thecookiemonster
Greenlighter
- Joined
- Dec 13, 2009
- Messages
- 6
In light of the use of ergot-derived dopamine agonists for the treatment of Parkinson's allegedly causing adverse cardiac effects, has anyone attempted to do any experiments with LSD? Most of the papers I've read have observed these adverse cardiac effects after treatment with anywhere from 1mg - 5mg DAILY of cabergoline or pergolide (or what seems like a rather massive dose -- 20mg daily of bromocryptine for 5 YEARS).
LSD is a 5HT-2a agonist (among others), correct? Furthermore, with an active dose at the microgram level, chances are these cardiac effects will be ameliorated. Say you gave 25 µg/day...that's probably sub-psychedelic threshold for most people, but it is 40x less than the SMALLEST dose (1mg) of the other drugs that are currently being used.
Anyway, I'm just curious if anybody's ever heard of this being done. It seems like it'd be pretty easy to just get a bunch of mice, some MPTP, treat with low-dose LSD and then take a look at the usual biochemical findings / alpha-synuclein, substantia nigra composition, etc.
There is the issue of tolerance, since recreational LSD users notice that the effects of LSD are diminished if you don't wait a few days in between. However, subthreshold dosing might ameliorate this effect -- if you do, say, 1/4 of the normal dose and the average refractory period is 4 to 5 days, it might not cause excessive serotonin depletion. Maybe supplementation with low-dose 5-HTP could help.
This has the added advantage of the VERY low cost of production of LSD (of course by a legitimate pharmaceutical company). Again, a 25µg dose would cost something like 40x less than the 1mg of bromocryptine.
I'm just a college student at the moment, so I don't have the resources to test any of this out, but I hopefully will in 10 years or so (I'm going for a MD/PhD in neuroscience / psychiatry). Any thoughts on this would be interesting. I couldn't find any studies that had tried this, but I might have overlooked them. Also, I don't mean to be pretentious having my first post in the "Advanced Drug Discussion" forum...I'm young and still learning, so please don't think that I'm trying to be a know-it-all or anything. I'm excited though to find this forum and I hope that I can learn a lot from all of you--you seem like really, really intelligent people.
LSD is a 5HT-2a agonist (among others), correct? Furthermore, with an active dose at the microgram level, chances are these cardiac effects will be ameliorated. Say you gave 25 µg/day...that's probably sub-psychedelic threshold for most people, but it is 40x less than the SMALLEST dose (1mg) of the other drugs that are currently being used.
Anyway, I'm just curious if anybody's ever heard of this being done. It seems like it'd be pretty easy to just get a bunch of mice, some MPTP, treat with low-dose LSD and then take a look at the usual biochemical findings / alpha-synuclein, substantia nigra composition, etc.
There is the issue of tolerance, since recreational LSD users notice that the effects of LSD are diminished if you don't wait a few days in between. However, subthreshold dosing might ameliorate this effect -- if you do, say, 1/4 of the normal dose and the average refractory period is 4 to 5 days, it might not cause excessive serotonin depletion. Maybe supplementation with low-dose 5-HTP could help.
This has the added advantage of the VERY low cost of production of LSD (of course by a legitimate pharmaceutical company). Again, a 25µg dose would cost something like 40x less than the 1mg of bromocryptine.
I'm just a college student at the moment, so I don't have the resources to test any of this out, but I hopefully will in 10 years or so (I'm going for a MD/PhD in neuroscience / psychiatry). Any thoughts on this would be interesting. I couldn't find any studies that had tried this, but I might have overlooked them. Also, I don't mean to be pretentious having my first post in the "Advanced Drug Discussion" forum...I'm young and still learning, so please don't think that I'm trying to be a know-it-all or anything. I'm excited though to find this forum and I hope that I can learn a lot from all of you--you seem like really, really intelligent people.