of his strategy was to simply agree with everyone - because it's a human bias to place more trust in people who will be unfailingly supportive than to people who are critical. But you need to read that one to see how the trick was done.

Also, why not spend a little time looking at:

www.retractionwatch.com

Appendix B demonstrates the sheer variety of reasons why a paper may be retracted. Don't be put off by the fact that it covers 63,000 retracted papers, you can filter and oh look..

That way at least even you will get a basic understanding that intentional fraud is a TINY fracton when the number of papers published is considered . Intentional fraud is very unusual because discovery is career-ending and possibly more importantly to some academics, it sullies their legacy. Because it calls into question ALL of their work. If fraud is detected in just ONE paper, that calls into question EVERY article a researcher has ever published. Never underestimate the vanity of academics and Schön had been tipped to win a Nobel prize which is one major factor in his downfall.

I feel it important to point out that ANYONE can submit a paper to Retraction Watch if they have a valid reason to doubt the work. I know I have.

In the specific case of buprenorphine, the difference is that the ORIGINAL aim of buprenorphine therapy was to detoxify those dependent on opioids. But later works focus much more on the abstainance rate of clients continuing with buprenorphine therapy. But many people have pointed out why long-term use of buprenorphine comes with some pretty hefty issues such as emergency analgesia not being available, the nebulous nature of it's metabolite, norbuprenorphine (toxic) and many typical side-effects of opioids such as hyperaglasia, but in this thread others have pointed to other issues, my list is far from exhaustive.

So yes, carfentanil HAS appear on the market in North America and if people are pushed into taking buprenorphine for extended periods, an opioid that will overcome the blockade isn't just a preference but a requirement so in fact it could fetch a premium. I don't know much about those markets because I don't touch non-prescribed medications. I did say that many of the nitazenes are novel but to the best of my knowledge, the prototype (etonitazene) has a significantly higher MOR affinity than buprenorphine. So again, likely to benefit from increased (required) prescribing of buprenorphine. Or at least here in the UK, courts can sentence people to DTTOs (drug treatment and testing orders) and I'm told in North America, it's even more stringent. Put simply not finding buprenorphine in a urine sample would land someone back in court just as quickly as finding H in that sample.

As I pointed out, in an uncontrolled market, Grisham's Law will ALWAYS prevail so carfentanil and nitazenes (both already on the street) are only going to benefit from the over-prescribing of buprenorphine. As I stated - opioid detoxification is rarely impossible. It's retaining sobriety that is far harder. But you now just have people dependent on HUGE doses of buprenorphine - which being legal and with so many patents issued for novel formulations is the most profitable model. But it does seem that people given high doses of buprenorphine for extended periods will develop dependency so while I value the fact it may save lives, essentially turning out millions of buprenorphine addicts is not an optimal outcome (for the client). One also has to ask if even an ELISA test would reliably detect such hugely potent ligands. I know that for over a decade, MDTs didn't detect buprenorphine and when we DID perform ELISA tests, in some prisons over half the convicts tested positive for the drug - so a lesson from history. I believe currently nitazenes are most commonly used in jails for the exact same reason; they can't be detected.

But I always endevour to provide an answer to problems which is why I suggested that thienorphine WILL blockade carfentanil and while I'm almost sure that it shares many of the same issues as buprenorphine, there are only a few quite obscure opioids that would displace it from the MOR. I sincerely doubt that BU72 is likely to turn up on the street - it's not an open-chain compound thus requires a rare natural precursor and it contains several chiral centres. I believe I even pointed out that a KEY benefit of carfentanil is that it's achiral. So is vanila fentanyl and so are the nitazenes. So while there are fentanyl derivatives even more potent than carfentanil, they contain several chiral centres and if one manages 100% yield in every synthetic step by some miracle, the final chiral resolution would remove 87.5% of the product (50% x 50% x 50%) which means not only is it synthetically much harder but the cost will be very high if most is discarded.

Don't judge the honesty of others by your own standards and don't confuse having read a few books with actual experience. Because it SHOWS. By all means ask, we all begin from a position of ignorance. But I'm sure we can all complete the maxim 'assumption is the mother of all..'
Thank you for your response. People need to hear this message and understand personal bias and nuance. Overall, things aren't black and white, and it takes effort to understand and remove ego from science.
 
Thank you for your response. People need to hear this message and understand personal bias and nuance. Overall, things aren't black and white, and it takes effort to understand and remove ego from science.

As explained, I only know because we had call to use what is termed a 'dual use' chemical and it really is a long and complex read. Not at all fun. But many odd things are excepted or whose distribution is limited by other laws.

Just as it DOES list 'classic' nerve agents, IPTBO is just as toxic but I've read it's used by mechanics working on commercial jets. Poisioning from it even has it's own name, Aerotoxic syndrome. But while implied, neither IPTBO nor it's precursors appear to be controlled.

