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EXCLUSIVE Suspicious clues in Elon Musk's drug test according to doctors

EXCLUSIVE Suspicious clues in Elon Musk's drug test according to doctors

Daily Mail​19-06-2025
Tech tycoon and former First Buddy Elon Musk is speaking out about the media's attention on his alleged drug use in a way some say will do nothing to refute the rumors.
Rumors of Musk's supposed drug use have been circulating in the pubic eye for months, with major publications publishing that the former head of DOGE reportedly used substances like ketamine and ecstasy while on the campaign trail with President Donald Trump.
Musk refuted these claims during a Q&A in the Oval Office last month and in his latest effort posted results from a urine drug test on X earlier this week.
In a photo of the urinalysis, the results showed he tested negative for illegal drugs like cocaine, fentanyl and marijuana, as well as prescription drugs that are sometimes abused like opiates, benzodiazepines and barbiturates.
Levels of waste products in his urine were also measured and showed normal results.
But Dr Holly Schiff, a licensed clinical psychologist familiar with urinalysis as a diagnostic tool for substance use disorders, told DailyMail.com that his latest post is not as convincing as he may think it is.
While she has not treated Musk and does not know the specifics of his testing, Dr Schiff told this website: 'Many recreational drugs clear from urine in one to three days.
'The test being done when it was and shared publicly makes me think it was more a PR rebuttal to prove his critics wrong, and posting it on social media with the "lol" adds a performative layer that can invite skepticism.'
And one detail in particular stood out to her.
On his urinalysis, Musk's creatinine level is 47.16 milligrams per deciliter of urine (mg/dL) – nothing immediately alarming given the normal range is 20 to 300 mg/dL.
A creatinine test is a measure of how well the kidneys are doing their job of filtering waste from the blood
But creatinine is typically above 50 among adult men, who tend to have higher muscle mass than women, and creatinine is a byproduct of muscle metabolism.
Dr Schiff said: 'The low creatinine level suggests urine dilution, whether that is intentional to flush substances or unintentional, due to high fluid intake. So this is a less concentrated sample.'
At the same time, she pointed out that certain drugs are cleared from the body relatively quickly.
Ketamine passes from the body in around 12 hours.
And, Dr Schiff added: 'This was also a one-time scheduled test that can easily be prepared for; therefore, not equivalent to randomized testing over time.'
A scheduled test is one a person can prepare for by abstaining from drugs for the time necessary to fall below detectable thresholds.
Another way to fall below the threshold is by diluting drug concentrations in urine by over-hydrating, a method that will also drive down urine creatinine levels.
Dr Johnny Parvani, an emergency medicine physician who founded an IV therapy company - who also had not treated Musk and does not know the specifics of the testing - told DailyMail.com: 'Since every test has its detection limits, the more diluted the urine, the more likely it will fall below detectable thresholds.
'This is actually the reason for the World Anti-Doping Agency limitation on the use of IV fluids, because it can help dilute and flush out performance-enhancing drugs below detection limits.'
Drug tests are typically administered at random to spot any substance use issues or to check in on someone who is meant to be cutting back or abstaining altogether.
'It doesn't rule out past drug use, prescription drug use or long-term use patterns,' Dr Schiff added. 'For meaningful clinical insight, we would need randomized, observed testing over time, ideally with behavioral and medical evaluations corroborating the results.'
The person who collected Musk's sample is listed as Jennifer Taylor on the results. Her LinkedIn says she is the owner of Fastest Labs in Austin - where the results indicate the urine test was done.
Collectors are typically the same sex as the person giving the urine sample as, in some cases, they will accompany the patient to ensure the sample is actually theirs and has not been tampered with.
That a woman is listed as the sample collector suggested to Dr Schiff that the test itself could have been what experts call unobserved, meaning the sample was provided in private without direct visual supervision.
'So, of course, there is always the possibility of substituting or manipulating a sample,' she said. 'Lack of observation undermines the test's evidentiary strength.'
