Michael Jackson was probably addicted to a painkiller given by a dermatologist treating the star with botox in the months before his death, a medical expert has testified.
One of the symptoms of withdrawing from the painkiller, Demerol, was insomnia - the problem Jackson was being treated for when he died in 2009, the expert said at the manslaughter trial of the star's doctor, Conrad Murray, on Thursday.
"My opinion is that ... he was probably addicted to opioids," addiction specialist Robert Waldman said, adding that his assessment was based on medical records and other evidence presented about Jackson.
He was called to testify by Murray's lawyers, who presented medical records subpoenaed from the office of Arnold Klein, a Beverly Hills dermatologist who Jackson saw several times a week before his June 2009 death.
The records showed Jackson being treated with increasing doses of Demerol at sessions from April to June that year, to ease pain when he was being given Botox and other similar wrinkle-busting injections.