• N&PD Moderators: Skorpio | thegreenhand

Ketamine salts solubility

Also, I need a little help decrypting what they're talking about with the reduced food administration with the agonists. So baclofen and the positive allosteric modulators reduce food intake, but in the discussion it says that:

Can anyone explain how these produces are different from the fixed ratio schedules that did show a reduction in food SA?

I assume that the animals responded to a challenge offering them some kind of food reward, e.g. when a lever is pressed a snack is released that they really enjoy. While they may respond the same in terms of reward, their overall food intake of general meal may still be decreased.
 
Structure elucidation of a new designer benzylpiperazine: 4-bromo-2,5-dimethoxybenzylpiperazine.
Westphal F, Junge T, Girreser U, Stobbe S, Pérez SB.
Forensic Sci Int. 2009 May 30;187(1-3):87-96. Epub 2009 Apr 3.

Landeskriminalamt Schleswig-Holstein, Mühlenweg 166, 24116 Kiel, Germany. [email protected]

A new designer benzylpiperazine was seized in Germany for the first time. Interpreting the results of gas chromatography-mass spectroscopy (GC-MS), product ion spectroscopy (GC-MS/MS), and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy the compound was 4-bromo-2,5-dimethoxybenzylpiperazine. The structure of the new benzylpiperazine was finally proved by two-dimensional NMR correlations and by GC-MS after synthesis of two of the possible isomers from commercially available starting materials. Additionally mass spectroscopic data after liquid chromatography-mass spectroscopy (LC-MS/MS) using electrospray ionization (ESI) as well as ultraviolet (UV) spectral data of the new compound are presented. A small quantity of the new benzylpiperazine was seized in very high purity along with other also very pure designer drugs in Hamburg, Germany.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19345524
 
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I know this is an old thread but I think my question applies. I current get 10% ketamine nasal spray for pain. However, for relief it takes 4 sprays in each nostril which means I go through about 60ml every 10 - 12. I was wonder if I managed to acquire Ketamine hcl crystal powder over seas and add a little to the bottle would it dissolve? I know there is a preservative in the bottle and Im guessing the rest is saline solution. Any help or pointers would be appreciated.
Thanks
 
Klein MT, Dukat M, Glennon RA, Teitler M. "Towards selective drug development for the human 5-HT1E receptor: a comparison of 5-HT1E and 5-HT1F receptor structure-affinity relationships." J Pharmacol Exp Ther. 2011 Mar 21.

The 5-HT1E receptor is highly expressed in the human frontal cortex and hippocampus, and this distribution suggests the function of 5-HT1E receptors might be linked to memory. To test this hypothesis, behavioral experiments are needed. Because rats and mice lack a 5-HT1E receptor gene, knockout strategies cannot be utilized to elucidate this receptor's function(s). Thus, selective pharmacological tools must be developed. The tryptamine-related agonist BRL54443 (5-hydroxy-3-(1-methylpiperidin-4-yl)-1H-indole) is one of few agents that binds 5-HT1E receptors with high affinity and some selectively; unfortunately, it binds equally well to 5-HT1F receptors (Ki≈1 nM). The differences between tryptamine binding requirements of these two receptor populations have never been extensively explored; this must be done in order to guide the design of analogs with greater selectivity for 5-HT1E receptors versus 5-HT1F receptors. Previously, we determined the receptor binding affinities of a large series of tryptamine analogs at the 5-HT1E receptor; we now examine the affinities of this same series of compounds at 5-HT1F receptors. The affinities of these compounds at 5-HT1E and 5-HT1F receptors were found to be highly correlated (r=0.81). All high-affinity compounds were full agonists at both receptor populations. We identified BODMT (5-n-butyryloxy-DMT) as a novel 5-HT1F receptor agonist with >60-fold selectivity versus 5-HT1E receptors. There is significant overlap between 5-HT1E and 5-HT1F receptor orthosteric binding properties; thus, identification of 5-HT1E-selective orthosteric ligands will be difficult. The insights generated from this study will inform future drug development and molecular modeling studies both for 5-HT1E and 5-HT1F receptors.

This is an interesting study because it contains some biochemical data about novel tryptamine derivatives and it also gives high affinity ligands for the the 5HT1E receptor, which is highly expressed and which also, up to now, selective ligands were not available for.

