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- From: gnosis@brahman.nullnet.fi (Gnosis)
- Date: Sun, 12 Feb 95 10:08:22 EET
- Newsgroups: alt.drugs
- Subject: LSD Frequently Asked Questions [ FAQ ]
-
- The Usenet alt.drugs LSD FAQ
-
- Last updated 30 Dec 1994
- Size 113 KB
-
- Authors : dozens of people on the Net
- Original editor: unknown
- Previous editor: honig@buckaroo.ICS.UCI.EDU (David Honig)
- Current editor: gnosis@brahman.nullnet.fi (Jani Poijarvi)
-
- *****
-
- NOTES:
-
- [this is just the editor bitching about stuff, if you want to get down to
- business skip to the next section]
-
- The FAQ is currently suffering from 'virgins writing about sex' syndrome
- since the current editor (me!) has never used LSD. I do have -some-
- technical knowledge regarding the subject, and some of my friends have
- used other psychedelics <wink wink nudge nudge say no more>, but I do not
- claim to be an expert, and I have merely tried to organize the previous
- chaotic mess with little regard to finding out if the info within is actually
- correct. Hence, if somebody more qualified than me wants the job, please
- drop me note at the address above.
-
- The primary change, aside from just cleaning up junk (spelling mistakes,
- witty sig files, etc), has been the removal of over 100K of DMT info
- which, while interesting, has no place in an LSD FAQ. Also, stuff that's
- "cute" but really quite irrelevant (stories about people pitching no-hitters
- on acid and crunchy PostScript graphics of the LSD molecule) has been
- omitted. It's all available in separate files on hyperreal.com anyway.
- All told, the file shrank from nearly 290K to a more manageable 113K.
-
- Lots of work still needs to be done. While the FAQ explains the background
- and chemistry and all nicely, it does very little to prepare for the
- user for the trip itself or the changes in mindset and attitude that
- will most probably occur after the trip. I attempted to do something
- about that by adding that little "Aftereffects" section at the end, but
- that's not nearly enough. Input is very welcome.
-
- *****
-
- Synopsis / Table of Contents:
-
- LSD (definition, introduction)
- Delysid (medical fact sheet for pharmaceutical LSD, pharmacology)
-
- Cautions, Real And Imagined:
-
- Addiction Potential (none)
- Adulterants (the strychnine myth, manufacturing impurities, etc.)
- Bad Trips (what they are, how to avoid, what to do)
- Myths (stamps for children, staring at the sun..)
- Dangers (LSD isn't for morons...)
- Flashbacks (what they are, post-traumatic stress syndrome)
- Insomnia (common, what to do)
- Tolerance (caquired and lost quickly (3 days), no withdrawal)
-
- Background:
-
- Anthropology (and history)
- Botany (sources in nature: mushrooms, ergot, morning glories,
- hawaiian baby woodrose, tropical plants)
- Chemistry (structure)
- Mechanism of Action (uncertain)
- Related Compounds (indoles: psilocybin, dimethyltryptamine (DMT) )
- Manufacture (forget it)
-
- Drug Testing (don't worry)
- Legal Scheduling (sched. 1, no medical uses in US (despite past
- effective use) )
-
- Pragmatics:
-
- Set and Setting (how to have a positive experience; LSD != beer)
- Storage (keep in a cool dark dry place)
- Combinations (cannabis is good, otherwise be careful)
- Aftereffects (a user's viewpoint as to why it's a good thing)
-
- References & Further Reading:
-
- (Recommended)
- _Psychedelic Encyclopedia_ by Peter Stafford
- _LSD: My Problem Child_ by Albert Hofmann
- _Licit & Illicit Drugs_ (Consumer Reports)
- _Storming heaven : LSD and the American dream_ by Jay Stevens
-
- *****
- FORMATTING:
-
- '*****' major division (usually a change of topic)
- '.....' minor division (usually a change of author of text)
-
- *****
-
- LSD
- Generic name for the hallucinogen lysergic acid
- diethylamide-25. Discovered by Dr. Albert Hofmann in 1938, LSD is one
- of the most potent mind-altering chemicals known. A white, odorless
- powder usually taken orally, its effects are highly variable and begin
- within one hour and generally last 8-12 hours, gradually tapering off.
- It has been used experimentally in the treatment of alcoholics and
- psychiatric patients. [Where it showed some success.] It
- significantly alters perception, mood, and
- psychological processes, and can impair motor coordination and skills.
- During the 1950s and early 1960s, LSD experimentation was legally
- conducted by psychiatrists and others in the health and mental health
- professions. Sometimes dramatic, unpleasant psychological reactions
- occur, including panic, great confusion, and anxiety. Strongly
- affected by SET and SETTING. Classification: hallucinogens. Slang
- names: acid, sugar. See also appendix B. (RIS 27:211-52 entries)
-
- -- Research Issues 26, Guide to Drug Abuse Research Terminology,
- available from NIDA or the GPO, page 54.
-
- .....
-
- Common Drug Slang Terms (NB: many of these refer to the carrier, ie, "Blotter"
- or "Sugar Cubes". Often the local names will refer to patterns printed
- on the blotter, eg, "Blue unicorn".):
-
- Acid, 'Cid, Sid, Bart Simpsons, Barrels, Tabs, Blotter, Heavenly blue,
- "L", Liquid, Liquid A, Lucy in the sky with diamonds, Microdots,
- Mind detergent, Orange cubes, Orange micro, Owsley, Hits,
- Paper acid, Sacrament, Sandoz, Sugar, Sugar lumps,
- Sunshine, Tabs, Ticket, Twenty-five, Wedding bells, Windowpane,
- etc.