But I'm just as fallable as anyone so I recommend people read it. It has not aged too well. At least when I read it, the NOVICHOCK agents weren't listed and the lead chemist (who later moved to the US) stated that one design criterion was that they were not in the CWC.
 
I can't find anything in Scandinavia and all of Europe seems to have no reliable source or the price is thousands of euros and still probably fake.

but thanks for this tip, I will continue searching for the substance
I can't promise it will fully eliminate PAWS for everyone

I wrote this to minimise PAWS and maximise long-term recovery to prevent relapse. It applies to all drugs, particularly opioids. It doesn't rely on any experimental or expensive items, they are all OTC and relatively inexpensive.

If you can't get SR-17018 then this is the next best OTC thing.
 
Last edited:
If you need advice Re: how to detox off Suboxone using SR-17, I can help you with that

Below dosing schedule is very effective. My girl used a very similar dosing schedule to detox off 100 mg methadone without any issues. Including myself I know 5 people who have detoxed avoiding any acute withdrawals + mitigating PAWS following this exact schedule or one very similar. I can't promise it will fully eliminate PAWS for everyone, if you've been dependent for a particularly long time it may also be beneficial to use nightly LDN after finishing with SR17

Phase 1: Taper off usual opiate & Transition on to SR-17018

First night: 75 mg SR-17018

2nd day: 3x 50 mg SR-17018, 20% lower opiate
3rd day: 3x 50 mg SR-17018, 20% lower opiate
4th day: 3x 50 mg SR-17018, 20% lower opiate
5th day: 3x 50 mg SR-17018, 20% lower opiate
6th day: 3x 75 mg SR-17018, no more opiate

Phase 2: SR-17018 Maintenance, Tolerance Reduction, & MOP Resensitization

7th day - 12th day: 75 mg SR-17018 3x per day

Phase 3: Smooth Taper to Freedom

13th day: 65 mg SR-17 3x per day
14th day: 55 mg SR-17 3x per day
15th day: 45 mg SR-17 3x per day
16th day: 35 mg SR-17 3x per day
17th day: 25 mg SR-17 3x per day
18th day: 15 mg SR-17 3x per day
19st day: 5 mg SR-17 3x per day

Edit: As for Kratom, that one may be a little tricky for some due to its effects on other receptors. I suspect for those who have trouble using SR-17 for kratom may be easier to use Bernese method for Suboxone induction first, wait a week or two until you feel stable, then use the SR-17 to detox from that.

And I do believe there are still vendors in that price range
What is this? If I end up experimenting with SR-17018 I am not going to take suboxone cause the only opioid I use is plain leaf Kratom and sometimes basic extracts like OPMS. I would like to hear more from people who have used this compound for Kratom WD and know if it works. I mean, it should shouldn't it?
 
Also, I know it's just AI and that AI can be wrong, but ChatGPT is saying that studies on mice have shown that SR-17018 produced dependence and respiratory depression in mice, so if that were actually true for people also then that wouldn't make it such a miracle drug at all. I don't know if I can really trust the anecdotes here that it can just magically get rid of opioid WD while itself acting as an opioid but not having any negative side effects:

Me: Is there any real proof that it can lead to respiratory depression or dependence? Have mice experienced either?




AI: Good question—and this gets at why biased agonism drugs like SR-17018 attracted attention in the first place.

🧠 What makes SR-17018 different?​

SR-17018 is a μ-opioid receptor agonist, but it was designed to favor G-protein signaling over β-arrestin pathways. Early theory suggested that might:

preserve pain relief

reduce side effects like respiratory depression

🧪 Respiratory depression: what’s actually been shown?​

In mice:​

Studies did measure breathing effects

Compared to classical opioids like morphine:

SR-17018 caused significantly less respiratory suppression

At equianalgesic doses, it showed a wider safety margin

👉 BUT:

It still produced measurable respiratory depression at higher doses

It was not completely “respiratory-safe”

So the evidence suggests:

Reduced risk ≠ no risk

🔁 Dependence and tolerance​

In mice:​

There is real evidence here.

