• Hey Guest,

    We wanted to share a quick update with the community.

    Our public expense ledger is now live, allowing anyone to see how donations are used to support the ongoing operation of the site.

    👉 View the ledger here

    Over the past year, increased regulatory pressure in multiple regions like UK OFCOM and Australia's eSafety has led to higher operational costs, including infrastructure, security, and the need to work with more specialized service providers to keep the site online and stable.

    If you value the community and would like to help support its continued operation, donations are greatly appreciated. If you wish to donate via Bank Transfer or other options, please open a ticket.

    Donate via cryptocurrency:

    Bitcoin (BTC):
    Ethereum (ETH):
    Monero (XMR):
viscera

viscera

Member
Sep 15, 2025
26
Has anyone explored the use of sodium chlorite (NaClO2) as a suicide method?

It has an LD50 similar to SN and is much more widely available as a disinfecting agent. It even kills in a similar fashion (methemoglobinemia). I found this clinical case, where a dose of 10g would have been more than sufficient to kill the subject had he not received prompt and intense medical care.

I'm only concerned about the potential discomfort before death compared to SN.
 
  • Like
  • Informative
Reactions: Eudaimonic, Unknown21 and closetoyou
U. A.

U. A.

"Ultra Based" gigashad
Aug 8, 2022
2,600
You aren't concerned about renal failure? I haven't kept tabs but I don't recall that happening often with SN. In all three incidences of SC poisoning I can find, all led to acute kidney injury requiring dialysis for an extended period of time.

This is the full paper you've got just the abstract from. Someone could look into secondary to methemoglobinemia, if the physical processes are the same.
Actually I'm seeing this has only been mentioned four times total on the site, none of them very informative or pertaining to actual attempts (there's a search function you likely can't use yet).
I may investigate later if no one else does.
 
Last edited:
  • Informative
  • Like
Reactions: nobodycaresaboutme, closetoyou, NearlyIrrelevantCake and 1 other person
Upvote 0
viscera

viscera

Member
Sep 15, 2025
26
You make a good point. I saw that paper as well, and I agree that the consequences of failure seem rather brutal.

However, it should be noted that all the patients you mention are stated to have made a full recovery, even with a dose as high as 90g. No permanent sequelae.

Given the dramatically greater availability of SC over SN, I think many people may consider the risks to be worth it. That's why I'm surprised this method is not discussed more.
 
  • Informative
  • Like
Reactions: nobodycaresaboutme, closetoyou and U. A.
Upvote 0
closetoyou

closetoyou

Member
Aug 19, 2025
81
from what i can gather, the death seems kind of painful and not particularly fast
 
Upvote 0
viscera

viscera

Member
Sep 15, 2025
26
Recovery is indeed painful and arduous if you receive medical treatment. If you don't, it seems to me that you would just pass out and die from the lack of oxygen caused by methemoglobinemia. This would occur long before renal failure comes into play. Someone please correct me if I'm wrong.
 
Upvote 0

Similar threads

L
  • Question
Replies
2
Views
608
Suicide Discussion
UserFromNowhere
UserFromNowhere
whitefeather
Replies
5
Views
1K
Suicide Discussion
urgent
U
W
Replies
6
Views
1K
Suicide Discussion
EmptyBottle
EmptyBottle
J
Replies
39
Views
11K
Suicide Discussion
Obliviate
Obliviate