-
- .....
-
- from the data sheet accompanying product:
- (see also Physician's Desk Reference from mid-60's)
-
- Delysid (LSD 25)
-
- D-lysergic acid diethylamide tartrate
-
- Sugar-coated tablets containing 0.025 mg. (25 ug.)
-
- Ampoules of 1 ml. containing 0.1 mg. (100 ug.) for oral
- administration.
-
- The solution may also be injected s.c. or i.v. The
- effect is identical with that of oral administration but
- sets in more rapidly.
-
- PROPERTIES
-
- The administration of very small doses of Delysid
- (1/2-2 ug./kg. body weight) results in transitory distur-
- bances of affect, hallucinations, depersonalization, reliv-
- ing of repressed memories, and mild neuro-vegetative symp-
- toms. The effect sets in after 30 to 90 minutes and gen-
- erally lasts 5 to 12 hours. However, intermittent distur-
- bances of affect may occasionally persist for several days.
-
- METHOD OF ADMINISTRATION
-
- For oral administration the contents of 1 ampoule of
- Delysid are diluted with distilled water, a 1% solution of
- tartaric acid or halogen-free tap water.
-
- The absorption of the solution is somewhat more rapid
- and more constant that that of the tablets.
-
- Ampoules which have not been opened, which have been
- protected against light and stored in a cool place are
- stable for an unlimited period. Ampoules which have been
- opened or diluted solutions retain their effectiveness for 1
- to 2 days, if stored in a refrigerator.
-
- INDICATIONS AND DOSAGE
-
- a) Analytical psychotherapy, to elicit release of
- repressed material and provide mental relaxation, par-
- ticularly in anxiety states and obsessional neuroses.
- The initial dose is 25 ug. (1/4 of an ampoule or 1
- tablet). This dose is increased at each treatment by
- 25 ug. until the optimum dose (usually between 50 and
- 200 ug.) is found. The individual treatments are best
- given at intervals of one week.
-
- b) Experimental studies on the nature of psychoses: By
- taking Delysid himself, the psychiatrist is able to
- gain an insight in the world of ideas and sensations of
- mental patients. Delysid can also be used to induced
- model psychoses of short duration in normal subjects,
- this facilitating studies on the pathogenesis of mental
- disease.
-
- In normal subjects, doses of 25 to 75 ug. are generally
- sufficient to produce a hallucinatory psychosis (on an
- average 1 ug./kg. body weight). In certain forms of
- psychosis and in chronic alcoholism, higher doses are
- necessary (2 to 4 ug./kg. body weight).
-
- PRECAUTIONS
-
- Pathological mental conditions may be intensified by
- Delysid. Particular caution is necessary in subjects with a
- suicidal tendency and in those cases where a psychotic
- development appears imminent. The psycho-affective lability
- and the tendency to commit impulsive acts may occasionally
- last for some days.
-
- Delysid should only be administered under strict medi-
- cal supervision. The supervision should not be discontinued
- until the effects of the drug have completely worn off.
-
- ANTIDOTE
-
- The mental effects of Delysid can be rapidly reversed
- by the i.m. administration of 50 mg. chlorpromazine.
-
- Literature available on request.
-
- SANDOZ LTD., BASLE, SWITZERLAND
-
- 9792*-Z1540 e.-sp./d.-fr.
- Printed in Switzerland.
-
- .....
-
- ~From: An Introduction to Pharmacology 3rd edition, JJ Lewis, 1964 (p 385)
-
- Peripheral Actions
-
- These include an oxytocic action and constriction of the blood vessels
- of isolated vascular beds. In intact animals LSD causes a fall in
- blood pressure, but its adrenergic blocking potency is low.
-
- LSD causes mydriasis in man and other species. It also causes
- hyperglycaemia and mydriasis, has a hyperthermic action and causes
- piloerection. These effects are sympathetic in nature and are
- abolished by ganglion blocking or adrenergic blocking agents.
- Parasympathetic effects include salivation, lachyrmation, vomiting,
- hypotension, and brachycardia. Low doses stimulate respiration but
- larger doses depress it.
-
- (NB: mydriasis = pupillary dilation)
-
- .....
-
- Hoffman thought the diethylamide version of the lysergic acid molecule
- might be a respiratory stimulant... (see _Problem Child_ by Hoffman)
-
- .....
-
- The "speedy" quality of unadulterated LSD is due to the pharmacological
- actions of LSD itself, and not necessarily due to decomposition or impurities.
- LSD typically causes early adrenergic effects such as sweating, nervousness,
- jaw grinding and insomnia which are easily confused with the side effects
- of amphetamine.
-
- *****
-
- ADDICTION POTENTIAL:
-
- Zero physical addiction potential. Not something that makes you want to
- do it again immediately.
-
- Essentially zero psychological addiction potential.
-
-
- Rarely people use it to escape in a negative way or as part of "polydrug
- abuse" behavior or pattern of behavior. Usually in this case other
- drugs are causing more harm, and the fundamental problem is a personal
- difficulty; the escapism/distraction is a symptom.
