Nagelfar
Bluelight Crew
S & R enantiomers of dissociative anaesthetics (NMDA antagonists) & opioids question.
First is first, the point where these questions touch in this topic would be DXM/DXO and the morphinans, but my initial question is about ketamine in-fact.
How is esketamine in comparison to ketamine, and is regular "ketamine" both the R & the S enantiomer with only the S being active? If so does the R enantiomer have any activity whatsoever? (My latter link should be expounded upon at that link to help elaborate the distinction and what is important about it as the latter link is on that difference specifically and "special K" ketamine is a rather widely known substance as a recreational drug) I know one being the active purposed oriented molecule for the effect is the case with SSRI Celexa/Citalopram with Lexapro/Escitalopram being the only one which is in-fact a SSRI.
The second question is I know the other kind of chirality; d- & l-, marks the difference between DXM style NMDA receptor antagonists and opiate style mu receptor agonists (with additional structural differences here or there otherwise but the bulk of the structure changing between those two sets of activity on the dextro- & levo- rotatory isomers of one another....) Well does the chirality of the R & S enantiomers of morphinan opioids change the activity of the morphinan affect on the mu receptors? Is only one active? Does, for example, the morphine molecule proper that grows on the opium poppy crop up both R & S or just one or the other? And if one were isolated would it be more effective or the alternate one made from scratch artificially, if non-extant in nature, have any ulterior effect?
First is first, the point where these questions touch in this topic would be DXM/DXO and the morphinans, but my initial question is about ketamine in-fact.
How is esketamine in comparison to ketamine, and is regular "ketamine" both the R & the S enantiomer with only the S being active? If so does the R enantiomer have any activity whatsoever? (My latter link should be expounded upon at that link to help elaborate the distinction and what is important about it as the latter link is on that difference specifically and "special K" ketamine is a rather widely known substance as a recreational drug) I know one being the active purposed oriented molecule for the effect is the case with SSRI Celexa/Citalopram with Lexapro/Escitalopram being the only one which is in-fact a SSRI.
The second question is I know the other kind of chirality; d- & l-, marks the difference between DXM style NMDA receptor antagonists and opiate style mu receptor agonists (with additional structural differences here or there otherwise but the bulk of the structure changing between those two sets of activity on the dextro- & levo- rotatory isomers of one another....) Well does the chirality of the R & S enantiomers of morphinan opioids change the activity of the morphinan affect on the mu receptors? Is only one active? Does, for example, the morphine molecule proper that grows on the opium poppy crop up both R & S or just one or the other? And if one were isolated would it be more effective or the alternate one made from scratch artificially, if non-extant in nature, have any ulterior effect?
