atara
Bluelighter
Looking at the structure of phenibut, it occurred to me that it should be rather prone to decarboxylation, by analogy with beta-keto carboxylic acids (at least, the way I heard it, an electron-withdrawing substituent on the beta position promotes decarboxylation). Phenyls are less electron-withdrawing than ketones, but it doesn't seem like too much of a stretch to me.
Where this gets interesting is that the decarboxylation leaves you with beta-methylphenethylamine, and there's been a decent amount of speculation as to whether that actually presents any activity. Is it possible that bMPEA is an active metabolite (in particular, could it be responsible for the dopaminergic effects)?
Where this gets interesting is that the decarboxylation leaves you with beta-methylphenethylamine, and there's been a decent amount of speculation as to whether that actually presents any activity. Is it possible that bMPEA is an active metabolite (in particular, could it be responsible for the dopaminergic effects)?
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