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  1. Chan KB, Pakiam C, Rahim RA
    Bull Narc, 2005;57(1-2):249-56.
    PMID: 21338025
    Recently, the abuse of ketum, an indigenous psychoactive plant, has received a lot of attention in Malaysia. To help national law enforcement agencies control its abuse, the laboratory of the Forensic Division has developed a procedure for its positive identification. Botanical identification may not be practical or conclusive, owing to the wide range of ketum materials available on the market, including dry macerated leaves, powdered leaves and drinks. In order to confirm that a substance is, in fact, ketum or that a preparation is derived from ketum, gas chromatography-mass spectrometry is used to definitively identify the presence of the psychoactive principle mnitragynine.
  2. Lim WJ, Yap AT, Mangudi M, Hu CY, Yeo CY, Eyo ZW, et al.
    Drug Test Anal, 2017 Mar;9(3):491-499.
    PMID: 27367276 DOI: 10.1002/dta.2034
  3. Sulaiman M, Kunalan V, Yap ATW, Lim WJL, Ng JJY, Loh SWX, et al.
    Drug Test Anal, 2018 Jan;10(1):109-119.
    PMID: 28670869 DOI: 10.1002/dta.2238
    Clandestine heroin laboratories have been a feature of the Malaysian illicit drug scene since soon after the abuse of heroin emerged in 1972. The first few clandestine heroin laboratories which synthesised heroin via the acetylation of imported morphine were uncovered in 1973 and 1977. By the mid-1980s, this type of laboratory was replaced by heroin-cutting laboratories whereby imported high-grade heroin was cut to street heroin. This was to meet the rising demand for the drug owing to the rapid escalation of the number of drug users. Over the years, the most significant change in the composition of the street heroin is the decrease in its purity from 30%-50% to 3%-5%. Caffeine has remained the major adulterant and chloroquine is detected in virtually all recent seizures.
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