Does this researcher just grab shit up he sees and see if it's a painkiller? What was his inspiration? snail looked really comfortable when on fire?
The chemicals are too large to go through the blood brain barrier so are useless unless you stick a needle into the brain or the spine.
All papers refer to this unfortunate fact.
Big pharma might figure out how to create a smaller molecule that can dissolve in normal blood plasma and sneak into brain one day.
Tons of chemicals are over 10 times more powerful than morphine.
In fact many are over 10 times more powerful than this snail venom.
One example Ohmefentanyl is 28 times more powerful as a painkiller than fentanyl.
There are many many drugs more powerful that morphine. The problem is that you want one that can be dissolved in water, small enough to enter brain, and can be processed out of body by the liver.
[–] manlyheartattack ago
Great. These snails are going to be fucking toast soon along with most other life, so we'd better get studying while they're still around.
[–] ruck_feddit ago
I've read about people picking up seashells, holding them up to their ear to "hear the ocean", getting stung by the snail inside, and dying.
[–] RevDrStrangelove 0 points 2 points 2 points (+2|-0) ago
Wait. Snail venom? When did those things become venomous?
[–] ChaoticNeutral 1 point 1 point 2 points (+2|-1) ago (edited ago)
Check out the cone snail.
[–] newoldwave 0 points 3 points 3 points (+3|-0) ago
Cone snails (found in the sea) are venomous.
[–] cthulian_axioms 0 points 4 points 4 points (+4|-0) ago
$10 says there are at least three different kinds of venomous snails native to Australia.
[–] RevDrStrangelove 0 points 1 point 1 point (+1|-0) ago
Yeah but that's Australia. They probably have venomous butterflies.
[–] ninjajunkie 2 points -1 points 1 point (+1|-2) ago
And as soon as (((Big Pharma))) can find a way to get millennials addicted to it, they have it on the market as Tranjoy or Xerfix or some shit.