Free full text here: http://jpet.aspetjournals.org/content/early/2011/03/21/jpet.111.179606.long
 
There's a bunch of papers/journal articles (50 or so I'd say) mostly related to NMDAr/sigma/CB1/5ht2a/5ht1a and QSAR thereof on my server, I'd post a link if people wanted. Dunno about reviewing each and every one though.
 
Cool, I'll see about putting together a little index with abstracts or something today. I'm a little iffy about just posting links to a directory full of synthesis PDF's.

[edit]: Nope, upon further consideration, information wants to be free etc.
Here's some light bedtime reading, there's a few papers that really stick out.

Among others is a paper stating "A3A Methano" - remember that? - was nothing but toxic. Fucking RC vendors.

There's notable ones regarding hypericin and its sigma affinity and the antidepressant role they play.
 
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An animal model of schizophrenia based on chronic LSD administration: old idea, new results.
Marona-Lewicka D, Nichols CD, Nichols DE.
Neuropharmacology. 2011 Sep;61(3):503-12. Epub 2011 Feb 23.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neuropharm.2011.02.006
Many people who take LSD experience a second temporal phase of LSD intoxication that is qualitatively different, and was described by Daniel Freedman as "clearly a paranoid state." We have previously shown that the discriminative stimulus effects of LSD in rats also occur in two temporal phases, with initial effects mediated by activation of 5-HT(2A) receptors (LSD30), and the later temporal phase mediated by dopamine D2-like receptors (LSD90). Surprisingly, we have now found that non-competitive NMDA antagonists produced full substitution in LSD90 rats, but only in older animals, whereas in LSD30, or in younger animals, these drugs did not mimic LSD. Chronic administration of low doses of LSD (>3 months, 0.16 mg/kg every other day) induces a behavioral state characterized by hyperactivity and hyperirritability, increased locomotor activity, anhedonia, and impairment in social interaction that persists at the same magnitude for at least three months after cessation of LSD treatment. These behaviors, which closely resemble those associated with psychosis in humans, are not induced by withdrawal from LSD; rather, they are the result of neuroadaptive changes occurring in the brain during the chronic administration of LSD. These persistent behaviors are transiently reversed by haloperidol and olanzapine, but are insensitive to MDL-100907. Gene expression analysis data show that chronic LSD treatment produced significant changes in multiple neurotransmitter system-related genes, including those for serotonin and dopamine. Thus, we propose that chronic treatment of rats with low doses of LSD can serve as a new animal model of psychosis that may mimic the development and progression of schizophrenia, as well as model the established disease better than current acute drug administration models utilizing amphetamine or NMDA antagonists such as PCP.

This is not really earthshattering research or anything, but it is interesting to see that administration of LSD to young rats over extended periods of time induces prolonged psychosis. This provides some support of the permanent effect of psychedelic drugs as HPPD.
 
An animal model of schizophrenia based on chronic LSD administration: old idea, new results.
Marona-Lewicka D, Nichols CD, Nichols DE.
Neuropharmacology. 2011 Sep;61(3):503-12. Epub 2011 Feb 23.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neuropharm.2011.02.006

Anyone that has the whole article? Post here or, if you hesitate to post it here, send me a PM please! I 'm highly interested in this as large acid doses were mainly to blame for my psychosis...
 
The Norepinephrine Transporter Inhibitor Reboxetine Reduces Stimulant Effects of MDMA ("Ecstasy") in Humans.
Hysek CM, Simmler LD, Ineichen M, Grouzmann E, Hoener MC, Brenneisen R, Huwyler J, Liechti ME.
Clin Pharmacol Ther. 2011 Aug;90(2):246-55. doi: 10.1038/clpt.2011.78. Epub 2011 Jun 15.

This study assessed the pharmacodynamic and pharmacokinetic effects of the interaction between the selective norepinephrine (NE) transporter inhibitor reboxetine and 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA, "ecstasy") in 16 healthy subjects. The study used a double-blind, placebo-controlled crossover design. Reboxetine reduced the effects of MDMA including elevations in plasma levels of NE, increases in blood pressure and heart rate, subjective drug high, stimulation, and emotional excitation. These effects were evident despite an increase in the concentrations of MDMA and its active metabolite 3,4-methylenedioxyamphetamine (MDA) in plasma. The results demonstrate that transporter-mediated NE release has a critical role in the cardiovascular and stimulant-like effects of MDMA in humans.