Musk has been open in the past about using ketamine prescribed by a doctor to treat depression. But the recent investigation by The New York Times cited unnamed people familiar with Musk's daily habits who said his chronic use of the powerful anesthetic had begun to affect his bladder.
The same report alleged that Musk traveled with a daily case of about 20 different pills, including ones marked Adderall.
'A clean test does not rule out use of substances not covered, nor non-substance causes of behavioral change,' Dr Schiff said. 'This test also does not give us any information about use weeks or months ago or current medication status, like sleep aids or prescription stimulants.
'So while the test is technically clean, a single, not random, [potentially] unobserved collection with potential sample dilution cannot definitively rule out recent or intermittent drug use. This appears more strategic than clinically necessary.'
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Ketamine: Would making the drug class A stop Gen Z using it?
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Ketamine: Would making the drug class A stop Gen Z using it?

"Upgrading ketamine to Class A just means that young people will take dirtier, unsafe drugs, the money will go to the dealers and no one wins."Vicky Unwin's words come from experience - the drug policy reform campaigner lost her daughter in 2011 to a ketamine is part of Anyone's Child, a decade-long campaign that lobbies for change in the government's current drug policies, calling for illegal drugs to be legally regulated. But their mission is not favoured by everyone. David Sidwick, Dorset's Police and Crime Commissioner (PCC) believes strongly in the criminalisation of drugs and said "making ketamine Class A sends a strong message on its dangers". It comes at a time when the use of ketamine has soared among young Home Office has described the drug as "extremely dangerous" and said it has requested advice from the Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs about reclassifying it. 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It is a licensed drug and can be prescribed medicallyHowever, when misused, it can cause serious and sometimes permanent damage to the bladderIt is currently a Class B drug under the Misuse of Drugs Act 1971This means the penalty for possession is up to five years in prison, an unlimited fine, or both If it was upgraded to Class A, the penalty for possession would increase to seven years, falling in line with drugs like cocaine, heroin and ecstasy (MDMA) Ms Unwin's perspective is not the only view on the Sidwick, Dorset's PCC, is among politicians lobbying for ketamine to be upgraded to Class is the addiction and substance misuse co-chair within the Association of Police and Crime Commissioners. 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Another blow for Elon Musk after Trump gives $10b to his worst nightmare
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I was a £40k ketamine addict who ‘bumped' 8 times a day while homeschooling – it ravaged my face & cost me my kids
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SWALLOWING another painkiller, mum-of-two Victoria Vigors desperately hoped this would be the one that would finally take the edge off the excruciating agony she was in. The 40-year-old was stuck in a vicious cycle of secret ketamine abuse and when the strong painkillers failed to mask the horrendous effects including debilitating stomach cramps, she turned to more drastic measures. 8 8 8 Rather than reducing the amount of drugs she was taking and getting help for her addiction Victoria microdosed instead, feeding her habit every two hours daily for years, even smuggling it in during her hospital stays. Soon, her life derailed and over four months she was hospitalised 14 times which ultimately led to her losing custody of her children, now 14 and eight. At her lowest, she was spending £500 a week on the Class B drug, which also ravaged her teeth. Victoria, who lives in Kent, and was 35 when her addiction took hold, says: 'Ketamine really took me to rock bottom. I used the drug as an alternative to drinking wine to cope with the everyday stresses of life. 'I didn't like the side effects of drinking when I was doing it so excessively and regularly. 'So I thought, 'Oh, ketamine is like being drunk'. After trying it, I had no side effects, no comedown – at first. 'I figured that a small 'bump' would be like having two glasses of wine. 'So I used it instead of booze, thinking I had somehow found the secret to life.' It was in 2020, when Victoria's children were three and ten years old when she tried the drug for the first time. Juggling her children and homeschooling, she struggled to cope and she went from wine to ketamine. 'I felt so alone, isolated and unable to be a good mother,' she explains. 'My family had their own problems so I didn't want to burden them. 'I felt I needed something to just not care. 