-
- *****
-
- ADULTERANTS:
-
- Several problems are associated with street drugs: their unknown
- purity and their unknown strength. Because of its extreme cheapness
- and potency, the purity of LSD in blotter form is not an issue: either
- it's lsd or untreated paper. The purity of powders, pills, and liquids
- cannot be assumed as safe. With regards to uncertain strength, the
- strength of hits these days is low, 100 micrograms or so. One should
- be careful and assume that the smallest square in a tiling of a sheet
- is a dose, even if a printed pattern covers several. An experienced
- person could judge the strength of a dose, and if it is assumed all
- doses on a sheet have been processed equivalently, those doses would
- be calibrated for others, much like anything else.
-
- .....
-
- "There is a great deal of superstition regarding purification of
- psychedelics. Actually, any impurities which may be present as a
- result of synthetic procedures will almost certainly be without any
- effect on the trip. If there are 200 micrograms of LSD in a tablet,
- there could only be 200 mics of impurities present even if the LSD was
- originally only 50% pure (assuming nothing else has been added), and
- few compounds will produce a significant effect until a hundred to a
- thousand times this amount has been ingested. Even mescaline, which
- has a rather specific psychedelic effect, requires about a thousand
- thimes this amount."
-
- .....
-
- Note that: 1) on a piece of paper, vs. a tablet, you can't even add
- significant amounts of adulterants 2) adulterants would cost, whereas
- blank paper will rip someone off just as well.
-
- LSD itself has some "body-kinks" on some people some times. Nausea is
- one of them. its usually mild and transient. It also has speedlike
- (ie, adrenergic stimulation) effects, etc.
-
- (It is common for the uninformed to harbor fears (e.g., about adulterants)
- instilled by ignorance and the current hysteria/propoganda. That's why this
- FAQ exists.)
-
- .....
-
- [Referring to strychnine] 15 mg has been fatal, but a more typical fatal
- dose is on the order of 50mg. [Another post indicates 25 mg. as the LD50] 1
- mg of strychnine orally probably has no observable pharmacological effects
- in a typical adult. [1 mg being ten times the effective dose of LSD, by the
- way.]
-
- ~From: Handbook of Poisoning, 10th ed, R.H. Dreisbach, M.D., PhD, Lange Med.
- Pub. Co. Los Altos, Ca.: strychnine is lethal in 15-30 mg amounts to adult
- humans. (Pure nicotine is fatal at 40 mg./person; cyanide salts are fatal
- at about 100 mg./person) Strychnine causes death by respitory failure, via
- increased spinal reflex excitability.
-
- Actually, I think the fact that PharmChem analyzed something on the order of
- 2,000 LSD samples between 1972 and 1979 and never found one with strychnine
- in it would be better. I'm going over all their data with a toothpick and
- I'll get back to you on exactly what I find. It looks like the percent of
- LSD with strychnine in it is, however, at least under .05%. More a little
- later.
-
- .....
-
- According to Alexander Shulgin the definitive answer is that strychnine is
- neither used in the synthesis, produced by the synthesis, or a possible
- contaminant of the synthesis. But just look at the structures of strychnine
- vs Lysergic acid/LSD/etc and you should be able to understand that readily.
-
- .....
-
- Summary of Street Drug Results - 1973: "Of 189 samples of LSD quantitatively
- analyzed, the average dose was 67.25ug LSD. Of the 32 samples of alleged
- mescaline actually containing mescaline, [...stuff about mescaline and
- mushrooms deleted...] It is interesting to note the low incidence of
- deception among the less sought after psychotomimetics LSD and PCP."
-
- Most likely "good" acid is N-acetyl-LSD (ALD-52) [according to
- _Psychedelic Encyclopedia_ it produces a smoother trip and is somewhat
- commonly found in analysis -- references to the latter were provided]. while
- "speedy" acid is LSD-25. You might want to inform her that those "speedy"
- effects are also commonly reported side effects of legal drugs which
- effect the 5-HT neurotransmitter system. And ditto on the potency issue --
- you'd need mg quantities of strychnine to feel anything. And what you would
- feel (according to descriptions I've read) does not match descriptions of
- LSD "speed" effects. Most significantly because strychnine muscular effects
- tend to fade in & out, while LSD "speed" effects are typically reported as
- being consistent -- and there are other qualitative differences.
-
- "actual experience"? ... no one here is likely to post descriptions of that
- over the net, even in e-mail... I'm *quite* sure that some people could
- though...
-
- > Well, hypothetically speaking, I bought some from her friends, and I could
- > probably surrender half a hit or a whole one, maybe, in the interest of
- > science. Does anyone have facilities to perform a REAL (hypothetical)
- > analysis of blotter to find out exactly what's in it?
-
- Its been done....
-
- > > Schnoll SH Vogel WH
- > > Analysis of "street drugs".
- > > N Engl J Med (1971 Apr 8) 284(14):791
-
- This reference sucks.
-
- > > Brown JK Shapazian L Griffin GD
- > > A rapid screening procedure for some "street drugs" by thin-layer
- > > chromatography.
- > > J Chromatogr (1972 Jan 19) 64(1):129-33
-
- Nope.
-
- There's a LA County analysis of street drugs I've got (Clin Tox ~1984 I think)
- that reports LSD as being >96% pure or blank (If I remember correctly) --
- the rest most likely is substitutes, but it wasn't reported in the analysis.
-
- .....
-
- This is the PharmChem analysis of LSD from 1972 (vol 1, no 1) up to the time
- that the DEA no longer allowed them to make quantitative measurements (1974-
- vol 3, no 2 included). NOTE: NO STRYCHNINE! also note that PharmChem found
- a sample of Shrooms contaminated with Strychnine in 1972 (vol 1, no 7), and
- I would think it safe to assume that they also checked LSD for Strychnine.
