From: dolphin@ziggys.cts.com (Rex Kahler) 619/262-6384 Newsgroups: alt.drugs Subject: Amphetamine, cocaine: New link Message-ID: <9Bk7Dc10w165w@ziggys.cts.com> Date: Tue, 07 Dec 93 01:03:19 PST (from an issue of Bottom Line Magazine..not sure of date or #): (reprinted wholly without permission) "A brain structure largely ignored by drug addiction researchers may play an important role in producing the similar ill effects of amphetamine and cocaine binges, including hallucinations and gradually worsening paranoia, according to a report accepted for publication in BRAIN RESEARCH. If the findingd hold up, they may lead to a new theory of how disturbances involving the chemical messenger dopamine promote various types of psychosis, asserts psychologist Gaylord Ellison of the University of California, Los Angeles. Prior animal research has found that taking amphetamine for several days damages dopamine-rich cells in a brain area called the caudate, while comparable cocaine intake leaves the caudate unscathed. However, these studies often rely on daily drug injections that fall far short of the "speed runs" of human addicts, who may consume cocaine or am- phetamine every few hours for days, Ellison notes. He and his co-workers developed slow-release silicone pellets that, when implanted under the skin, deliver continuous doses of either amphetamine or cocaine for five days. Rats implanted with amphetamine pellets, but not those bearing cocaine pellets, display caudate damage by the third day, based on staining and microscopic analysis of their brains. However, both groups suffer ex- tensive damage to a structure near the center of the brain, the habenula, and its cell connections to a related region, Ellison contends. Anatomical studies indicate that the habenula helps to regulate dopamine transmission by slowing its release elsewhere. The habenula also maintains connections to cells that produce serotonin, a chemical courier involved in hallucinations, Ellison holds. Destruction of cell pathways linking the habenula to other brain structures may at least partly cause amphetamine and cocaine psychosis, he proposes." back beneath the waves D o l p h i n R e x /s\ ============================================================================= My excellent book: "Drugs and the Brain" by Solomon H Snyder (a fellow tripper) contains the following factoids about Ephedrine Ephedrine was discovered by K. K. Chen, who was looking for a substitute for Adrenalin as an antiathsmatic (sp?). Chen was curious about chinese herbal medicine, in particular ma huang. He and other Lilly chemists quickly isolated ephedrine, and verified that it widened bronchial passages. Since Adrenalin couldn't be taken orally, and had a hell of a side-effect :-) ephedrine seemed vastly preferable. The rarity of ma huang quickly sent chemists scrambling for a synthetic ephedrine, and sometime in the 30's, one of them stumbled on Amphetamine. Amphetamine was also a bronchiodilator, and could be inhaled directly, delivering the relief within seconds. It was marketed under the name Benzedrine and quickly became a legal, over the counter, recreational drug. ..from a 1937 Journal of the American Medical Association "Benzedrine Tablets were used at the department for Psychology at the University of Minnesota to study ... effects on human thought. It was found that the substance increased alertness... Apparently, the effect iveness of the drug in delaying the onset of sleep has induced many University of Minnesota students so seek the drug in local Pharmacies." Anyhoo. Ephedrine is structurally similar to the family of Amphetamines, so it's concievable that it could serve as a precursor. this is probably reason enough for the Feds to clamp down on it....Stock up now.