'A friend suggested trying ketamine and sent over the number of a supplier. It felt like an instant antidepressant without all the negative side effects of alcohol.' Large doses of ketamine can cause users to experience a 'k hole', described as a 'near death experience', something Victoria was desperate to avoid. She began taking small doses regularly instead which also meant she could keep a handle on parenting - for a while. She says: 'I was terrified of going into a k hole so I never did more than a tiny bump at a time and microdosing daily. However, my tolerance became so high I was having to use more to get the same effect with each bump. 'Because I was microdosing it didn't really impact my parenting at first. I was able to go about my daily life but just feeling happy, relaxed and content all the time. Ketamine really took me to rock bottom. I used the drug as an alternative to drinking wine to cope with the everyday stresses of life Victoria 'I would do a bump as soon as I woke up and then another one every two hours until I went to bed. 'It was only when I started being in chronic pain and being in and out of hospital that it started to impact my parenting because I was in constant pain - it stopped me from giving the children the routine they needed. 'I would have to ask their dad to pick them up because I would be in so much agony I couldn't stand up. I was frequently unable to get out of bed and was so tearful all the time because of the pain I was suffering. 'My children never witnessed anything they shouldn't, they just knew 'Mummy was poorly'.' During 2021, Victoria was admitted to Darent Valley Hospital in Dartford 14 times because she was constantly ill with stomach pains. By this time, she was spending £500 a week - money from savings - on the drug and went to desperate measures to get her 'fix'. ' I would get ketamine delivered to the hospital because the painkillers the doctors gave me didn't work,' she recalls. 'I was too scared to tell them that I was an addict in case they took my children away. 'I missed my children so much and knew I had let them down, I just wanted to be a normal mum but I was unable to live a normal life with the pain and the only thing that stopped the pain was more ketamine.' 8 8 8 Life for Victoria, a content creator, continued to spiral and she is far from alone. Deaths resulting from ketamine addiction in the UK have surged by 650% over the last decade and one person dies from it every week. There were seven deaths in 2015 compared with 53 in 2023 with experts warning of the 'next drug pandemic'. Victoria was gripped by the drug for four years which also began to have a major impact on her teeth. Her gums began to recede, exposing the roots underneath. 'People would comment on my smile and call me 'horse teeth' because I had so many gaps,' she explains. 'I used to keep my mouth closed a lot and I learned to smile like that. WAKE-UP CALL "I remember overhearing my nan telling my uncle that I used to be so beautiful but now looked a mess and my teeth were unbearable to look at. 'That really hurt me - coming from someone that I really looked up to. In October 2021 Victoria finally confessed her addiction to doctors. Being told that all contact with her children would be stopped until she 'got clean' was a stark wake-up call. She says: 'I was told my kids would be going to live with their dad. That was when I decided I had to get clean for my babies - they were my whole reason for living. 'The emotional pain of being kept away from them was worse than the physical pain of getting clean, so I never touched ketamine again from that day. 'The withdrawal was excruciating. Even the morphine I was given didn't stop the pain. 'My bladder had been damaged and I needed to wheel my drip down to the toilet every 30 minutes. 'I never felt like relapsing, I knew that I had to choose either ketamine or my children and my children win every time.' 8 8 After weeks in hospital Victoria joined a narcotics anonymous group and had therapy sessions to stay on the right path. It was following her recovery and getting her life back on track that she decided it was time to fix the lasting physical reminder of her addiction. In May this year she booked herself into a clinic in Izmir in Turkey and paid almost £5,000 for 'new' teeth. 'Having my teeth fixed might seem superficial but it was an important part of my recovery. I love them,' she adds. Victoria, who has a partner of four years and now shares custody of the children with their dad, looks back on the past few years and adds: 'I feel a lot of regret, especially a lot of guilt. 'I wanted to be a great mum but I was trapped by addiction. I was just trying to cope. 'Now, we are making up for lost time. We have our first family holiday in years in a few weeks and whilst being a mum still has its challenges I am able to cope. 'I am a better mum than I was before ketamine got the better of me, and I am proud of what I've overcome.'

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