N&PD Moderators: Skorpio | someguyontheinternet
Does anyone know how mephedrone works in the body? Like the actual chemistry of it.
Psychopharmacology (Berl). 1998 Nov;140(2):191-201.
Subjective, psychomotor, and analgesic effects of oral codeine and morphine in healthy volunteers.
Walker DJ, Zacny JP.
Department of Anesthesia and Critical Care, University of Chicago, IL 60637, USA. [email protected]
The subjective, psychomotor, and physiological effects of analgesic doses of oral codeine and morphine were examined in 12 healthy volunteers. Subjects ingested placebo, morphine 20 or 40 mg, or codeine 60 or 120 mg in a randomized, double-blind, crossover design. The smaller and larger doses of each drug were putatively equianalgesic, and the cold-pressor test was included to test this assumption. Codeine and morphine increased ratings of "feel drug effect" but had little effect on other subjective measures, including the Addiction Research Center Inventory, visual analog scales, and adjective checklists. The few subjective effects that were observed were modest and were dose-related for morphine but not for codeine. The drugs did not affect performance on Maddox-Wing, digit-symbol substitution, coordination, auditory reaction, reasoning, and memory tests. Dose-related decreases in pupil size (miosis) were observed following codeine and morphine. Ratings of pain intensity decreased in a dose-related manner for morphine but not for codeine. Plasma codeine and morphine levels varied as an orderly function of dose. These results suggest that oral codeine and morphine are appropriate drugs for outpatient pain relief because they are effective analgesics at doses that have only modest effects on mood, produce few side effects, and do not impair performance. The results also suggest a possible ceiling effect of codeine on analgesia and subjective effects.
I've never had a problem with chemsketch, though I haven't honestly used it much.
Anyway, I'm a chem major who currently in Organic I, just finishing up reactions of alkenes and alkynes, and I'm trying to start learning basic pharmacology, and my school doesn't seem to offer anything of the sort, with the exception of forensic toxicology (?). I've found some good info (I haven't taken a full look yet, though) on MIT's open course website, but I'm curious as to if there are any sources that you guys recommend?
Thanks
The releasers usually cause greater levels of monoamine release than the reuptake inhibitors. Though d-AMP and METH also have about even levels of DA/NE release, whereas the only reuptake inhibitors on the market that do are dextromethylphenidate and cocaine. Regular old methylphenidate I can barely even feel for some reason, and it has a much higher affinity for NE than DA. Same with MDPV, most likely.
DA/NE reuptake inhibitors are most of the time selective for NE over DA, probably just for the reason of the NET being more promiscuous.
concerta gels up when i try to bang it. i end up just eating the goo, but i know how good it feels to shoot a ritalin... how do i cook it down?