Tolerance:

Much less tolerance develops compared to morphine in some pain models

Especially in hot plate (supraspinal) pain tests

However, tolerance still appears in other contexts (e.g., spinal reflex models)

Dependence:

Mice given chronic SR-17018 do show signs of physical dependence

This is typically tested by precipitating withdrawal with naloxone

Withdrawal signs were:

present

but often less severe than morphine

⚖️ Big picture from animal data​

Across studies, SR-17018 shows a consistent pattern:

✅ Strong analgesia

✅ Reduced respiratory depression vs morphine

✅ Reduced (but not eliminated) tolerance

⚠️ Still causes dependence

⚠️ Still causes respiratory depression at sufficient doses

🚨 Important reality check​

Even though results look promising in mice:

Many “safer opioids” (including other biased agonists) failed in humans

The relationship between β-arrestin signaling and breathing suppression is more complex than originally thought

No human trials = no confirmed safety profile

Bottom line​

There is real experimental evidence in mice showing:

Respiratory depression: yes, but less than morphine

Dependence: yes, clearly demonstrated (though somewhat reduced)

So SR-17018 isn’t a “non-addictive” or “non-respiratory-depressant” opioid—it’s more accurate to think of it as:

a potentially improved, but still fundamentally opioid-like compound

If you want, I can compare it to other “next-gen opioids” (like oliceridine) to show how this whole class has held up in real-world use.




Me: Is it even an opioid or does it just get rid of opioid withdrawal which is what I've heard? Does it kill pain by itself?




AI: This is where a lot of confusion online comes from—what you’ve heard has a kernel of truth, but the interpretation is off.

🧠 “How can it be an opioid if it reduces withdrawal?”​

Because that’s exactly what opioids do.

Drugs that activate the μ-opioid receptor—like:

morphine

heroin

methadone

buprenorphine

…can all suppress withdrawal symptoms from other opioids.

👉 Why?
Withdrawal happens when the receptor is suddenly not activated.
If you give another drug that activates the same receptor, withdrawal symptoms go away.

So if SR-17018 reduces withdrawal, that’s actually strong evidence that:

it behaves like an opioid at the receptor level

💊 Does SR-17018 relieve pain on its own?​

Yes—in animal studies, it is a potent analgesic.

Produces strong pain relief in mice (tail-flick, hot plate tests)

In some cases, comparable to morphine

Effects are blocked by naloxone, which confirms:

its pain relief is mediated through opioid receptors

So it’s not just a “withdrawal helper”—it’s a true opioid analgesic.

⚖️ Why people think it’s “different”​

SR-17018 was designed with biased agonism in mind:

It still activates the μ-opioid receptor

But it biases signaling toward pathways thought to cause:

pain relief

less tolerance

less respiratory depression

That led to claims like:

“non-addictive opioid”

“no respiratory depression”

“withdrawal-free”

👉 But animal data doesn’t support those extreme claims:

It still produces dependence

It still can cause respiratory depression

It still acts like an opioid overall

🔁 Why it might​

Compared to some traditional opioids, it may:

produce less euphoria

cause less rapid tolerance in certain pathways

So users sometimes report:

smoother effects

fewer “ups and downs”

But mechanistically, it’s doing the same core thing:

activating the μ-opioid receptor to stabilize the system

🧾 Bottom line​

SR-17018 is an opioid because it activates the same receptor as morphine

It does relieve pain on its own (in animal models)

It can reduce withdrawal—but that’s a typical opioid effect, not a contradiction

The key misconception is this:

“Reduces withdrawal” doesn’t mean “not addictive”
It usually means “functions like an opioid substitute”

If you want, I can break down how it compares specifically to buprenorphine—that comparison helps clarify why some drugs reduce withdrawal with less abuse potential.




Me: no. I've heard people say it does not produce dependence so i think you might not have solid proof that it does or doesn't




AI: It’s fair to question that—because the claims online about SR-17018 are much stronger than what the data actually shows.

🧪 What counts as “proof” of dependence?​

In research (especially with opioids), scientists don’t rely on opinions—they use standard tests:

Chronic dosing (give the drug repeatedly)

Then trigger withdrawal with naloxone

Look for physical withdrawal signs (jumping, tremors, weight loss, etc.)

If those appear → that’s physical dependence

🐭 What happened with SR-17018 in mice?​

Studies that did exactly this found:

Mice given SR-17018 chronically did show withdrawal signs when naloxone was given

The withdrawal was:

real and measurable

often less severe than with morphine, but still present

👉 That’s the key point:

It did not eliminate dependence—it reduced its severity in some comparisons.

🤔 So why do people say “no dependence”?​

A few reasons:

1. Misinterpretation of “less” as “none”​

Because SR-17018 showed:

less tolerance in some tests

milder withdrawal signs

People simplified that into:

“no dependence”
which isn’t what the data actually says

2. Early hype around biased agonism​

There was a big theory that these drugs could:

keep pain relief

remove side effects like dependence

That idea has not fully held up, even beyond SR-17018.

3. Anecdotal reports ≠ controlled evidence​

Human claims online:

aren’t controlled

vary wildly (dose, purity, tolerance, expectations)

So they can’t override controlled animal data.