-
- *****
-
- BAD TRIPS:
-
- A person on LSD who becomes depressed, agitated, or confused may
- experience these feelings in an overwhelming manner that grows on
- itself. The best solution is to remove disturbing influences, get to
- a safe, comforting environment, and reassure the tripper that things
- are alright. It may comfort those who fear that they are losing their
- minds to be reminded that it will end in several hours.
-
- Authorities are fond of administering injections of anti-psychotic
- drugs. Recovery in the presence of authorities, in hospitals or
- police stations, is not pleasant. Sedatives or tranquilizers such as
- Valium may help reduce panic and anxiety, but the best solution is
- calm talking. Some claim that niacin (an over the counter vitamin
- supplement) can abort a trip, but this may be due to a placebo effect
- (niacin produces a flushing effect).
-
- Remember that odd bodily sensations are normal and not harmful.
-
- .....
-
- "The distinction between psycholytic and psychedelic doses of LSD is used in
- many scientific publications but seems to be ignored by popularizers who
- either preach the "LSD utopia" or warn of the "decline of the West." A
- psycholitic does, generally 75 or 100 - or at most 200 - micrograms, causes
- a rush of thoughts, a lot of free association, some visualization
- (hallucination) and abreaction (memories so vivid that one seems to relive
- the experience). A psychedelic dose, around 500 micrograms, produces total
- but temporary breakdown of usual ways of perceiving self and world and
- (usually) some form of "peak experience" or mystic transcendence of ego.
- "Bad trips" usually occur only on psychedelic doses."
-
- .....
-
- The best review of this question is Rick Strassman's "Adverse Reactions
- to Psychedelic Drugs: a Review of the Literature" in _J. Nerv and Mental
- Disease_ 172(10):577-595. He writes:
-
- The most common adverse reaction is a temporary (less than 24 hours)
- episode of panic --the "bad trip". Symptoms include frightening illusions/
- hallucinations (usually visual and/or auditory); overwhelming anxiety
- to the point of panic; aggression with possible violent acting-out behavior;
- depression with suicidcal ideations, gestures, or attempts; confusion; and
- fearfulness to the point of paranoid delusions.
-
- Reactions that are prolonged (days to months) and/or require hospitalization
- are often referred to as "LSD psychosis," and include a heterogenous
- population and group of symptoms. Although there are no hard and
- fast rules, some trends have been noted in these patients. There is a
- tendency for people with poorer premorbid adjusment, a history of
- psychiatric illness and/or treatment, a greater number of exposure to
- psychedelic drugs (and correlatively, a great average total
- cumulative dosage taken over time), drug-taking in an unsupervised
- setting, a history of polydrug abuse, and self-therapeutic and/or
- peer-pressure-submission motive for drug use, to suffer these consequences.
-
- In spite of the impressive degree of prior problems noted in many of these
- patients, there are occasional reports of severe and prolonged reactions
- occuring in basically well adjusted individuals. In the same vein,
- there are many instance of faily poorly adapted individuals who suffer
- _no_ ill effects from repeated psychedelic drug use. In fact, it has been
- hypothesized that some schizophrenics do not suffer adverse reactions
- because of their familiarity with such acute altered states. Another
- possibility is that there individuals may be "protected" by possible "down-
- regulation" of the receptors for LSD, bu the (over-)production of some
- endogenous compound. _Individual_ prediction of adverse reactions,
- therefore, is quite difficult...
-
- .....
-
- Major "functional" psychosis vs. "LSD psychosis"
-
- A diagnostic issue dealth with explicitly in only a few papers is that of
- LSD-precipitated major functional illnesses, e.g. affective disorders
- or schizophrenia. In other words, many of these so called LSD psychoses
- could be other illnesses that were triggered by the stress of a traumatic
- psychedelic drug experience. Some of the same methodological issues
- described earlier affect these studies, but they are, on the averagem
- better controlled, with more family and past psychiatric history available
- for comparison.
-
- Hensala et al. compared LSD-using and non-LSD-using psychiatric inpatients.
- They found that this group of patients was generally of a younger age and
- contained more characteristically disordered individuals than the non-
- LSD-using group. Patients with specific diagnoses with or without LSD
- histories were not compared. Based on their observations, they concluded
- that LSD was basically just another drug of abuse in a population of
- frequently hospitalized individuals in the San Francisco area, and that
- it was unlikely that psychedelic use could be deemed etiological in the
- development of their psychiatric disorders.
-
- Roy, Breakey et al., and Vardy and Kay have attempted to relate LSD use to
- the onset and revelopment of a schizophrenia-like syndrome. A few comments
- regarding this conceptual framework seem in order, before their findings
- are discussed. The major factor here is that of choosing schizophrenia,
- or in the Vardy and Kay study, schizophreniform disorders, as the
- comparison group. There is an implication here that LSD psychoses are
- comparable, phenomenologically, to schizophrenia-like disorders, and that
- LSD can "cause" the development of such disorders. The multiplicity of
- symptoms and syndromes described in the "adverse reaction" literature
- should make it clear that LSD can cause a number of reactions that can last
- for any amount of time--from minutes to, possibly, years. I believe what
- is being studied here is the question of the potential role of LSD in
- accelerating or precipitating the onset of an illness that was "programmed"
- to develop ultimately in a particular individual--in a manner comparable
- to the major physical or emotional stress that often precipitates a bona
- fide myocardial infarction in an individual with advanced coronary
- atheresclerosis. The stress did not _cause_ the heart disease; it was
- only the stimulus that accelerated the inexorable process to manifest
- illness.
