I don’t know what video you are talking about, but opiate levels in general don’t mean anything since each user will have a different tolerant level based on how much and how long they have used.
Steady opiate users can handle huge amounts in their system and the longer they use, if they can afford to keep upping the dose, the more they can handle.
If haven’t had any opiates in a year, for example, and you took a milligram of pure fentanyl, you would die.
Opioid tolerant patients who take 60mg of morphine a day might be given a 200mcg dose of fentanyl (0.2mg) for breakthrough pain.
But drug abusers can handle a lot more. Someone with a steady supply of opiates who was continuing to up their dose could eventually handle tens of milligrams. I’ve heard of people taking milligram doses of carfentanyl which is like a 1000 times stronger than fentanyl.
The biggest reasons people overdose are the following:
regular opiate user gets clean for some period of time and starts using again. Tries to do a dose they could handle before they got clean and OD
regular opiate users getting careless. They take 5 times their regular size dose and OD
hotspots. This is the a huge problem more specific to fentanyl. With doses being in the microgram to single digit milligram range, and the powder invariably being cut with inactive substance, when the drug is cut, it is not distributed evenly. If you are aiming for 200mcg per fake oxycodone pill you might end up with some being all cut and some being 1000mcg.
If Floyd was clean and took “three times the fatal dose” it would have killed him.
If Floyd had been using for a couple weeks straight before the incident I wouldn’t be surprised if he could have otherwise handled “three times the fatal dose” since tolerance builds back more quickly for addicts.
Even if the fentanyl wouldn’t have killed him by itself due to tolerance (which he may or may not have had) it still would have had a respiratory depressive effect on him. Between the covid + meth + heart + blocked arteries + physical exertion of fighting with the cops + respiratory depression from the fentanyl the fact that he died is no surprise, with or without the knee...
Duh. Are people so stupid? I'm sure they are. Cities are going to burn and people are going to die because of this ignorance.
🔥🔥
There is a second video about Floyd's drug levels being below DUI case levels, can anyone help regarding this videos data?
I don’t know what video you are talking about, but opiate levels in general don’t mean anything since each user will have a different tolerant level based on how much and how long they have used.
Steady opiate users can handle huge amounts in their system and the longer they use, if they can afford to keep upping the dose, the more they can handle.
If haven’t had any opiates in a year, for example, and you took a milligram of pure fentanyl, you would die.
Opioid tolerant patients who take 60mg of morphine a day might be given a 200mcg dose of fentanyl (0.2mg) for breakthrough pain.
But drug abusers can handle a lot more. Someone with a steady supply of opiates who was continuing to up their dose could eventually handle tens of milligrams. I’ve heard of people taking milligram doses of carfentanyl which is like a 1000 times stronger than fentanyl.
The biggest reasons people overdose are the following:
If Floyd was clean and took “three times the fatal dose” it would have killed him.
If Floyd had been using for a couple weeks straight before the incident I wouldn’t be surprised if he could have otherwise handled “three times the fatal dose” since tolerance builds back more quickly for addicts.
Even if the fentanyl wouldn’t have killed him by itself due to tolerance (which he may or may not have had) it still would have had a respiratory depressive effect on him. Between the covid + meth + heart + blocked arteries + physical exertion of fighting with the cops + respiratory depression from the fentanyl the fact that he died is no surprise, with or without the knee...
I don't disagree with anything you say.
The second video I was referring to was linked right after the one you posted.
Not there now unfortunately but it was one of the prosecutors interviewing a witness who was testifying about drug levels of DUI offenders.