We all know about possible DA/5-HT axon terminal damage with these drugs, but this review basically says they cause cell death all over the place?
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1749-6632.2009.05141.x/full#ss3 (free full text)
As a layman, I have no idea how relevant this is to human use. Haven't sifted through the references, but I hope this kind of gross damage happens only with ridiculous doses given to mice and rats...
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1749-6632.2009.05141.x/full#ss3 (free full text)
Recent studies indicate that the damage produced by these drugs may be more widespread than originally believed.
In addition, METH, MDMA and d-amphetamine damage a population of nonmonoaminergic neurons and their processes in rat parietal cortex (somatosensory cortex). In mice, high-dose METH leads to cell death in a variety of brain areas including the striatum, cortex (frontal, parietal, and piriform), indusium griseum, medial habenular nucleus, hippocampus, tenia tecta, and fasciola cinerea. More recently, a low dose of METH has been shown to damage cell bodies in rat prefrontal cortex of behaviorally sensitized rats, whereas an escalating binge dose of METH damages pyramidal neurons in the frontal cortex, CA3 and dentate gyrus regions of the hippocampus, and calbindin interneurons of the striatum. Finally, there are several more recent reports of amphetamine toxicity to DA-containing neurons and their terminals in mouse olfactory bulb and rat retina.
Studies of mechanisms underlying METH toxicity to neuronal cell bodies are relatively recent and indicate that an early event in METH toxicity to nonmonoaminergic striatal and somatosensory cortical neurons might be a release of GLU that initiates a chain of events culminating in apoptosis.
As a layman, I have no idea how relevant this is to human use. Haven't sifted through the references, but I hope this kind of gross damage happens only with ridiculous doses given to mice and rats...
