Product Description
Nembutal Powder is a proven, reliable medication that brings about a peaceful death. Almost no failures are known, despite large statistics (for example, the Swiss euthanasia organization Dignitas reported 840 exits with no single failure). There are however reports on seemingly slow or painful deaths with Nembutal in capital punishment, although this may be due to the poor quality of the drug from compounding pharmacies given intravenously rather than orally.
Nembutal Powder is sold most of the time in liquid form for use as a sedative and anesthetic in hospitals. veterinary Nembutal is a liquid and not in pill form, which means that it has a shorter shelf life. On the other hand, Seconal (secobarbital), a short-acting barbiturate that is as powerful as Nembutal if not more powerful, is still available in capsule form in the USA, EUROPE, and probably the UK. Nembutal powder has a white color and bitter taste that require the use of anti-emetics to prevent vomiting when given orally at high dosages.
The administration is a matter of dissolving the powder in the water and drinking. . . . . If the powder is analyzed to be pure, and if ingested in the recommended dosage.
Nembutal has also been reported to be available on the black market, particularly in Europe and UK, in powder form with 95% of purity.
Nembutal Powder, unlike other lethal drugs, may not require any additional drugs. Only anti-emetic drugs must be taken in advance, in order to prevent any vomiting from occurring. This has been partially endorsed by experts in the administration of the death penalty, whereby a pure barbiturate method has been deemed painless and more successful than prior 3-drug approaches and newer concoctions involving e.g. Midazolam (in the traditional 3-drug approach, a barbiturate was one of the components). There have, however, been reports of less successful attempts, the cause of which have been debated. The use of pentobarbital-only has also been called into question by some experts on capital punishment.
Overdose effects
A pentobarbital overdose is an amount taken in excess of that which is medically recommended. five to ten grams excess may lead to agonizing and other reverse form wich is not peaceful, that is why it is always better to use 50 grams for lethal dose or a quantity above for more insurance.. A purchase of 50 grams of 95% pure Nembutal soldium may be suffisant to help passing away an adult.
In extreme overdose, all electrical activity in the brain may cease, in which case a “flat” EEG normally equated with clinical death cannot be accepted. This effect is fully reversible unless hypoxic damage occurs. Consideration should be given to the possibility of barbiturate intoxication even in situations that appear to involve trauma.
Complications such as pneumonia, pulmonary edema, cardiac arrhythmias, congestive heart failure, and renal failure may occur. Uremia may increase CNS sensitivity to barbiturates. Differential diagnosis should include hypoglycemia, head trauma, cerebrovascular accidents, convulsive states, and diabetic coma.
However, experts in human anaesthesia have pointed out that pentobarbital, while an anaesthetic, is not a full analgesic. As such, coadministration of an appropriate analgesic may be advisable to completely eliminate risk of perceived pain, although reports of adverse events have been sparse. Suggestions for analgesics seem unclear at this time, perhaps a low-moderate dose opioid could be an option. The US Death with Dignity homepage mentions a mix of phenobarbital, choral hydrate, morphine sulfate and ethanol as a less expensive option to secobarbital. These additions are possibly due to phenobarbital being slower acting. In veterinary euthanasia, a two step approach is favoured, whereby a sedative such as propofol is given prior to an IV pentobarbital dose. Oral administration is recommended only as a fallback. This method may differ slightly in effect from oral human consumption in that death occurs almost immediately, and perhaps by cardiac effects rather than respiratory depression. In the recorded events of adverse event
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