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Zombie drug vapes put five schoolchilden in hospital with one left in coma


The pupils aged 14 to 16 suffered symptoms including a reduced level of consciousness, vomiting and confusion after smoking the drug in Eltham. One was put into an induced coma

The children took the spice using an cigarette (file image)(Getty Images/iStockphoto)

Five school children were hospitalised, one comatose, after using a vape laced with the drug Spice.

Emergency services rushed to the scene as the pupils aged 14 to 16 suffered symptoms including a reduced level of consciousness, vomiting and confusion. One was put into an induced coma.




The five teens reportedly used a rechargeable vape pen containing blue liquid in a silver and black cartridge labelled Vaporesso.

All five children involved in the incident are thought to have since recovered. The emergency in Eltham, South East London on January 29 came after alerts in recent months of youngsters using vapes laced with Spice.

The Mirror can also reveal two young people were harmed after using a Spice-laced vape labelled Lemonade Vape Cookies in a separate incident earlier last month in Merton, South West London.

Spice is called a zombie drug because of the effect it produces in users(Collect)

But the teens using Spice, called a zombie drug because of the effect it produces in users, may not have known what was in their vapes.

The Welsh Emerging Drugs and Identification of Novel Substances service said last week that all customers known to have bought Spice-laced e-cigarettes last year thought they contained cannabis or CBD liquids. Lab-made drug Spice was designed to mimic the effects of cannabis but its effects can very different.

They can include dizziness, breathing difficulties, chest pain, heart palpitations and seizures. Users can even be temporarily paralysed.



Read More: Zombie drug vapes put five schoolchilden in hospital with one left in coma