⚖️ What we can say with confidence​

Based on actual experiments:

✅ SR-17018 activates the μ-opioid receptor

✅ It produces analgesia (pain relief)

✅ It produces physical dependence in mice

⚠️ Dependence may be less severe than morphine in some conditions

❌ There is no solid evidence it eliminates dependence

🚨 Important nuance​

“Less dependence” can still be meaningful scientifically—but it’s very different from:

“non-addictive” or “no withdrawal”

And without human trials, we don’t know:

how strong dependence would be in people

how it compares clinically to drugs like buprenorphine or methadone

🧾 Bottom line​

There is controlled experimental evidence, and it shows:

SR-17018 can cause dependence (in mice), just not necessarily to the same extent as traditional opioids.

So the claim “it doesn’t produce dependence” isn’t supported by the available data—it’s an overstatement of more modest findings.

If you want, I can point to the exact study designs and what withdrawal behaviors they measured—that makes it clearer how strong (or weak) the effect really is.




only if you can explain it as simply and briefly as possible. Also, if something shows dependence in mice does that mean that it will in humans? And what withdrawal effects did it produce in mice?




Got it—here’s the simple, no-fluff version:

🧪 Did studies actually show dependence?​

Yes (in mice).

How they tested it:


Give SR-17018 repeatedly

Then give naloxone (which blocks opioids)

See if withdrawal happens

👉 Withdrawal did happen, which = physical dependence

🐭 What withdrawal signs did mice show?​

Typical opioid-type signs, including:

Jumping

Tremors / shaking

Paw tremors

Teeth chattering

Weight loss / stress signs

👉 These were real but generally milder than with morphine

🤔 Does “dependence in mice” mean it will happen in humans?​

No—but it’s a strong warning sign.

❌ Not guaranteed

✅ But very likely if:

same receptor is involved (it is)

same drug class (opioid)

👉 In practice:

Almost every drug that causes opioid dependence in animals also does in humans

🧾 Bottom line​

SR-17018 did produce dependence in mice

Withdrawal signs were clear but somewhat less severe than morphine

Animal results don’t guarantee human effects—but here, they strongly suggest it would still be dependence-forming

If you want it even tighter:

It behaves like a **“somewhat milder opioid,” not a dependence-free one.




Me: Ok, but could we eventually find out that it really doesn't produce dependence or respiratory depression in humans if there are already people saying it hasn't for them?




AI: Short answer: it’s very unlikely—but not impossible—that it turns out to have no dependence or respiratory depression in humans. The current evidence points the other way.

🧠 Why anecdotes aren’t strong evidence​

People saying “I didn’t get withdrawal” or “it didn’t affect my breathing” can happen because:

Short use → dependence hasn’t had time to develop

Low or inconsistent dosing

High opioid tolerance already

Unreliable product purity/identity

Subjective perception
(withdrawal and breathing effects aren’t always obvious)

👉 So individual reports ≠ proof of absence

🧪 What the science suggests​

SR-17018 activates the same μ-opioid receptor as morphine

In animals, it:

causes dependence (withdrawal appears with naloxone)

can depress respiration at higher doses

That puts it firmly in the “opioid-like risk” category.

🔮 Could humans be different?​

Technically yes—but here’s the realistic view:

We’ve studied many “safer opioids” based on biased agonism

None have turned out to be:

non-addictive AND non–respiratory-depressant

Even drugs designed to be safer (like buprenorphine) still:

cause dependence

can suppress breathing (just with a ceiling effect)

⚖️ What would have to be true for it to be “risk-free”?​

For SR-17018 to truly have no dependence or respiratory depression, it would need to:

Activate opioid receptors without triggering adaptation (dependence)

Provide analgesia without affecting brainstem breathing centers

👉 So far, no drug has cleanly achieved both in humans.

🧾 Bottom line​

Anecdotes can’t rule out risks

Animal data + pharmacology strongly suggest:

it would still cause dependence and respiratory depression in humans

The most realistic best-case scenario:

“less than traditional opioids,” not “none at all”
 
I mentioned this very early in the discussion. It's entirely possible for a person to stop using opioids. It's the fact that we KNOW from studies that it's relapse that is the issue. So I asked if the stuff would work equally well if used a second time. Nobody knows. I think that's important to know because if a person relapses imagining thay can simply buy a research chemical (again) and get clean, it may not work.

If anything, after the respiratory depression, the other risk is less obvious. Everyone has a certain amount of risk they are prepared to take and everyone's comfort zone is different and often in flux. So the Safety Paradox (Google it) may be that people do not fear becoming physically dependent on an opioid on the basis that they can just use a 'magic cure'. That assumes said cure works a second time and that's assuming it remains available, or available at an affordable price.

As I also noted, the stuff is not legally controlled. So why someone would use a dubious source instread of simply setting up a paper company and ordering it from a legitimate ligand supplier is beyond me. At least the latter source has a reputation to lose. It's your health and if you had the choice of a medicine from a legitimate pharmacy or a medicine from a stranger you never meet, has no physical address and has no reputation to lose, is it worth the extra cost to go to the pharmacy? I see the situations as analogous.

