Shaquille O’Neal addresses painkiller abuse, fragile kidneys
Shaquille OβNeal was never suspended for drug use of any kind during his decorated 19-year NBA career. The rugged 7-foot-1, 325-pound Hall of Fame center freely acknowledged playing through pain and openly worried about damage to his kidneys and liver from his prolonged use of legal anti-inflammatory medications.
He also recently recounted on βInside the NBAβ a bizarre story about testing positive for cocaine ahead of the 1996 Olympics. The result was thrown out β and never publicized β because OβNeal told officials heβd eaten a poppy seed muffin shortly before the test.
Never mind that while poppy seeds can trigger a false positive test for opioids such as morphine or codeine, they canβt do the same for cocaine, which is identified in drug tests by the presence of its major metabolite, benzoylecgonine.
So in his recounting of an episode from nearly 30 years ago, OβNeal was wrong either about the illegal substance for which he tested positive or about what he ingested that caused the false positive. Perhaps he just meant to say codeine rather than cocaine.
Point being, recollections can be fuzzy, and OβNeal isnβt immune to such fuzziness, something to keep in mind when listening to the four-time NBA champion βfess up to his use of painkillers on this weekβs βArmchair Expert With Dax Shepardβ podcast.
OβNeal toggled between referring to opioid painkillers such as oxycodone and powerful, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatories such as Indocin. He said he used opioids when recovering from injuries and took NSAIDs throughout his career.
But he also said his doctor told him he was addicted to painkillers, leading to βa heated discussion.β OβNeal didnβt feel high, he said, even when he would take more than the prescribed dose. βI would do homeboy math,β he said. βIf it said take one, Iβm taking three.β
βIt was a club sandwich, fries and two pills for 19 years.β
OβNeal first discussed painkillers during his four-part HBO documentary βShaq,β which premiered in 2022, and on the podcast Shepard mostly asked him to expand on what heβd said then about the potential damage to internal organs, the warnings from doctors and his current regrets.
In the documentary, OβNeal had this to say: βSometimes I couldnβt play if I didnβt take it. All it did was mask the pain…. Had a lot of painkillers. I got limited kidney stuff now going on. I donβt have the full range, but I took so many painkillers that [doctors are] saying, βHey, man, we donβt need you taking that stuff now. You got to be careful.β
βMy kidneys are kind of just chilling out right now,β he continued. βI donβt want to flare βem back up.β
Both opioids and NSAIDs can cause kidney and liver damage, and OβNeal didnβt specify on the podcast which substances caused him the most concern. He said he struggled with accepting that he might have an addiction, eventually concluding, βI had to have them. So, is that addiction?β
And he hid the use of painkillers from his wife and kids, although he said βthe trainers knew.β
As far back as 2000 β a year when OβNeal was the NBAβs most valuable player and led the Lakers to the first of three consecutive championships β he expressed concern about the dangers of anti-inflammatories.
OβNeal suspected that the kidney disease that threatened the life of fellow NBA star Alonzo Mourning might be the result of anti-inflammatories and said he would stop taking them.
Two years later, however, OβNeal had resumed NSAID use. After a stomach ailment he originally believed was an ulcer, diagnostic tests were done on his kidneys and liver.
He described the results to The Times thusly: βIβm not great, but Iβm cool.β
OβNeal was playing with a badly aching arthritic big toe, a sprained wrist and a handful of unlisted bangs and bruises. He needed the pills, although it was unclear whether he was referring to painkillers, anti-inflammatories or both.
βI tried to stay off of them, but if I donβt take them I canβt move or play,β he said in 2002. βI was taking them. When my stomach was giving me problems I had to get the test.β
OβNeal has long championed nonprescription means of addressing pain. Heβs been the spokesperson for the topical analgesic Icy Hot since 2003 and he spoke on Capitol Hill in 2016, plugging efforts to give police better tools to recognize when drivers are under the influence of drugs. He pledged two years of funding for officers to become drug recognition experts.
OβNealβs comments on Shepardβs podcast are a clear indication that his use of painkillers and NSAIDs continues to weigh heavily on his mind. He added that these days he relaxes with a different vice: a hookah.
βIβve never been into weed,β he said. βHookah, it enables me to follow the routine of sit your ass down.β