ethacetin
Greenlighter
- Joined
- Dec 26, 2009
- Messages
- 18
Hi, I was wondering if anyone knew if Amanita Muscaria and NMDA antagonists were contraindicated in any way.
And I had this idea .. I believe this Wikipedia quote sums up the current ideas on the pharmacology of Amanitas pretty well:
"Ibotenic acid and muscimol are structurally related to each other and to two major neurotransmitters of the central nervous system: glutamic acid and GABA respectively. Ibotenic acid and muscimol act like these neurotransmitters, muscimol being a potent GABA-A agonist, while ibotenic acid is an agonist of NMDA glutamate receptors and certain metabotropic glutamate receptors which are involved in the control of neuronal activity. It is these interactions which are thought to cause the psychoactive effects found in intoxication. Muscimol is the agent responsible for the majority of the psychoactivity."
One of the major reasons for boiling/baking/pickling/recycling urine is to decarboxylate the ibotenic acid into muscimol, because NMDA *agonists* are neurotoxic & not fun, and muscimol is thought to be where the magick happens
Also, Amanita trips are said to occur in 3 stages .. first one begins salivating everywhere and gets all nauseous, disoriented and fucked up, maybe just sick and unpleasant and not even tripping .. then the somnolence stage where one becomes drowsy and often falls asleep .. and then one comes to and begins tripping. It almost sounds as if the first stage is primarily caused by the effects of the ibotenic acid, the second stage might be the body breaking down and excreting the ibotenic acid, and the third stage the effects of pure muscimol? Maybe?
Anyway, my theory is that if a lot of the negative effects of Amanitas are caused by NMDA *agonist* activity .. then perhaps one could use an NMDA *antagonist* (such as ketamine perhaps?) to neutralize or eliminate these unpleasant effects?
Does neurochemistry work that way, or would this just cause a bad reaction? The more I've read about the subject, the doesn't seem to be any set trend as far as mixing agonists and antagonists of the same receptor - in some cases they cancel one another out and nothing happens, in other cases one is stronger than they other, or it produces a bad reaction..or sometimes they synergize well and cause a really good reaction....
I mean, I should also point out that this is quite a bizarre combination and should really not be attempted by anyone unless they're fully aware of what they're getting themselves into and have experience with both substances & psychonautical voyaging in general .. I know it's probably going to be batshit insane but that's kind of why I'm curious about it .. what I'm most concerned about is if anyone knows if it's physically safe to mix these two substances (or about mixing NMDA antagonists and GABAergics in general)
And I had this idea .. I believe this Wikipedia quote sums up the current ideas on the pharmacology of Amanitas pretty well:
"Ibotenic acid and muscimol are structurally related to each other and to two major neurotransmitters of the central nervous system: glutamic acid and GABA respectively. Ibotenic acid and muscimol act like these neurotransmitters, muscimol being a potent GABA-A agonist, while ibotenic acid is an agonist of NMDA glutamate receptors and certain metabotropic glutamate receptors which are involved in the control of neuronal activity. It is these interactions which are thought to cause the psychoactive effects found in intoxication. Muscimol is the agent responsible for the majority of the psychoactivity."
One of the major reasons for boiling/baking/pickling/recycling urine is to decarboxylate the ibotenic acid into muscimol, because NMDA *agonists* are neurotoxic & not fun, and muscimol is thought to be where the magick happens
Also, Amanita trips are said to occur in 3 stages .. first one begins salivating everywhere and gets all nauseous, disoriented and fucked up, maybe just sick and unpleasant and not even tripping .. then the somnolence stage where one becomes drowsy and often falls asleep .. and then one comes to and begins tripping. It almost sounds as if the first stage is primarily caused by the effects of the ibotenic acid, the second stage might be the body breaking down and excreting the ibotenic acid, and the third stage the effects of pure muscimol? Maybe?
Anyway, my theory is that if a lot of the negative effects of Amanitas are caused by NMDA *agonist* activity .. then perhaps one could use an NMDA *antagonist* (such as ketamine perhaps?) to neutralize or eliminate these unpleasant effects?
Does neurochemistry work that way, or would this just cause a bad reaction? The more I've read about the subject, the doesn't seem to be any set trend as far as mixing agonists and antagonists of the same receptor - in some cases they cancel one another out and nothing happens, in other cases one is stronger than they other, or it produces a bad reaction..or sometimes they synergize well and cause a really good reaction....
I mean, I should also point out that this is quite a bizarre combination and should really not be attempted by anyone unless they're fully aware of what they're getting themselves into and have experience with both substances & psychonautical voyaging in general .. I know it's probably going to be batshit insane but that's kind of why I'm curious about it .. what I'm most concerned about is if anyone knows if it's physically safe to mix these two substances (or about mixing NMDA antagonists and GABAergics in general)

