Jabberwocky
Frumious Bandersnatch
So, I've read dozens of scientific papers on all aspects of amphetamine and remain confused about one very simple thing related to smoking: when and where does smoked crystalised methamphetamine hydrochloride convert to pure methamphetamine and when does it further metabolise into amphetamine.
You'd think this would be a basic answer evident in a grad paper on meth metabolisation. However I have noticed that almost every paper on smoked meth uses the terms METHAMPHETMINE HYDROCHLORIDE (METH-HCL - formula C10H16ClN) and METHAMPHETAMINE (METH - formula C10H15N) interchangeably even when it seems highly likely they are talking about METH-HCL at one point (for example what is in the pipe) but pure METH at another point (for example when they are talking about blood plasma levels or bioavailability).
My understanding is that people people put the crystaline form of METH-HCL (i.e. C10H16ClN) their pipe and heat it until it liquidises and undergoes a phase change becoming METH-HCL vapor. METH-HCL is not broken down when it is vaporised although it does decompose when it is overheated and burnt. I was mistaken about this for a long time and believed that what you sucked in was pure METH (i.e. C10H15N) converted from METH-HCL (i.e. C10H16ClN).
Now, in the lungs the molecule METH-HCL enters the blood (or does it change at this point?) and begins it's journey to the brain. At this point the literature invariable refers to the effects of METH and no longer makes any reference to METH-HCL. But nowhere does it explain if, when, or how the inhaled METH-HCL might have been converted to METH. It just says "METH" does this or that in the brain. Then it jumps another mysterious gap and starts talking about the metabolisation of "METH" in the liver and how X% excretes unchanged and at a rate depending on Ph of your system.
For the life of me I can't work out from any of these papers if it is C10H16ClN having psychoactive effects in the brain and whether it is C10H16ClN being excreted unchanged. However it is very clear that C10H16ClN does change at some point because smoking meth leads to the production of various metabolites including mainly Amphetamine (presumedly as C9H13N) and 4-hydroxymethamphetamine (C9H13NO).
Anybody who can clarify the if, when, and how of conversion of METH HCL to METH and in which form it has it's psychoactive effects and is excreted in a simple way will know more than almost 100 % of scientists writing about meth.
You'd think this would be a basic answer evident in a grad paper on meth metabolisation. However I have noticed that almost every paper on smoked meth uses the terms METHAMPHETMINE HYDROCHLORIDE (METH-HCL - formula C10H16ClN) and METHAMPHETAMINE (METH - formula C10H15N) interchangeably even when it seems highly likely they are talking about METH-HCL at one point (for example what is in the pipe) but pure METH at another point (for example when they are talking about blood plasma levels or bioavailability).
My understanding is that people people put the crystaline form of METH-HCL (i.e. C10H16ClN) their pipe and heat it until it liquidises and undergoes a phase change becoming METH-HCL vapor. METH-HCL is not broken down when it is vaporised although it does decompose when it is overheated and burnt. I was mistaken about this for a long time and believed that what you sucked in was pure METH (i.e. C10H15N) converted from METH-HCL (i.e. C10H16ClN).
Now, in the lungs the molecule METH-HCL enters the blood (or does it change at this point?) and begins it's journey to the brain. At this point the literature invariable refers to the effects of METH and no longer makes any reference to METH-HCL. But nowhere does it explain if, when, or how the inhaled METH-HCL might have been converted to METH. It just says "METH" does this or that in the brain. Then it jumps another mysterious gap and starts talking about the metabolisation of "METH" in the liver and how X% excretes unchanged and at a rate depending on Ph of your system.
For the life of me I can't work out from any of these papers if it is C10H16ClN having psychoactive effects in the brain and whether it is C10H16ClN being excreted unchanged. However it is very clear that C10H16ClN does change at some point because smoking meth leads to the production of various metabolites including mainly Amphetamine (presumedly as C9H13N) and 4-hydroxymethamphetamine (C9H13NO).
Anybody who can clarify the if, when, and how of conversion of METH HCL to METH and in which form it has it's psychoactive effects and is excreted in a simple way will know more than almost 100 % of scientists writing about meth.