I have already linked to all the extant academic papers and we DO have a human trial.
 
It's the fact that we KNOW from studies that it's relapse that is the issue.

I suspect TLR4 is key in relapse since opioids cause hyperalgesia which requires more opioids to resolve (relapse). This seems entirely overlooked in rehab clinics but I addressed it in this drug recovery overview specifically tailored to prevent relapse.

Drugs like opioids, alcohol and psychostimulants activate TLR4 signaling and subsequently induce proinflammatory responses, which in turn contributes to the development of drug addiction.
— 10.3389/fphar.2020.603445
...structurally diverse opioids (including the clinically relevant agonists morphine, fentanyl, remifentanil, methadone, oxycodone, buprenorphine, meperidine and antagonists naloxone and naltrexone) interact with TLR4
— 10.1177/0310057X211063891

The most well-known TLR4 blockers are naloxone and naltrexone besides the various OTC options.
Several TLR4 antagonists and glial modulators shown to reduce opioid-induced tolerance, hyperalgesia and allodynia preclinically are clinically available...
— 10.1177/0310057X211063891
...suggesting codeine does not rely upon conversion to morphine to increase pain sensitivity. This highlights the potential non-opioid receptor-dependent nature of codeine-enhanced pain sensitivity
https://doi.org/10.1038/tp.2014.121

Imo anyone using morphine/codeine/methadone/etc long-term would benefit from strategically chosen TLR4 antagonists to minimise tolerance, mitigate hyperalgesia and maximise the sustainability factor. Thankfully there are several OTC options that don't involve naloxone/naltrexone, as outlined here.
 
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No - hyperalgesia isn't at all pleasent (as I can attest) but at even rather large doses of prescribed Oxylan (generic Oxycontin), it hasn't caused me to increase the dose or even consider that option. Why? Well, plain fear if I'm honest.

Addiction has nothing to do with any physical need for a drug. I do try to use the right term so people understand the difference. The need is psychological and I've had clients who didn't touch opioids for over a decade and in each case they were essentially in crisis and went back to the one class of drug that helped them through previous crises. I feel that the term 'holistic' has been debased by scammers but I suppose if someone has a genetic predisposition and possibly environemtal factors or cues, I can see how hyperaglasia may prove a barrier in a client attaining abstainence. So more factors may well need to be considered by clinicians.

I absolutely agree that codeine IS doing something else. Clearly anyone on 80mg of oxycodone per day shouldn't even FEEL 30mg of codeine (in the form of prescribed Co-Codamol) yet here I am. If I don't take one every 12 hours, the pain is indeed much worse. If asked, I have repeatedly stated that codeine's dependence liability is out of all proportion to it's supposed analgesic activity. If it's the TRL4 pathway, that would entirely fit with my own experience.

Is the case that antihistamines can modulate the TLR4? I know of various in vitro and animal (in vivo) models but has this been demonstrated in man?

I try to give good advice if asked, as my logic is 'if you must do this damned silly thing, at least don't do it in this damned silly manner' (Sir Humphry Appleby).

I also think it worth mentioning that it seems that people who cycle between opioid use and abstainance suffer worse and worse AWS and possibly post-AWS symptoms after each cycle. So the hidden catch I previously mentioned may actually work against a client. People with a solid decades long habit seem often to suffer less severe AWS than clients who cycle and importantly, fear that next time they simply won't be able to stop.

Oh, I did ask and got no reply concerning the co-consumption of SR-17018 with other opioids as I can see the obvious case of someone who has reduced their use of conventional opioids but chooses to consume them as a 'treat' on occassion. Does the novel ligand increase, decrease or make no diference to the respiratory depression that all MOR agonists appear to produce.

@Allylbenzene - Good work fella!
 
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Addiction has nothing to do with any physical need for a drug. I do try to use the right term so people understand the difference.
From my perspective, the word "addiction" has connotations which can be misleading to the general populace and sometimes detrimental for quality of treatment.

I'd interpret "addiction" as uncontrolled self-medication for health-related issues which are either acknowledged or unacknowledged (or both).

TLR4 would be one of many factors driving opioid reuse/relapse - but its a factor which seems under-appreciated in opioid recovery protocols (particularly the ones that don't use naloxone/naltrexone).

I feel that the term 'holistic' has been debased by scammers but I suppose if someone has a genetic predisposition and possibly environemtal factors or cues, I can see how hyperaglasia may prove a barrier in a client attaining abstainence.
The opioid-induced TLR4 effect spans beyond hyperalgesia. I don't recall the specifics but it's involved in excitatory signalling (and thus epilepsy) amongst other things.