No big review because NPG is a dick and I have no access -- but I wonder what happens if you administer MDAI with a noradrenaline only releasing agent such as ethcathinone?
 
^that is interesting. I did some experimentation a couple years ago with MDAI & a few varied DARI's/releasing agents, some with greater affinity for NE than others. Buphedrone+MDAI was quite MDMA-like, but was lacking in some regards, which i thought odd. Granted, i don't think there is definitive info on buphedrone's pharmacology, but everything i could find seemed to indicate it was mostly dopaminergic. MPH+MDAI was also quite interesting. d-amph & M1 (separately) + MDAI were nearly indistinguishable from MDMA.

I've been attempting to find the full text to the following article, but both colleges whose library i have access to don't have it. Sure some of you guys would be interested as well. Here's the citation:
International Journal of Neuropsychopharmacology. 2011 May 5:1-5. [Epub ahead of print]
A preliminary naturalistic study of low-dose ketamine for depression and suicide ideation in the emergency department.
Larkin GL, Beautrais AL.
Department of Emergency Medicine, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, USA

feel free to pm or email me.
 
nuke said:
No big review because NPG is a dick and I have no access -- but I wonder what happens if you administer MDAI with a noradrenaline only releasing agent such as ethcathinone?

I'm guessing that you'd end up with something that feels remarkably similar to MBDB (given that the latter has significant affinity at SERT and NET, but little at DAT).

ebola
 
Effects of MDMA on Extracellular Dopamine and Serotonin Levels in Mice Lacking Dopamine and/or Serotonin Transporters.
Curr Neuropharmacol. 2011 Mar;9(1):91-5.
Hagino Y, Takamatsu Y, Yamamoto H, Iwamura T, Murphy DL, Uhl GR, Sora I, Ikeda K.

3,4-Methylendioxymethamphetamine (MDMA) has both stimulatory and hallucinogenic properties which make its psychoactive effects unique and different from those of typical psychostimulant and hallucinogenic agents. The present study investigated the effects of MDMA on extracellular dopamine (DA(ex)) and serotonin (5-HT(ex)) levels in the striatum and prefrontal cortex (PFC) using in vivo microdialysis techniques in mice lacking DA transporters (DAT) and/or 5-HT transporters (SERT). subcutaneous injection of MDMA (3, 10 mg/kg) significantly increased striatal DA(ex) in wild-type mice, SERT knockout mice, and DAT knockout mice, but not in DAT/SERT double-knockout mice. The MDMA-induced increase in striatal DA(ex) in SERT knockout mice was significantly less than in wildtype mice. In the PFC, MDMA dose-dependently increased DA(ex) levels in wildtype, DAT knockout, SERT knockout and DAT/SERT double-knockout mice to a similar extent. In contrast, MDMA markedly increased 5-HT(ex) in wildtype and DAT knockout mice and slightly increased 5-HT(ex) in SERT-KO and DAT/SERT double-knockout mice. The results confirm that MDMA acts at both DAT and SERT and increases DA(ex) and 5-HT(ex).
Free fulltext: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3137209/?tool=pubmed

This flies in the face of all the people who've been saying that DAT and SERT have been instrumental in the release of monoamines from MDMA. That dopamine release still occurs despite the KO of DAT is surprising, though SERT KO produced ablation of 5HT release activity. This is yet more confusing information about the psychopharmacology of MDMA, since it has been shown in a couple of studies to also not be a substrate for human SERT. I would have been more pleased if they included the effects of NET knock-out too, but making mice with genes knocked out is probably not a trivial matter.
 
This flies in the face of all the people who've been saying that DAT and SERT have been instrumental in the release of monoamines from MDMA.

This would include everyone, right? Holy shit...

ebola
 
This would include everyone, right? Holy shit...

ebola

Well, to be fair, SERT knockout produced the expected results.. but how to explain the catecholamine release? VMAT2?

And if MDMA/MDA doesn't bind to SERT in humans, what stimulates 5HT release?

Lots of questions now about MDMA's mechanism of action, I guess.
 
It probably has more to do with metabotropic glutamate, NAChR's, and VMAT2 than anything else judging by all the other amphetamine studies that have popped out recently. MDMA might have a lot to do with 5HT2A as far as 5HT release goes to quote my pharmacology prof.
 
