Category Archives: Drug State

Lady Hotel Manager dies from drug overdose

A VIP Room female manager of a hotel in Pasay City, Miss Edgel Durolfo, recently died of drugs overdose.

edgel durolfo Ms Edgel Durolfo

Findings from the Hotel Medical Clinic where the hotel executive was rushed to before being brought to San Juan De Dios Hospital along Roxas Boulevard in Pasay City was that the lady manager, inside her complimentary suite as manager, had a drug session together with at least three other staff of the same hotel beginning on the late hours of Thursday. The lady manager had earlier asked a friend of a friend to purchase at 1,500 pesos each, five pieces of the drug – Ecstasy – a heroin based drug.

When the lady manager developed reactions to the drug she was taking, her companions during the drug session and later an intimate friend accompanied by a family member, brought her to the hotel infirmary/clinic.

At the same hotel clinic, no available remedy could be found for the lady manager suffering from extreme reactions to the Ecstasy drug.

The clinic staff requested her concerned co-workers and the intimate friend to immediately transport her to the nearest, more well-equipped medical facility. The female hotel executive was promptly brought to San Juan De Dios Hospital and all her relatives were instantly informed.  The relatives of the lady manager soon arrived at the same hospital together with the members of the family of the manager’s initmate friend. Due to the fatal effect of the drug upon the hotel manager who is known to be suffering from attacks of shortness of breathing and a serious liver ailment, she passed away on the afternoon of Friday February 26, 2016.

Ms. Edgel Durolfo held a lucrative post at her hotel, earning a compensation of no less than 120,000 pesos a month for her talents and expertise. She is the reported bread winner of her family. She is survived by her father who works as a carpenter and her mother who sells wet market goods like chicken, among others and her small male child, Shaunny as well as possibly some siblings if any.  Ms. Durolfo has hundreds of friends, many are ever present and very well versed in social media..

Uninformed sources mistakenly attribute Miss Durolfo’s death to sadistic beating supposedly by her intimate friend, a certain Rodney Ynchausti who was at home all the while that she was inducing drugs into her system when she started suffering from severe reactions to the Ecstasy drug and whatever combinations she made with the prohibited substance.

See Related article at:

http://www.trendingnewsportal.com/2016/02/dead-woman-posts-on-facebook-asking-for-help.html

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Photo of Hotel Lady Manager Copied by trendingnewsportal from facebook.com

Her co-workers that brought Ms. Durolfo to the clinic were instantly fired by the hotel management where they are employed at.

Ecstasy (“X”) Drug Effects Information

What is Ecstasy?

MDMA or ecstasy is a Schedule I synthetic, psychoactive drug possessing stimulant and hallucinogenic properties. MDMA possesses chemical variations of the stimulant amphetamine or methamphetamine and a hallucinogen, most often mescaline.

What are the immediate (short-term) effects of heroin use?

Once heroin enters the brain, it is converted to morphine and binds rapidly to opioid receptors.11 Abusers typically report feeling a surge of pleasurable sensation—a “rush.” The intensity of the rush is a function of how much drug is taken and how rapidly the drug enters the brain and binds to the opioid receptors. With heroin, the rush is usually accompanied by a warm flushing of the skin, dry mouth, and a heavy feeling in the extremities, which may be accompanied by nausea, vomiting, and severe itching. After the initial effects, users usually will be drowsy for several hours; mental function is clouded; heart function slows; and breathing is also severely slowed, sometimes enough to be life-threatening. Slowed breathing can also lead to coma and permanent brain damage.12

Brain image highlighting the limbic system, brain stem and spinal cord

Opioids Act on Many Places in the Brain and Nervous System

  • Opioids can depress breathing by changing neurochemical activity in the brain stem, where automatic body functions such as breathing and heart rate are controlled.
  • Opioids can increase feelings of pleasure by altering activity in the limbic system, which controls emotions.
  • Opioids can block pain messages transmitted through the spinal cord from the body.