This gives more insight:
“If this receptor can be suppressed, preferably within a day after injury, the future development of epilepsy can be reduced if not entirely prevented.”
...
The receptor in question is the Toll-like receptor 4, or TLR4, an innate immune receptor. Following a brain injury, TLR4 increases excitability in the dentate gyrus of the hippocampus, the brain structure that plays a major role in learning and memory.
...
“Blocking TLR4 signaling shortly after brain injury reduces neuronal excitability in the hippocampus and seizure susceptibility. This seizure susceptibility is not reduced if we delay the blocking of TLR4 signaling after injury.”
(source)

TLR4 blockers for epilepsy? Many people are already doing this without realising since cannabinoids and cannabis terpenes block TLR4. Many people with epilepsy use cannabis to boost inhibitory signalling (GABA, CB1, CB2, adenosine) and reduce excitatory signalling (blocking NMDA & TLR4).

Is the case that antihistamines can modulate the TLR4? I know of various in vitro and animal (in vivo) models but has this been demonstrated in man?
I'm not aware of pharmaceutical antihistamines that modulate TLR4 (I haven't read those studies you mention). AFAIK the only antihistamine that modulates TLR4 is palmitoylethanolamine. It's an endogenous mast cell stabiliser which has the effect of reducing histamine release. Palmitoylethanolamine is OTC.

Palmitoylethanolamide (PEA), an endocannabinoid-like mediator, has been extensively studied for its diverse actions, including anti-inflammatory, antimicrobial, immunostimulatory, neuroprotective, and pain-reducing effects, with high tolerability and safety in both animals and humans.
https://doi.org/10.7555/JBR.38.20240053

I'm aware of other OTC TLR4 blockers including aspirin, agmatine, beta-caryophyllene, pregnenolone, thymoquinone, cannabigerol, theanine, vanillin, eugenol, linalool and frankincense/myrrh.

Most of these have analgesic effects and 2 of them (ß-caryophyllene, agmatine) have been studied for their opioid sustainability & recovery benefits.
 
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Well, in my case, I will simply ask my doctor if the Co-codamol could be substituted for Co-codaprin. As an experiment, if you will. Same amount of codeine phosphate, just 325mg of aspirin rather than 500mg of paracetamol. I was originally prescribed EIGHT Co-codamol per day and it was me that chose to reduce it as much as possible. So I only refill every four months.

Single case reports are considered low quality evidence BUT if it helps, that could potentially benefit many more people. My local HR unit occassionally asks if I can provide technical information on new ligands appearing on the gray market or indeed what a 'mystery powder' really contains i.e. read the NMR and GC-MS (which BTW ChemOffice will automate). So I will ask if aspirin is already in use.

I'm always very careful to make it clear what quality of evidence I have to support or refute a given case.

FYI Since I originally posted links to all the extant papers I could find CC SR-17018 a new paper publised by The Lancet has appeared. As always, we both know that mice don't make ideal models for subjective pain. I also keep an eye on the two licenced biased opioids used in clinical practice. Oliceridine (Olinvyk™) & tegileridine (Aisute™/艾苏特). If nothing else, a comparison of the three might shed more light on the advantages and disadvantages of each.
 
Well, in my case, I will simply ask my doctor if the Co-codamol could be substituted for Co-codaprin. As an experiment, if you will. Same amount of codeine phosphate, just 325mg of aspirin rather than 500mg of paracetamol.

IMO you would gain a lot from this substitution. Salicylic acid offers far greater medicinal value than paracetamol ever could (aspirin breaks-down into vinegar and salicylic acid).

Now 325mg is a fairly high dose. Depending how frequently you'd be taking this it's recommended to accompany chronic aspirin with a small quantity of vitamin K. Here's some context for this:
Indirect inhibition of vitamin K epoxide reduction by salicylate

Salicylate antagonizes the vitamin K-dependent biosynthesis of clotting factors in the rat and produces an elevation of the ratio of vitamin K epoxide to vitamin K in the liver. Vitamin K epoxide is reduced to vitamin K by a vitamin K epoxide reductase, and 1 mM salicylate was required to cause a 50% inhibition of the dithiothreitol-dependent in-vitro reduction of vitamin K epoxide by this enzyme.

— 10.1111/j.2042-7158.1984.tb04903.x

Same amount of codeine phosphate, just 325mg of aspirin rather than 500mg of paracetamol.

Have you been addressing the paracetamol contribution towards glutathione-depletion? I'm always surprised when paracetamol is liberally prescribed by doctors who seem to under-appreciate it's problematic aspects. Eg considering whether paracetamols glutathione-depletion will impact other things, worsen a health issue or synergise with other glutathione-depleting medications etc.

