Adrenochrome

Adrenochrome is a chemical compound with the molecular formula C9H9NO3 produced by the oxidation of adrenaline (epinephrine). The derivative carbazochrome is a hemostatic medication. Despite a similarity in chemical names, it is unrelated to chrome or chromium.

Adrenochrome is an oxidation product of adrenaline (ephinephrine, norepinephrine). The effects and classification of this drug is said to be controversial because it is debated whether is has any psychoactive or hallucinogenic effects, although some test subjects compared the adrenochrome experience to mild psilocybin and LSD experiences. Psychoactive effects of adrenochrome may include euphoria, confusion, a change in train of thought, lack of judgment, poor insight and inability to concentrate.

Author Hunter S. Thompson* mentions adrenochrome in his book Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas. In the book the drug comes from a living donor's adrenal gland and therefore it is deemed exotic and intense. In the DVD commentary, director Terry Gilliam admits that his and Thompson's portrayal is fictional.


 * note: a child male victim named Paul that grew up in an orphanage home for boys, claimed that he was being prostituted in the Franklin Child Prostitution Ring to high level politicians and celebrities, specifically identified Hunter S. Thompson at Bohemian Grove, and said that he saw him participating in a game with a group of men that involved hunting down and killing children in the woods, with firearms. Circa 1990's. Wikipedia reports this event as conspiracy theory.

Satanic Ritual Abuse
SRA survivors, such as Kristy Allen, have made accounts claiming that Adrenochrome is the drug of choice for practicing satanists, who remove the adrenals after preferably killing a child, in order to harvest the hormonal secretions.

"Many of us have heard of the excretion Adrenochrome, the satanists remove the children's adrenal glands right after they have been terrorized and when killed in rituals to extract this kool aid the elites use to sustain their youth and extend their lives." - Statement made by Kristy Allen at the ITNJ seating, June 2018.