Oops,guess from that edit I must have been gouching out and done exactly that. I hate it when I'm typing on (especially laptop) keyboards and either nod off to produce the 'catwalk effect' (when a animal being a member of the order Felidae kept in a domesticated context decides to be a naughty little beggar and daintily pad about on your keyboard)
Or for some reason, opioids often seem to cause slight myoclonus (why is this? other people get this?)
Twitching fingers, fingertips and feet, ankles, wrist mostly, and it often causes me to, whilst not nodding, but fairly well developed influence of the MOR agonist, to repeatedly press a key, have to remove the character then redo both, often several times.
Other than memantine and rimantadine, amantadine anyone know of otherl, similarly low-trapping antagonists? is there a profile available for common NMDA antagonists used either recreationally, medically, in research or a combination of these settings, of their channel residence times? to get some idea and compare side by side rather than have to dig through all the lit manually and dissect each paper bit by bit until finding something relevant, then table it all up?
Memantine, cotcha, if I understand things right, has some similarities to magnesium, in that it gets booted out on glutamate binding quite easily, being a low trapping, low-medium affinity uncomepetitive antagonist, binds harder than magnesium but not massively so, so it can leave the normal function of glutamatergic synaptic activity umolested, whilst blocking excessive calcium currents that would otherwies cause excitotoxicity. As being an uncompetitive antagonist it needs activation by glutamate/aspartate to bind the orthosteric site before memantine can uncompetitively bind its allosteric site on the NMDAr. So, blocking Ca++current production in excess more than it produces blockade of regular, NMDAr-dependent LTP.
Are there any voltage-dependent high-trapping uncompetitive or noncompetitive antagonists available for NMDARs?