Porn star Kylie Page was drug addict since teenage but gave rehab a genuine try, recently celebrated...

Kylie Page was found dead at her apartment | X

Adult film actress Kylie Page, who was found dead in her Hollywood apartment on 25th June, started taking drugs in adolescence, family sources told a media outlet. She came from a family with a history of substance abuse and was well aware of its consequences.

 

However, the adult film actress had taken steps to break free from her addiction and had celebrated sixty days of sobriety only a few days before her demise, a report said. Twenty-eight-year-old Page died due to a drug overdose, the police department had said, after recovering fentanyl and drug paraphernalia from her room.

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It was not immediately known when she started using again, despite managing to stay clean for sixty days. Kylie Page had lost two uncles to addiction, TMZ said in a report. A few years ago, the Oklahoma native decided to try rehab for the first time. She switched to a sober apartment in Hollywood, and a change in environment along with the rehab service brought positive changes to her life recently, TMZ quoted a family member of the late porn star as saying.

 

She was extremely proud of managing to stay sober for two months and thus celebrated the sixty-day milestone. She was not only attending Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) but even led some meetings, the report said. It was not immediately known how she returned to substance use despite managing to make good progress.

 

Kylie Page's mother, Aimee, told TMZ that she spoke to her late daughter a day before her death. She was apparently shopping at Target with a female friend and sounded "cheerful, but a little tired."

 

It was a week after her passing that reports confirmed law enforcement stating that Page, who had featured in the Netflix miniseries on the porn industry, 'Hot Girls Wanted: Turned On', died of an overdose. Fentanyl, a synthetic opioid often used to relieve pain in cancer patients, is said to be about 50 to 100 times more potent than morphine. Addicts often turn to fentanyl when regular doses of heroin or oxycodone no longer provide the desired high.

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