Mike Tyson just admitted to using drugs during his boxing career to deal with pain.
“It was a painkiller, and I used to use it to patch up my toe,” Tyson said of substance, which is a synthetic opioid that is estimated to be 50 times more potent than heroin.
Comparing the effects and the withdrawal symptoms of both drugs, the boxer said, “It was like heroin. Once it wears off and you take the Band-Aid off, you start withdrawing, throwing up, just like if you were on heroin.”
Tyson revealed that he used the substance “quite a few times” and only stopped after learning that it could have ended his high-level boxing career.
“It was illegal if it [was] caught in my bloodstream,” he told Miller. “It was a narcotic, my friend told me. It was brand new. I told my friend, ‘Could I use this?’”
“No one ever heard of it,” Tyson remembered. “Then he looks at me and says, ‘Mike, that’s a narcotic. You couldn’t use.’ I didn’t know that.”
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has approved fentanyl for pain management when prescribed by medical professionals, but the drug has seen a surge of illicit use in recent years as a cheaper, stronger alternative to heroin or other popular pills like Oxycontin and Percocet.
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During his interview with Miller, Tyson wondered why the Drug Enforcement Administration currently classifies cannabis…
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