nuke
Bluelighter
- Joined
- Nov 7, 2004
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Or alpha-allyl-phenethylamine, a drug that was investigated as an antidepressant but discarded by the industry (who reported it as being like tricyclic antidepressants). It appears to be a sedative of some sort.
The synthesis is really trivial stuff and it's not controlled in any way. Does anyone have any more information?
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0041-008X(72)90150-0Pharmacologic evaluation of aletamine (α-allylphenethylamine hydrochloride) as an antidepressant
John T. Hitchens1, Raymond Orzechowski2, Sidney Goldstein3 and Irving Shemano3
The National Drug Company Research Laboratories, Division of Richardson-Merrell Inc., Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19144, USA
Received 18 January 1971. Available online 27 September 2004.
The pharmacologic activity profile of aletamine closely resembles that of the tricyclic antidepressants imipramine and amitriptyline. Effects shared are antagonism of RO4-1284-induced ptosis and depressed exploratory behavior, depression of spontaneous motor activity, prolongation of hexobarbital hypnosis and anticonvulsant action in mice, hypotension and potentiation of norepinephrine pressor effects in dogs, antimuricidal effects, hypothermia in rats and local anesthesia in rabbits and guinea pigs. Aletamine differed from imipramine and amitriptyline as follows: (1) aletamine exerted no apparent central or peripheral anticholinergic effect as suggested by lack of influence on tremorine-induced tremors or salivation; (2) although aletamine was less potent on a milligram basis than imipramine and amitriptyline in preventing RO4-1284 depression, aletamine was more potent than imipramine in counteracting existing reserpine depression (ptosis, depressed exploratory behavior) in mice. Amitriptyline was inactive against reserpine depression. The pharmacologic effects of aletamine differ in several respects from those of d-amphetamine. The effects of aletamine on spontaneous motor activity, hexobarbital hypnosis and body temperature in rodents and on blood pressure in dogs are in opposite direction to those of amphetamine. In further contrast to amphetamine, grouping of mice has no influence on the toxicity of aletamine. Aletamine does not appear to be an inhibitor of monoamine oxidase in vivo since it does not enhance tryptamine-induced convulsions in rats. On an empirical basis, the results indicate that aletamine has pharmacologic properties consistent with potential clinical utility as an antidepressant drug.
The synthesis is really trivial stuff and it's not controlled in any way. Does anyone have any more information?
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