-
- In looking at the relevant studies, Breakey et al. found that schizophrenics
- who "used drugs" had an earlier onset of symptoms and hospitalization than
- non-drug-using schizophrenics, and had possibly better premorbid personal-
- ities than non-drug using patients (although Vardy and KAy have challenged
- this analysis of Breakey's data).
-
- Bowers compared 12 first-admission patients with psychosis related to LSD
- use, requiring hospitalization and phenothiazines, to 26 patients hospital-
- ized and treated with phenothiazines with no history of drug use. Six
- of these controls had been previously hospitalized. Drug-induced psychotic
- patients were found to have better premorbib histories and prognostic
- indicators than the nondrug groups. There was no difference in rates of
- family history of psychiatric illness. However, several issues flaw
- this study. One is the poly-drug abusing nature of the "LSD-induced"
- psychotic patients, compared to the controls. The role of LSD, therefore,
- in causing or precipitating these symptomatic disorders, is open to dispute.
- The other is the lack of an adequate comparison control group, i.e. the
- controls were specified only as "psychotic," and did not necessarily
- match the LSD group in either symptoms or diagnostic classification.
- A follow-up study of the patients occured between 2 and 6 years later.
- One half did well and one half did poorly, although the lack of a control
- group for a follow-up in a similarly symptomatic control group makes
- interpretation of the data difficult.
-
- Roy, in a somewhat different design, compared chronic schizophrenic
- patients (diagnosed according to DSM-III criteria) who had used LSD
- within the week preceding hospitalization, and found no difference
- in age of symptom onset or hospitalization compared to patients without
- a history of illicit drug use.
-
- Vardy and Kay, in an elegant study with a 3- and 5- year follow-up period,
- demonstrated that patients hospitalized for a schizophrenic picture
- that developed within two weeks of LSD use (patients with other diagnoses
- were explicitly excluded form comparisons with non-drug-using
- schizophrenics) were "fundamentally similar to schizophrenics in
- geneology, phenomenology, and course of illness (165, p. 877). Pre-
- morbid adjustment, age of onset of symptoms and hospitalization, family
- history of psychosis or suicide, and most cognitive features were also
- equal between groups. Family histories of alcohol abuse were markedly
- great in the LSD group.
-
- I believe these data, taken as a whole, limited as they are in terms of
- comparing subgroups (i.e. LSD-using vs. non-LSD-using) of "schizophrenia-
- like" disorders, point towar, at most, a possible precipitory role in
- the development of these disorders, in a non specific and not
- etiologically related manner.
-
- *****
-
- MYTHS:
-
- LSD does not form "crystals" that reside in the body to be "dislodged"
- later, causing flashbacks. LSD is a crystalline solid (though it is
- unlikely that one would ever have enough to be visible to the naked
- eye) but it is easily water soluble, thus cannot form bodily
- deposits. Furthermore, it is metabolized and excreted in hours. The
- bogus "loosened crystal" description in not necessary to explain
- flashbacks, which are psychological phenomena (see FLASHBACKS).
-
- LSD does not cause chromosome damage.
-
- In Science 30 April 1972, Volume 172 Number 3982 p. 431-440 there was an
- article by Norman I. Dishotsky, William D. Loughman, Robert E. Mogar and
- Wendell R. Lipscomb titled "LSD and Genetic Damage - Is LSD chromosome
- damaging, carcinogenic, mutagenic, or teratogenic?". They reviewed 68
- studies and case reports published 1967-1972, concluding "From our own
- work and from a review of literature, we believe that pure LSD ingested
- in moderate doses does not damage chromosomes in vivo, does not cause
- detectable genetic damage, and is not a teratogen or carcinogen in man."
-
- Well, there's the study by Sidney Cohen which was cited here
- recently, Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, 130, 1960. The
- following is from Jay Stevens' Storming Heaven: "Cohen surveyed a sample
- of five thousand individuals who had taken LSD twenty-five thousand
- times. He found and average of 1.8 psychotic episodes per thousand
- ingestions, 1.2 attempted suicides, and 0.4 completed suicides.
- 'Considering the enormous scope of the psychic responses it induces,'
- he concluded, 'LSD is an astonishingly safe drug.'"
-
- Some urban legends: I've heard two "stories" about people blinding
- themselves on "drugs". One was revealed as a hoax by the person who
- perpetrated it (apparently it was intended to "illustrate" the dangers
- of LSD), another is trotted out by anti-drug speakers at high schools:
-
- 1) Seven people on LSD stared at the sun and lost 90% of their reading
- vision.
-
- [Ed: See the file hyperreal.com:/drugs/psychedelics/lsd/staring.at.the.sun
- for more detailed information on the spread and mutation of the myth.]
-
- 2) A teenager arrested while on LSD plucked out his eyeballs in his
- jail cell, and felt no pain.
-
- While these are bogus, the drug has powerful effects on the mind
- and the consumer should be aware of the hazards, and act appropriately.
-
- .....
-
- There is an occasionally circulated fake warning from some police department
- about LSD-laced "tattoos" or stickers (the "blue star tattoo" story) being
- given to children. This probably originated with some hick cop or ignorant
- and panicky parent not understanding some children-cartoon (eg, mickey mouse
- in sorcerer's garb) printed on a sheet of blotter.
