specialspack
Bluelighter
Seems wildly wrong:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ketamine
Ref - Hirota, K; Lambert, DG (1996 Oct). "Ketamine: its mechanism(s) of action and unusual clinical uses". British journal of anaesthesia 77 (4): 441–4. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19546251
I looked at this paper and it states the Ki values above without obvious reference or any experimental data. Given that S-ketamine is widely regarded by just about every other source as several times more potent in effects, and equally having an affinity for the NMDA receptor several times that of R-ketamine, this seems like a strange anomaly? Any reason why I'm wrong?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ketamine
The S(+) and R(-) stereoisomers bind with different affinities: Ki = 3200 and 1100 nM, respectively
Ref - Hirota, K; Lambert, DG (1996 Oct). "Ketamine: its mechanism(s) of action and unusual clinical uses". British journal of anaesthesia 77 (4): 441–4. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19546251
I looked at this paper and it states the Ki values above without obvious reference or any experimental data. Given that S-ketamine is widely regarded by just about every other source as several times more potent in effects, and equally having an affinity for the NMDA receptor several times that of R-ketamine, this seems like a strange anomaly? Any reason why I'm wrong?
