The potential for causing beneficial drug interactions via the cytochrome P450 (CYP) system is pretty well-trod territory. For the few recreational drugs that can be potentiated this way, you can basically do a quick search on PubMed or find a book in a medical library that will tell you what you need to know. The ones you can pull off with OTC substances are especially well-known. The CYP system is only one set of enzymes that are important in drug metabolism, however. A lot of drugs are activated or inactivated by conjugation with glucuronic acid by an entirely different system of enzymes called UGTs. It seems that the scientific community is just now exploring this system in detail. In my humble opinion, there is a lot of potential here for potentiating recreational drugs. If you could figure out how to inhibit UGT1A3 and UGT2B7, for instance, you could block the metabolism of hydromorphone. If you could selectively block UGT1A3, which makes the undesirable metabolite of morphine, you could possibly enhance morphine quite a bit. Preventing the glucuronidation of morphine could also potentially significantly elevate the amount of bioavailable morphine that's produced from a dose of codeine. This approach to enhancing codeine is a lot more promising than anything you can do with CYPs alone, IMHO.
Here is an interesting article on UGTs and opioids: http://psy.psychiatryonline.org/cgi/content/full/44/2/167
There are other enzymes that are important in metabolizing recreational drugs. Cocaine is metabolized primarily by butyrylcholinesterase (BChE). The wide distribution of BChE in the body is apparently the reason cocaine has such a short half-life. A couple of alzheimers drugs do a good job of inhibiting BChE, but at the cost of being prescription-only and also inhibiting AChE. AChE inhibition in the brain could theoretically increase the risk of seizure, which is not what you want with cocaine. However, there are specific BChE inhibitors, and ones that don't cross the BBB. There is a good chance that some are cheap, safe, and OTC.
Here is an interesting article on UGTs and opioids: http://psy.psychiatryonline.org/cgi/content/full/44/2/167
There are other enzymes that are important in metabolizing recreational drugs. Cocaine is metabolized primarily by butyrylcholinesterase (BChE). The wide distribution of BChE in the body is apparently the reason cocaine has such a short half-life. A couple of alzheimers drugs do a good job of inhibiting BChE, but at the cost of being prescription-only and also inhibiting AChE. AChE inhibition in the brain could theoretically increase the risk of seizure, which is not what you want with cocaine. However, there are specific BChE inhibitors, and ones that don't cross the BBB. There is a good chance that some are cheap, safe, and OTC.
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