Editorial: Energy Drinks and Opioid Warnings — When Trust Is a Life-or-Death Choice

Aug 03, 2025 at 04:48 pm by WGNS


UPDATED Editorial: Just Sharing – From Bart Walker at WGNS: Every now and then, a story lingers—refuses to leave your mind. That happened to me recently while listening to a CBS Morning News segment on WGNS. It unsettled me so deeply that I felt I had to share it. This isn’t a medical report, and I’m not claiming expert status—but I am someone who’s reported on the opioid crisis for years. So, take this as food for thought. Let it marinate.

A Disturbing Ingredient in an Energy Drink?

The story centered around a particular energy drink sold at gas stations and convenience stores that reportedly contained 7-hydroxymitragynine (7-OH)—a compound found in the kratom plant. If you’ve never heard of kratom, it's a tropical tree native to Southeast Asia, and its leaves can produce both stimulant and sedative effects, depending on the dose.

Now, 7-hydroxymitragynine is not an opioid by classification. But according to research from the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) and statements from the FDA, this compound does bind to the same opioid receptors in the brain as morphine or oxycodone—meaning it can produce similar effects. In fact, 7-OH is believed to be one of the primary alkaloids responsible for kratom's pain-relieving and potentially addictive properties.

This wasn’t a case of “all energy drinks are dangerous.” Not even close. But the concern raised in the news report was that one specific product marketed as an “energy drink” may have included kratom-derived substances. And while it may only be one product, what happens if it’s the one your teenager picks up? Or worse—gets hooked on?

When Curiosity Becomes Crisis

Here’s why this matters:

Let’s not confuse these warnings with conspiracies or paranoia. It’s about recognizing red flags when they flash.

The Deeper Issue—Access Without Oversight

This is about more than just one drink. It’s about how easily products with powerful psychoactive ingredients can land on store shelves with little to no regulation—especially compared to alcohol, tobacco, or prescription medications. If a product affects the brain’s opioid receptors, it deserves scrutiny.

We’ve been here before. OxyContin and other opioids were aggressively marketed, downplayed, and prescribed until addiction swept through communities like a wildfire. The same patterns—profits over safety, weak regulation, delayed government response—are now appearing in new, unregulated forms.

Trust Matters More Than Ever

Again, I’m not a doctor. But I’ve interviewed grieving parents. I’ve seen how addiction begins innocently—with a back injury, a bottle of pills, or now, maybe a drink from a gas station.

So, if you’re a parent, grandparent, or someone who cares—don’t assume everything on the shelf is safe just because it's there. Read the label. Research the ingredients. Talk to your doctor, not an influencer. If something seems questionable, ask a professional.

What We Know So Far:

Final Thought: Don’t Wait

This isn’t about panic—it’s about prevention. The earlier we ask questions, the less likely we are to read tragic headlines later. You don’t need to be an expert to recognize when something doesn’t feel right.

So, please—if you remember anything from this message—find someone you trust. A physician. A pharmacist. A scientist. Not a Reddit post or a TikTok “guru.” Because one day, this might not be a theory—it could be your child, your friend, your story.

And by then, it may be too late.

 

Links to Learn More:

 

 

 

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