WHPM Xylazine Drug Test Strips | WXY-ST25
Drugs Detected |
Xylazine at concentrations of 500 ng/mL |
SKU | WXY-ST25 |
Quantity | 25 Tests |
Time to Results | 5 minutes |
Product Dating | >= 12 months |
Classification | Harm Reduction, Forensic Use |
Sample Type | Liquid or Powder (see insert) |
Storage | Room Temp. |
W.H.P.M. Xylazine Drug Test Strips are 99% accurate and 100% easy to use.
- Detects Xylazine in concentrations at 500 ng/mL
- Built-in procedural control
- Fast results in 5 minutes
- Cost-effective option
- 99% Accurate
Xylazine is not a controlled substance; it is marketed as a veterinary drug and used as a sedative, analgesic and muscle relaxant. In humans, it could cause central nervous system depression, respiratory depression, bradycardia, hypotension, and even death. Most of the non-fatal cases required medical intervention. Over recent years xylazine has emerged as an adulterant in recreational drugs, such as heroin or speedball (a cocaine and heroin mixture). Its chronic use is reported to be associated with physical deterioration and skin ulceration. Literature shows some similar pharmacologic effects between xylazine and heroin in humans. These similar pharmacologic effects may create synergistic toxic effects in humans. Therefore, fatalities among drug users may increase due to the use of xylazine as an adulterant. Xylazine alone has proven harmful to humans and even more when it is combined with drugs of abuse.
Xylazine is a pharmaceutical drug used for sedation, anesthesia, muscle relaxation, and analgesia in animals. Xylazine is not FDA-approved for use in humans. Human use of xylazine may result in serious and life-threatening side effects that appear to be similar to those commonly associated with opioid use, making it difficult to distinguish opioid overdoses from xylazine exposure.
Research has shown xylazine is often added to illicit opioids, including fentanyl, and has been linked to an increasing number of overdose deaths nationwide. The combination of xylazine with opioids or other recreational drugs may increase their toxic effects by potentiating sedation and causing respiratory depression,​ hypotension, and bradycardia.
||Detects (XYL) Xylazine at 500 ng/mL||