I came across this article and thought it was pretty interesting.
http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fnsys.2014.00038/full
Basically explains how psychostimulants like methylphenidate, and amphetamine alter glutamate function, and may impair behavioral flexibility.
Healthy individuals run the risk of pushing themselves beyond optimal levels into hyperdopaminergic and hypernoradrenergic states, basically destroying the very behaviors they are striving to improve.
At optimal doses, dopamine binds to higher-affinity D1-like receptors, and norepinephrine binds to α2 receptors, leading to an increase in prefrontal cortical signal-to-noise ratio and enhancing the flow of information and strengthening neuronal communication.
When the levels of dopamine and norepinephrine rise beyond the optimal levels, they begin to activate dopamine D2-class receptors and noradrenergic α1 and β receptors, which leads to weakening of the signal-to-noise ratio via activation of neurons that may not be involved in the current
I have heard of people who take amphetamine/dex (adderall) with a very small dose of methylphenidate (ritalin) Because the ritalin is neuroprotective towards the amphetamine. Yeah, you are not going to get any euphoria, or recreation out of the Ritalin, it is primarily taken to protect the brain from amphetamines neurotoxicity.
Amphetamine competes with dopamine for a common binding site on the striatal Dopamine transporter So, both empirical calculation and experimental evidence may support the assumption that Methylphenidate, at least at low concentrations, may be actively transported by the DAT into dopaminergic neurons which may support the first possible mechanism of methylphenidate neuroprotection. These neuroprotective effects of Methylphenidate may be due, at least in part, to its ability to attenuate or prevent abnormal cytoplasmic dopamine accumulation in dopaminergic neurons by modulating the activity of the DAT and the VMAT-2 through several neuropharmacological mechanisms.
But good luck trying to talk a doctor into prescribing anyone a small dose of methylphenidate (Ritalin) with adderall/dex
http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fnsys.2014.00038/full
Basically explains how psychostimulants like methylphenidate, and amphetamine alter glutamate function, and may impair behavioral flexibility.
Healthy individuals run the risk of pushing themselves beyond optimal levels into hyperdopaminergic and hypernoradrenergic states, basically destroying the very behaviors they are striving to improve.
At optimal doses, dopamine binds to higher-affinity D1-like receptors, and norepinephrine binds to α2 receptors, leading to an increase in prefrontal cortical signal-to-noise ratio and enhancing the flow of information and strengthening neuronal communication.
When the levels of dopamine and norepinephrine rise beyond the optimal levels, they begin to activate dopamine D2-class receptors and noradrenergic α1 and β receptors, which leads to weakening of the signal-to-noise ratio via activation of neurons that may not be involved in the current
I have heard of people who take amphetamine/dex (adderall) with a very small dose of methylphenidate (ritalin) Because the ritalin is neuroprotective towards the amphetamine. Yeah, you are not going to get any euphoria, or recreation out of the Ritalin, it is primarily taken to protect the brain from amphetamines neurotoxicity.
Amphetamine competes with dopamine for a common binding site on the striatal Dopamine transporter So, both empirical calculation and experimental evidence may support the assumption that Methylphenidate, at least at low concentrations, may be actively transported by the DAT into dopaminergic neurons which may support the first possible mechanism of methylphenidate neuroprotection. These neuroprotective effects of Methylphenidate may be due, at least in part, to its ability to attenuate or prevent abnormal cytoplasmic dopamine accumulation in dopaminergic neurons by modulating the activity of the DAT and the VMAT-2 through several neuropharmacological mechanisms.
But good luck trying to talk a doctor into prescribing anyone a small dose of methylphenidate (Ritalin) with adderall/dex