Glutathione (GSH) is the most important small molecular weight antioxidant produced in the cell.
...
The authors support the case that GSH stores are consumed at therapeutic doses of paracetamol, and not only in overdose paracetamol; they remind us that ingestion of therapeutic doses of paracetamol depletes serum antioxidant capacity in healthy volunteers in 14 days, possibly by a reduction in GSH (Nuttall et al., 2003).

https://doi.org/10.3389/fphar.2020.625295

Nuttall et al., 2003 -
Chronic ingestion of maximum therapeutic doses of paracetamol depletes serum antioxidant capacity in healthy volunteers in as few as 14 days, possibly by a reduction in glutathione.
...
Detoxification of paracetamol may deplete stores of glutathione, which is one of the major antioxidants present in the lung. A reduced source of glutathione in the lung may lead to increased oxidative damage to the epithelium and hence increased frequency and severity of asthma attacks in susceptible individuals.

https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-2710.2003.00493.x

It seems paracetamol activates TLR4 directly!

Acetaminophen-induced hepatotoxicity predominantly via inhibiting Nrf2 antioxidative pathway and activating TLR4-NF-κB-MAPK inflammatory response in mice

Finally, acetaminophen further significantly activated the toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4), nuclear factor-kappa B (NF-κB) and mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs) signaling pathways.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecoenv.2023.114590

I did a brief search for anything indicating a Glutathione-TLR4 relationship:

This paper offers some insights on TLR4 and mentions paracetamol 'intoxication':
N-acetyl cysteine (NAC) is a known anti-inflammatory and anti-oxidant agent used widely for paracetamol intoxication, and is safe to use during pregnancy (class B). Its anti-oxidant activity results from its conversion into metabolites that are capable of stimulating glutathione synthesis and promoting detoxification, and by its inherent function as a scavenger of free oxygen radicals.
Necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC) brain injury is mediated through Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4) on the intestinal epithelium and brain microglia. Our aim was to determine whether postnatal and/or prenatal NAC can modify NEC associated intestinal and brain TLR4 expression and brain glutathione levels in a rat model of NEC.
...
The decrease in brain and ileum glutathione levels observed in NEC offspring was reversed with all NAC treatment groups. NAC reverses the increase in ileum and brain TLR-4 levels and the decrease in brain and ileum glutathione levels associated with NEC in a rat model, and thus may protect from NEC associated brain injury.

https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-35019-5

A paper on TLR4 and glutathione, possibly includes relevant references and context:
Glutathione Fine-Tunes the Innate Immune Response toward Antiviral Pathways in a Macrophage Cell Line Independently of Its Antioxidant Properties

Glutathione (GSH), a major cellular antioxidant, is considered an inhibitor of the inflammatory response involving reactive oxygen species (ROS). However, evidence is largely based on experiments with exogenously added antioxidants/reducing agents or pro-oxidants. We show that depleting macrophages of 99% of GSH does not exacerbate the inflammatory gene expression profile in the RAW264 macrophage cell line or increase expression of inflammatory cytokines in response to the toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4) agonist lipopolysaccharide (LPS); only two small patterns of LPS-induced genes were sensitive to GSH depletion. One group, mapping to innate immunity and antiviral responses (Oas2, Oas3, Mx2, Irf7, Irf9, STAT1, il1b), required GSH for optimal induction. Consequently, GSH depletion prevented the LPS-induced activation of antiviral response and its inhibition of influenza virus infection. LPS induction of a second group of genes (Prdx1, Srxn1, Hmox1, GSH synthase, cysteine transporters), mapping to nrf2 and the oxidative stress response, was increased by GSH depletion. We conclude that the main function of endogenous GSH is not to limit inflammation but to fine-tune the innate immune response to infection.

https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2017.01239
 
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I can't understand ANYTHING you guys are saying lol. I have zero understanding of chemistry or how drugs work.

But do you guys, from what you know and/or have experienced, think that SR-17018 is actually a physically dependence-forming opioid like any other? And do you think it truly does cause respiratory depression?

4DQSAR: You said that we DO have human trials with this drug? Where are they and what do they show?

Cause for me, if I want to use this as a "magic" way to go on and off Kratom without WD (which is what I do want and would be a dream come true) then how is this different than just going on another opioid instead?

I mean people are saying it doesn't really have much of a high, but that it's still an opioid? Is it an opioid? Does it also kill pain? Does it help with depression or anxiety symptoms like Kratom does for me?

Also, I sometimes use Naltrexone to stay off Kratom for periods of time. Am I correct in assuming it's NOT safe to take Naltrexone and SR-17018 at the same time?

Not that I'd try, but I'd certainly want to know.

Obviously there is so much we don't know about this stuff, but for me, Kratom is the best antidepressant and anti-anxiety drug I know of (PLAIN LEAF powder or sometimes OPMS but not 7-OH, I won't touch that shit).

