Body Packing and Body Stuffing

ByGerald F. O’Malley, DO, Grand Strand Regional Medical Center;
Rika O’Malley, MD, Grand Strand Medical Center
Reviewed/Revised Dec 2022
VIEW PROFESSIONAL VERSION

To smuggle illegal drugs across borders or other security checkpoints, people may voluntarily swallow packets filled with drugs or hide those packets in body cavities.

  • If a packet tears, a drug overdose may occur, sometimes causing serious symptoms.

  • The risks and consequences of drug overdose vary depending on the amount and type of drug and the way it is packaged.

Body packing

Body packing often involves drugs with a high street value (primarily heroin or ). The drugs originate in other countries and may be placed in condoms or in packets wrapped in several layers of plastic wrap or latex and sometimes covered with an outer layer of wax in preparation to transport across the border. After body packers swallow several packets, they typically take medications to slow the movement of substances through the digestive tract until the packets can be retrieved. Some body packers may swallow and smuggle hundreds of packets in a single trip.

If a packet tears, a drug overdose may occur, sometimes causing serious symptoms. Packets may block or injure the intestine. If the intestine tears, its contents may leak into the abdominal cavity and cause severe inflammation and infection—a disorder called peritonitis. Symptoms of drug overdose from a burst packet depend on the kind of drug and may include repeated seizures, high blood pressure, a very high body temperature, difficulty breathing, and coma.

Body stuffing

Body stuffing is similar to body packing. It occurs when people swallow drug packets to avoid being caught by law enforcement, but sometimes packets are hidden in the rectum or vagina. The amounts of drugs are smaller than those in body packing. But because the drugs are usually less securely wrapped, overdose is still a concern.

Diagnosis of Body Packing and Stuffing

  • A doctor's suspicion

  • Body cavity search

  • Sometimes plain x-ray or computed tomography (CT scan)

Suspected body packers and stuffers are usually brought to medical attention by law enforcement officials, but doctors should consider body packing if recent travelers and newly incarcerated people present with coma or seizures of no known cause. Pelvic and rectal examinations (body cavity searches) should be done to check those areas for drug packets. Plain x-rays can sometimes confirm the presence of packets in the digestive tract, but computed tomography is the most sensitive test to locate packets of drugs in the gastrointestinal tract.

Treatment of Body Packing and Stuffing

  • Treatment for complications of drug overdose

  • Removal of drug packets

  • Sometimes specific antidotes

Doctors treat people with symptoms of overdose (and presumed packet rupture) with symptom-specific supportive care, including support of breathing and blood pressure, and antiseizure medications. Sometimes, specific antidotes for certain drugs, if available, are used.

Usually, unruptured packets in the digestive tract can be removed by a procedure called whole-bowel irrigation, in which the digestive tract is flushed out with large amounts of electrolyte solution.

However, once packets rupture, doctors try to immediately remove all packets using surgery or an endoscope (a nonsurgical procedure using a flexible tube with a camera). Surgical or endoscopic removal can take time, however. Death commonly occurs with rupture of drug packets in body packers because the quantity of drug released is large and the drug is pure, so the dose is very high. People with an intestinal blockage (obstruction) or tear (perforation) also need immediate surgery. Activated charcoal, a substance administered by mouth to absorb the illegal drug, may be helpful but is dangerous in people who have intestinal blockages or tears.

Doctors can usually remove vaginal and rectal packets with a gloved hand.

Body packers or stuffers who are symptom-free should be observed until they have passed all the drug packets and several packet-free stools. Some doctors use whole-bowel irrigation to prompt passage of the packets. If a person has symptoms of potential drug toxicity or overdose, doctors may need to do an endoscopy procedure to remove packets.

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