Some “wellness practitioners” are peddling a new kind of detox: dabbing the poisonous secretions of an Amazonian tree frog onto your skin, with potentially life-threatening results. Last month, Kristian Trend, a 40-year-old wellness coach from the U.K., died after reportedly using kambo, the frog poison that has long been a traditional medicine among some Indigenous people. And at least six deaths worldwide have been associated with the substance.
‘Incredible but brutal’ Kambo is harvested from the defensive skin secretions of the giant monkey tree frog. In traditional Amazonian rituals, it’s “applied to superficial burns” made on the legs or arms to produce an “intense purging effect,” said Martin Williams of Melbourne’s Swinburne University of Technology, at The Conversation. Self-styled kambo practitioners tout a range of supposed benefits, including reduced anxiety, increased energy and relief from chronic pain.
Many users “anecdotally report positive physical, emotional and spiritual aftereffects,” said Williams. Kambo left Orlando Bloom with a “feeling of being clearer and wide open,” said the actor to GQ, describing the purge as “incredible.” But it was “pretty brutal in terms of what it does to the body in the moment.” It was “coming out both ends.”
‘Danger to health’ Using kambo can have severe health consequences. It can lead to hyperthermia and dangerously low sodium levels, inducing psychiatric effects that are “often misinterpreted by participants as ‘astral travel,’ instead of being recognized as potentially fatal conditions,” said a paper published in the Cureus Journal of Medical Science. It’s concerning that kambo is so widely available on the internet, as this could contribute to an “uncontrolled increase in fatalities,” said the study authors.
In Brazil, it’s illegal to sell or market kambo. And in Australia, where there have been two deaths after kambo rituals, it’s categorized as a “substance of such danger to health as to warrant prohibition of sale, supply and use,” said the paper.
Indigenous healers have used these substances for hundreds of years and have been trained to do so safely for “certain specific situations,” said Roger Byard, a forensic pathologist at Australia’s Adelaide University, to The Guardian. To think we can “take one of their time-honored, cultural practices” for our own use is “absolute Western arrogance.”
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