-
- .....
-
- See also myths about testing in DRUG TESTING
-
- *****
-
- DANGERS:
-
- Purely psychological hazards, not harmful to body. May release latent
- psychosis or exacerbate depression, leading to irrational behavior. There
- is also a danger of foolish or incautious behavior, e.g, misjudging
- distances or thinking one can fly. Physical overdose is not a hazard,
- though one may easily ingest more than one may be able to handle
- psychologically.
- .....
-
- Because the "LSD psychosis" is not distinguishable from non-drug-
- induced psychosis, we have reasonable evidence to conclude that LSD
- was not the sole cause of psychosis. Instead, it would seem that the
- drug brought on the problems in vulnerable individuals.
- Interestingly, the rate of parental alcoholism was found to be much
- higher in LSD patients than in other patients or in the general
- population by one study (Vardy and Kay, Arch-Gen-Psych, 1983 40(8):
- 877-83).
-
- .....
-
- Lethal (toxic) doses of LSD are conservatively several tens of
- thousands of times as much as a normal dose, making it (in the toxic
- sense) one of the safest drugs known. See section on Pharmacology for
- description of bodily side-effects.
-
- The LD50 for psilocybin (active ingredient in mushrooms) is 275 mg/kg
- i.v. in mice. Of course, it would take lots more p.o. to kill someone.
-
- The reported LD50 values for LSD are 46, 16.5, 0.3 mg/kg I.V. for mice,
- rats, and rabbits, respectively. Again, it's hard to accurately translate
- these numbers to oral values.
-
- Note that an average human dose is 0.001 mg/kg, ie, 1 microgram/kg, ie,
- 1 part per billion by weight.
-
- .....
-
- Never take any drugs while pregnant. Best to be prudent.
-
- *****
-
- FLASHBACKS:
-
- Quoted without permission from 'Licit and Illicit Drugs,' written by
- Edward M. Brecher and the editors of Consumer Reports. ISBN: 0-316-15340-0
-
- A simple explanation of LSD flashbacks, and of their changed character
- after 1967, is available. According to this theory, almost everybody
- suffers flashbacks with or without LSD. Any intense emotional
- experience--the death of a loved one, the moment of discovery that one is in
- love, the moment of an automobile smashup or of a narrow escape from a
- smashup--may subsequently and unexpectedly return vividly to consciousness
- weeks or months later. Since the LSD trip is often an intense emotional
- experience, it is hardly surprising that it may similarly "flash back."
-
- <end quote>
-
- "Post-traumatic stress disorder has been commonly associated with war
- veterans, but it also affects victims of disasters and violence... Experts
- estimate that 1% of the population suffers from the disorder."
- ---LA Times, Feb 18 1992, p A3, "Journey For Better Life Hell For Some Women."
-
- .....
-
- Can smoking marijuana induce a flashback?
- Also are you more likely to suffer flashbacks from having a bad trip?
-
- Apparently yes and yes. The following is reproduced without
- permission from Lester Grinspoon and James B. Bakalar, "Psychedelic
- Drugs Reconsidered," Basic Books, Inc. New York, 1979. pp. 159-163.
- I highly recommend this book, and if you find it please buy me one
- too.
-
- I typed this in a while ago and didn't type in the references at the
- time (slap!). If you want them i'll see what i can do. Typos are
- mine.
-
- - - - - - - -
-
- ... Studies of flashbacks are hard to evaluate because the
- term has been used so loosely and variably. On the broadest
- definition, it means the transitory recurrence of emotions and
- perceptions originally experienced while under the influence of a
- psychedelic drug. It can last seconds or hours; it can mimic any of
- the myriad aspects of a trip; and it can be blissful, interesting,
- annoying, or frightening. Most flashbacks are episodes of visual
- distortion, time distortion, physical symptoms, loss of ego
- boundaries, or relived intense emotion lasting a few seconds to a few
- minutes. Ordinarily they are only slightly disturbing, especially
- since the drug user usually recognizes them for what they are; they
- may even be regarded lightheartedly as "free trips." Occasionally
- they last longer, and in a small minority of cases they turn into
- repeated frightening images or thoughts. They usually decrease
- quickly in number and intensity with time, and rarely occur more than
- a few months after the original trip.
-
- A typical minor and pleasant flashback is the following:
-
- --
-
- ... Frequently afterward there is a momentary "opening"
- ("flash" would be too spastic a word) when for maybe a couple of
- seconds an area one is looking at casually, and indeed unthinkingly,
- suddenly takes on the intense vividness, composition, and significance
- of things seen while in the psychedelic condition. This "scene" is
- nearly always a small field of vision -- sometimes a patch of grass, a
- spray of twigs, even a piece of newspaper in the street or the remains
- of a meal on a plate (Cohen 1970[1965], pp. 114-115)
-
- --
-
- Here are two more troublesome examples:
-
- --
-
- For about a week I couldn't walk through the lobby of A-entry
- at the dorm without getting really scared, because of the goblin I saw
- there when I was tripping. (Pope 1971, p. 93)
-
- --
-
- A man in his late twenties came to the admitting office in a
- state of panic. Althought he had not taken any drug in approximately
- 2 moths he was beginning to re-experience some of the illusory
- phenomena, perceptual distortions, and the feeling of union with the
- things areound him that had previously occurred only under the
- influence of LSD. In addition, his wife had told him that he was
- beginning to "talk crazy," and he had become frightened ... He was
- concerned lest LSD have some permanent effect on him. He wished
- reassurance so that he could take it again. His symptoms have
- subsided but tend to reappear in anxiety-provoking situations.
