Nagelfar
Bluelight Crew
According to Wikipedia:
OK, so are there drugs which function in the NMDA antagonist capacity of inhalants, as mentioned above, but are not so simple of, or water insoluble type of, molecules? For example, something that could be mainlined in a manner similar to ketamine? It seems as if it would be a much more potent dissociative if so, and not include the possibility of complications related to hypoxia.
Anesthetic gases used for surgery, such as nitrous oxide or enflurane, are believed to induce anesthesia primarily by acting as NMDA receptor antagonists, open channel blockers that bind to the inside of the calcium channels on the outer surface of the neuron, and provide high levels of NMDA receptor blockade for a short period of time.
This makes inhaled anesthetic gases different from other NMDA antagonists, such as ketamine, which bind to a regulatory site on the NMDA-sensitive calcium transporter complex and provide slightly lower levels of NMDA blockade, but for a longer and much more predictable duration. This makes a deeper level of anesthesia achievable more easily using anesthetic gases but can also make them more dangerous than other drugs used for this purpose.
OK, so are there drugs which function in the NMDA antagonist capacity of inhalants, as mentioned above, but are not so simple of, or water insoluble type of, molecules? For example, something that could be mainlined in a manner similar to ketamine? It seems as if it would be a much more potent dissociative if so, and not include the possibility of complications related to hypoxia.
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