The problem is, as we all know, eventually you hit points where you realize you just need to stop for a while, that the side effects are making daily use problematic, and you want a clean period. When that happens for me, Kratom WD, while mild, lasts 7-10 days and will make it considerably harder to live life normally, especially cause it gives me insomnia and it's hard to work while not getting adequate sleep. And because of the WD effects and side effects of Kratom, I therefore cannot really allow myself to just be dependent on it and use it medicinally on a daily basis like I would like to. Every time I take it I'm aware I'll have to stop at some point and go through another week or more of WD which will be just annoying enough to really interfere with life, so then I can never just have Kratom be the medicine that I really want it to be, so I don't use it for so many things it would help me for or as often as I'd like to use it.

So for me, IF SR-17018 really worked and was safe and essentially enabled me to turn Kratom into a non-habit forming drug I could just use whenever I wanted and then stop whenever I wanted without issues, I honestly feel like I could use this combination to literally fix my life. Like, all the fucking problems I don't feel like describing, all the daily struggles we all have, they are ALL made easier for me by Kratom. I can overcome difficulties and face things on Kratom that I can't off of it, but it will always become a problem eventually, and there's no way around it.

I want so badly to believe this shit could be that way, but the chances are slim. I'd be willing to take certain physical risks too. Not ANY physical risk, but I mean seriously, if you told me that the combo of SR-17018 and Kratom would work PERFECTLY and I could hop on and off Kratom without WD symptoms...fuck, I might be ok with 5 years cut off my life. That's desperation speaking, but seriously, if the rest of my years were as good as Kratom can make them, I MIGHT be willing to make that trade.

But if SR-17018 is really just another opioid and we'll eventually find out it has its own withdrawal symptoms and god knows how to we taper it? And if it actually has a REAL risk of respiratory depression? Then what makes it any different than switching from Kratom to suboxone or methadone?
 
I can't understand ANYTHING you guys are saying lol. I have zero understanding of chemistry or how drugs work.

But do you guys, from what you know and/or have experienced, think that SR-17018 is actually a physically dependence-forming opioid like any other? And do you think it truly does cause respiratory depression?

4DQSAR: You said that we DO have human trials with this drug? Where are they and what do they show?

Cause for me, if I want to use this as a "magic" way to go on and off Kratom without WD (which is what I do want and would be a dream come true) then how is this different than just going on another opioid instead?

I mean people are saying it doesn't really have much of a high, but that it's still an opioid? Is it an opioid? Does it also kill pain? Does it help with depression or anxiety symptoms like Kratom does for me?

Also, I sometimes use Naltrexone to stay off Kratom for periods of time. Am I correct in assuming it's NOT safe to take Naltrexone and SR-17018 at the same time?

Not that I'd try, but I'd certainly want to know.

Obviously there is so much we don't know about this stuff, but for me, Kratom is the best antidepressant and anti-anxiety drug I know of (PLAIN LEAF powder or sometimes OPMS but not 7-OH, I won't touch that shit).

The problem is, as we all know, eventually you hit points where you realize you just need to stop for a while, that the side effects are making daily use problematic, and you want a clean period. When that happens for me, Kratom WD, while mild, lasts 7-10 days and will make it considerably harder to live life normally, especially cause it gives me insomnia and it's hard to work while not getting adequate sleep. And because of the WD effects and side effects of Kratom, I therefore cannot really allow myself to just be dependent on it and use it medicinally on a daily basis like I would like to. Every time I take it I'm aware I'll have to stop at some point and go through another week or more of WD which will be just annoying enough to really interfere with life, so then I can never just have Kratom be the medicine that I really want it to be, so I don't use it for so many things it would help me for or as often as I'd like to use it.

So for me, IF SR-17018 really worked and was safe and essentially enabled me to turn Kratom into a non-habit forming drug I could just use whenever I wanted and then stop whenever I wanted without issues, I honestly feel like I could use this combination to literally fix my life. Like, all the fucking problems I don't feel like describing, all the daily struggles we all have, they are ALL made easier for me by Kratom. I can overcome difficulties and face things on Kratom that I can't off of it, but it will always become a problem eventually, and there's no way around it.

I want so badly to believe this shit could be that way, but the chances are slim. I'd be willing to take certain physical risks too. Not ANY physical risk, but I mean seriously, if you told me that the combo of SR-17018 and Kratom would work PERFECTLY and I could hop on and off Kratom without WD symptoms...fuck, I might be ok with 5 years cut off my life. That's desperation speaking, but seriously, if the rest of my years were as good as Kratom can make them, I MIGHT be willing to make that trade.

But if SR-17018 is really just another opioid and we'll eventually find out it has its own withdrawal symptoms and god knows how to we taper it? And if it actually has a REAL risk of respiratory depression? Then what makes it any different than switching from Kratom to suboxone or methadone?
It dosent get much safer than kratom really.
How many years are u using and what quantities?
 
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