- (Frosch et al. 1965, p. 1237)
-
- --
-
- Flashbacks are most likely to occur under emotional stress or
- at a time of altered ego functioning; they are often induced by
- conditions like fatigue, drunkenness, marihuana intoxication, and even
- meditative states. Falling asleep is one of those times of
- consciousness change and diminished ego control; an increase in the
- hypnagogic imagery common at the edge of sleep often follows
- psychedelic drug use and can be regarded as a kind of flashback.
- Dreams too may take on the vividness, intensity, and perceptual
- peculiarities of drug trips; this spontaneous recurrence of
- psychedelic experience in sleep (often very pleasant) has been called
- the high dream (Tart 1972). Marihuana smoking is probably the most
- common single source of flashbacks. Many people become more sensitive
- to the psychedelic qualities of marihuana after using more powerful
- drugs, and some have flashbacks only when smoking marihuana (Weil
- 1970). In one study frequency of marihuana use was found to be the
- only factor related to drugs that was correlated with number of
- psychedelic flashbacks (Stanton et al. 1976).
-
- How common flashbacks are said to be depeds on how they are
- defined. By the broad definition we have been using, they occur very
- often; probably a quarter or more of all psychedelic drug users have
- experienced them. A questionanaire survey of 2,256 soldiers (Stanton
- and Bardoni 1972), leaving the definition to the respondents, revealed
- that 23 percent of the men who used LSD had flashbacks. In a 1972
- survey of 235 LSD users, Murray P. Naditch and Sheridan Fenwick found
- that 28 percent had flashbacks. Eleven percent of this group (seven
- men in all) called them very frightening, 32 percent called them
- somewhat frightening, 36 percent called them pleasant, and 21 percent
- called them very pleasant. Sixty-four percent said that their
- flashbacks did not disrupt their lives in any way; 16 percent (4
- percent of the whole LSD-using group) had sought psychiatric help for
- them (Naditch and Fenwick 1977). In a study of 247 subjects who had
- taken LSD in psychotherapy, William H. McGlothlin and David O. Arnold
- found 36 cases of flashbacks, only one of which was seriously
- disturbing (McGlothlin and Arnold 1971). McGlothlin, defining
- flashbacks narrowly for clinical purposes as "repeated intrusions of
- frightening images in spite of volitional efforts to avoid them"
- (McGlothlin 1974b, p. 291), estimates that 5 percent of habitual
- psychedelic users have experienced them.
-
- There are few studies on the question of who is most
- susceptible. In 1974, R. E. Matefy and R. Krall compared psychedelic
- drug users who had flashbacks with those who did not, and found no
- significant differences in their biographies or on personality tests.
- The main causes of flashbacks were stress and anxiety. About 35
- percent found them more or less pleasant, and the same proportion
- thought they could control them. Most accepted them as an inevitable
- part of their lives as members of the psychedelic fraternity and did
- not want help from psychiatry (Matefy and Krall 1974). Naditch and
- Fenwick found that the number of flashbacks, both pleasant and
- unpleasant, was highly correlated with the number and intensity of bad
- trips and the use of psychedelic drugs as self-prescribed
- psychotherapy. Those who enjoyed flashbacks and those who were
- frightened by them did not differ significantly on tests of ego
- functioning.
-
- A case seen in an outpatient setting in the late sixties
- illustrates the kind of set and setting that may create flashback
- problems. PQ was a thirty-six-year-old single man who entered therapy
- because of depression and anxiety. He was a heavy drinker who was
- passive, slovenly, and spent most of his time in bed. Just before
- taking to alcohol and his bed he had failed in an attempt to parlay a
- gift from his wealthy father into a fortune on the stock market.
- Despite a remarkable incapacity for insight, during a year in
- psychotherapy he managed to give up alcohol and start a promising
- business. But his anxiety continued, and in order to allay it he had
- to keep himself very busy wheeling and dealing. Imitating his father,
- a successful self-made man who had married a woman twenty years
- younger than himself, PQ dated only women under the age of nineteen.
- Being attractive to young women was so imporant to him that much of
- his time was spent in the company of teenagers. During business hours
- he would wear a conservative three-piece suit and drive a new sedan,
- but when he was with his young friends he would wear a leather jacket
- and drive a motorcycle. Anxiety and fears of inadequacy dominated
- both of these lives. Several months after therapy began, during a
- weekend in a small resort town, his young friends decided to take LSD,
- and he felt obliged to dissemble his fears and join them; it was his
- first and only trip. He felt a panic he had never known before; he
- thought that he was losing his mind and going "out of control." His
- friends were so concerned thet they took him to a small hospital,
- where he was given chlorpromazine and after six hours released in
- their care. The next day he had a flashback that lasted one or two
- hours and was almost as frightening as the original experience.
- Flashbacks continued for six months, their frequency, duration, and
- severity eventually diminishing to the point where it was difficult
- for him to determine whether they were related to the LSD trip or
- merely an intensification of his usual anxiety. In fact, the patient
- described the flashbacks as being like very much enhanced anxiety
- episodes. Even several years after this experience, when he became
- very anxious, he was reminded of the trip and these flashbacks. He
- denied that these experiences had any perceptual or cognitive aspect;
- both during the LSD trip and later, the only symptom was panic. There
- is no question that the nature of his trip was influenced by the
- unfortunate set and setting. It is a matter of speculation what part
- his underlying chronic anxiety played in the development and form of
- the flashback phenomena.