Let's keep em coming fellas.

Long-Lasting Neuroprotective
Effect of Sildenafil Against 3,4-
Methylenedioxymethamphetamineinduced
5-Hydroxytryptamine Deficits
in the Rat Brain

Elena Puerta,1 Lucia Barros-Min˜ ones,1 Isabel Hervias,2
Violeta Gomez-Rodriguez,1 Lourdes Orejana,1 Neus Pizarro,3
Rafael de la Torre,3,4 Joaquı´n Jorda´n,5 and Norberto Aguirre1*

Sildenafil, given shortly before 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA), affords protection against 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT) depletions caused by this amphetamine derivative by an acute preconditioning-like mechanism. Because acute and delayed preconditionings do not share the same mechanisms, we investigated whether sildenafil would also protect the 5-HT system of the rat if given 24 hr before MDMA. For this, MDMA (3 × 5 mg/kg i.p., every 2 hr) was administered to rats previously treated with sildenafil (8 mg/kg p.o.). One week later, 5-HT content and 5-HT transporter density were measured in the striatum, frontal cortex, and hippocampus of the rats. Our findings indicate that sildenafil afforded significant protection against MDMA-induced 5-HT deficits without altering the acute hyperthermic response to MDMA or its metabolic disposition. Sildenafil promoted ERK1/2 activation an effect that was paralleled by an increase in MnSOD expression that persisted 24 hr later. In addition, superoxide and superoxide-derived oxidants, shown by ethidium fluorescence, increased after the last MDMA injection, an effect that was prevented by sildenafil pretreatment. Similarly, MDMA increased nitrotyrosine concentration in the hippocampus, an effect not shown by sildenafil-pretreated rats. In conclusion, our data demonstrate that sildenafil produces a significant, long-lasting neuroprotective effect against MDMA-induced 5-HT deficits. This effect is apparently mediated by an increased expression of MnSOD and a subsequent reduced susceptibility to the oxidative stress caused by MDMA

I guess if you want to beat the neurotoxicity of MDMA, it's best to pop a boner-pill...
 
Alkamides and a neolignan from Echinacea purpurea roots and the interaction of alkamides with G-protein-coupled cannabinoid receptors
Judit Hohmanna, , , Dóra Rédeia, Peter Forgoa, Pál Szabób, Tamás F. Freundc, József Hallerc, Engin Bojnikd, Sándor Benyhed
-From various on Universities/Institutes in Hungary

doi:10.1016/j.phytochem.2011.06.008
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0031942211003037#sec3.2

Multiple chromatographic separations of the CHCl3-soluble extract of the roots of Echinacea purpurea led to the isolation of 19 compounds. Four natural products, three alkamides and nitidanin diisovalerianate, were identified, and five further compounds were detected for the first time in this species. Additionally, 10 known E. purpurea metabolites were isolated. The structures were determined by mass spectrometry and advanced 1D and 2D NMR techniques. The bioactivity of the isolated compounds was studied in [35S]GTPγS-binding experiments performed on rat brain membrane preparations. Both partial and inverse agonist compounds for cannabinoid (CB1) receptors were identified among the metabolites, characterized by weak to moderate interactions with the G-protein signaling mechanisms. The G-protein-modulating activities of the Echinacea compounds are rather far from the full agonist effects seen with the CB1 receptor agonist reference compound arachidonyl-2′-chloroethylamide (ACEA). However, upon coadministration with ACEA, a number of them proved capable of inhibiting the stimulation of the pure agonist, thereby demonstrating cannabinoid receptor antagonist properties.

I have been sick lately and found that Echinacea helped me recover far faster than I imagined. I decided to read a bit about it, besides what you can find in wikipedia, to see what science had to say about it. I was also particularly interested in finding an article that dealt with how echinacea interacts with the endocannabinoid system. I find it relavant to today's politics as certain, most likely uneducated, folk have called for bans on all chemicals that interact with the endocannabinoid system (as a means of banning various synthetic thc esque chemicals); this would (unintentionally?) include the likes of many OTC things such as echinacea tea or echinacea couch drops... etc.

Particuarly I think the article, if indirectly, does a good job of describing the daunting-ness of the task of explaining how echinacea can function as an immunomodulator. A major trouble has been determining which chemicals found in echinacea are actually responsible for the physiological effects.

-I have access to the full text via my university VPN.
 
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