4DQSAR
Bluelighter
- Joined
- Feb 3, 2025
- Messages
- 5,447
See you almost get it yet you dont. You think more dopamine selective = more euphoric.
No - I don't like ANY stimulants as I posted earlier. So of course 'I don't get it', but this thread is devoted to selective dopamine transport ligands. Not to any one person's subjective response.
My position is purely data led. I have located and provided the data. LOTS of data. LOTS and LOTs and LOTs of data.
I KNOW how much ethylphenidate we sold and I provided a HEAP of references to back up my position. Confirmation bias is natural and human, but be aware of it and account for it.
You said it was fine to disagree as YMMV... so why argue? If you prefer less selective ligands, fine. We are all entitled to hold an opinion. But it IS an opinion.
If you have a human study, I would love to read it as there more data is always a good thing. in vitro studies are shaky at best and even rodent models can perform very poorly. There is a term used by those who employ rodent models - ratatonia.
The reason being that a whole range of ligands from stimulants to opioids to anxiolytics to I do know what; but for whatever reasons, rodents just become catatonic so how does one test the subjective activity of a high dose of a stimulant using rodents if all they do is to freeze?
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