Illuminateur
Bluelighter
- Joined
- Nov 2, 2009
- Messages
- 62
Cocaine is a DA reuptake inhibitor, it does not release DA.
There are some
I was under the impression that it did both. So if it inhibited Dopamine reuptake, wouldn't that increase synaptic DA and neurotoxicity(from that source)? Would the depletion of dopamine or the increase have more effect? since I was thinking of timing the "crash" comedown of the coke with the comedown of the mdma, I would assume that the net effect during the relevant time period would be DA depletion.
As for the downregulation, as far as my limited knowledge goes(someone who knows feel free to correct me), DA recovery is much faster than 5HT, however over DA-stimulation can cause permanent receptor neuron death unlike 5HT overstimulation which causes prolonged downregulation. Anyone know any better?
I was going to ask if neurotoxicity was glutamate excitotoxicity regulated, would ketamine help regulate that as an NMDA antagonist, or on a more nootropic note, L-Theanine? Then I saw...
From that article as well:
Glutamate Does Not Appear to Play a Major Role in MDMA neurotoxicity
Excitatory amino acids such as glutamate have well-established potential to damage neurons (Choi 1992; Olney 1994). A role for glutamate in MDMA neurotoxicity was suggested by a report that the N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) antagonist, dextrorphan, inhibited MDMA-induced 5HT depletions in the rat striatum (Finnegan et al. 1990). Subsequent studies employing other NMDA antagonists, such as dizocilpine (also called MK-801), have not supported this conclusion. Although it is neuroprotective, dizocilpine appears to protect against MDMA neurotoxicity through a thermoregulatory mechanism (Farfel and Seiden 1995). Glutamate antagonists that do not block MDMA-induced hyperthermia are not neuroprotective (Colado et al. 1998; Farfel and Seiden 1995). As further evidence against a role for glutamate in MDMA neurotoxicity, Nash and Yamamoto (1992) reported that a neurotoxic MDMA regimen had no effect on acute glutamate efflux in the striatum of rats. Finally, excitotoxicity does not usually
produce selective axon loss. Thus, there currently appears to be no strong evidence that glutamate plays in role in the mechanism of MDMA neurotoxicity.
So uh... anyone know ketamine's thermal effect?
Then I saw this:
7. It is concluded that ketamine produces hypothermia in rats possibly through the release of 5-hydroxytryptamine in the hypothalamus and that this effect is similar in some respects to that produced by morphine in non-tolerant rats.
From http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1776151/
