A deadly drug which rots the flesh of users has hit the streets of Arizona.
Krokodil — which kills most addicts within a year of their first hit — is a poisonous cocktail of codeine, gasoline, paint thinner, hydrochloric acid, iodine and red phosphorous.
KPHO
A deadly drug which rots the flesh of users has hit the streets of Arizona. Krokodil - which kills most addicts within a year of their first hit - is a poisonous cocktail of codeine, gasoline, paint thinner, hydrochloric acid, iodine and red phosphorous.
RELATED: MARIJUANA GROWER KILLED BY OWN BOOBY TRAP
The injected narcotic — which originated in Russia and is dubbed "the drug that eats junkies" — is three times cheaper to produce than heroin.
1948ross via YouTube
The drug is three times cheaper to make than heroine and has been called 'the drug that eats junkies.'
Victims suffer from gangrenous sores that open all the way to the bone.
RELATED: BALTIMORE GRANNY KILLS GRANDSON WITH METHADONE: COPS
1948ross via YouTube
The injected narcotic — which originated in Russia — is a cocktail of codeine, gasoline, paint thinner, hydrochloric acid, iodine and red phosphorous.
Terrifyingly, two reports of people using the drug in Arizona were reported this week — sparking fears an epidemic could be about to engulf the state.
They arrived in emergency rooms with their flesh hanging off their body, reports Fox 5.
ABC15 Phoenix
Terrifyingly, two people have been treated this week for using the drug in Arizona, sparking fears among doctors than an epidemic is on its way.
RELATED: BURGLAR MISTAKES HUMAN ASHES FOR COCAINE: COPS
"We've had two cases this past week that have occurred in Arizona," Dr. Frank LoVecchio, co-medical director at Banner's Poison Control Center, told KLTV.
"As far as I know, these are the first cases in the United States that are reported. So we're extremely frightened," he added.
RELATED: MACHETE MOM THREATENS TO CHOP KIDS' HEADS OFF
"We're afraid there are going to be more and more cases," he ended.
The use of Krokodil, which has the medical name of desomorphine, spread across Russia "like a plague" since 2002 and there are now 3 million users, a Time magazine investigation reported in 2011.