-
- Several explanations for flashbacks have been proposed. One
- is that the drug has lowered the threshold for imagery and fantasy and
- made them less subject to voluntary control; in another version of
- this explanation, flashbacks are caused by a heightened attention to
- certain aspects of immediate sensory experience suggested by drug
- trips and reinforced by the community of drug users. Something more
- seems to be needed to account for repeated fearful relivings of
- sequences from past drug trips, and these have been explained as
- similar to traumatic neuroses precipitated by fright: disturbing
- unconscious material has risen to consciousness during the drug trip
- and can be neither accepted nor repressed. For example, D. F. Saidel
- and R. Babineau (1976) have reported a case of recurrent flashbacks --
- three years of blurring images and auditory distortions, with some
- anxiety and confusion -- which they regard as a neurosis founded on
- the patient's problems with his career and his relationship to his
- mother. (See also Horowitz 1969; Shick and Smith 1970; Heaton 1975.)
- Another explanation treats the flashback as an example of recall
- associated with a particular level of arousal. (Fischer 1971). In
- this conception the memory of an experience is best retrieved when the
- rate of mental data-processing is the same as it was during the
- original experience -- in other words, when the state of consciousness
- in similar. Therefore, psychedelic experiences are likely to be
- recalled and relived when the ego's sorting and control of sensory
- information is disturbed by drugs, stress, or the state of half-sleep.
-
- For a critique of flashback studies, see Stanton et al. 1976
-
- - - - - - - -
-
- *****
-
- INSOMNIA:
-
- Insomnia occurs frequently after the trip. A mild, over-the-counter
- sleeping aid can help, and these antihistamines do not produce adverse
- interactions. Also, some people like to consume a small amount of alcoholic
- beverage to "smooth the jitteries". The usual precautions about sleeping
- aids if alcohol has been consumed apply of course.
-
- *****
-
- TOLERANCE:
-
- Acquired rapidly, within 3 days. Tolerance dissipates equally rapidly,
- without withdrawal, craving, or symptoms of addiction.
-
- Cross-tolerance can and is developed between other indole hallucinogens, eg,
- DMT, LSD and Psilocybin.
-
- *****
-
- BOTANY:
-
- Lysergic compounds appear in ergot, a fungal parasite of cereal grains;
- morning glory and hawaiian baby wood rose seeds; psychedelic tryptamines
- also occur in psilocybe mushrooms, in some south american trees and the
- poison glands of the cane toad. (Mescaline is not in this chemical family).
- LSD (lysergic acid diethylamide) itself is not found in plants, however
- its close chemical cousin lysergic acid amide is.
-
- .....
-
- "Indole Alkaloids In Plant Hallucinogens" Richard Evans Schultes, PhD.
- Journal of Psychedelic Drugs Vol.8(No.1) Jan-Mar 1976
-
- "The main constituent of the seeds of Rivea corymbosa is ergine or d-lysergic
- acid amide. Minor alkaloids present are the related d-isolysergic acid amide
- (isoergine), chanoclavine, elymoclavine and lysergol. The seeds of Ipomoea
- violacea have a similar composition, but instead of lysergol, they have
- ergometrine (ergonovine). Later, very minor amounts of two alkaloids
- ergometrinine and penniclavine - were found in I. violacea by chromatography.
- the total alkaloid content of the seeds of Ipomoea viloacea is approximately
- five times as great as that of the seeds of Rivea corymbosa: 0.06% in the
- former; 0.012% in the latter. This difference in the alkaloid content
- explains why Indians employ smaller doses of seeds of the Ipomoea than of the
- Rivea.
-
- "Ethnopharmacology and Taxonomy of Mexican Psychodysleptic Plants"
- Jose Luis Diaz M.D.
- Journal of Psychedelic Drugs Vol. 11(1-2) Jan-Jun 1979
-
- Seeds of various Morning Glories contain
- Ergolines: ergine,isoergine,ergonovine
- Glucosides: turbicoryn [apparently in Rivea corymbosa only]
-
- called Tlitlitzen (Aztec word for "The Divine Black One")
- to the Aztecs, Black is a "hot" color,
- a property of psychotropics associated with light
-
- .....
-
- "The Botanical and Chemical Distribution of Hallucinogens"
- Richard Evans Schultes, PhD.
- Journal of Psychedelic Drugs Vol.9(No.3) Jul-Sep 1977
-
- "I. violacea, often referred to by it's synonyms I. rubro-caerulea and
- I. tricolor, is represented in horticulture by a number of "varieties,"
- such as: Heavenly Blue, Pearly Gates, Flying Saucers, Wedding Bells,
- Summer Skies, and Blue Stars - all of which contain the hallucinogenic
- ergot alkaloids."
-
- .....
-
- "Burger's Medicinal Chemistry" Fourth Edition, Volume III
- Chapter: "Hallucinogens" Alexander Shulgin
-
- Composition, % of total alkaloids present
- =========================================
- Compound R. corymbosa I. violacea
- =============== ================ ======================
- Ergine (LA-111) 54, 48 58, 10-16, 5-10
- Isoergine 17, 35 8, 18-26, 9-17
- Ergometrine 8
- Elymoclavine 4 4
- Chanoclavine 4 4
- Lysergol 4
-
- Total Alkaloids .012, .04 .06, .04-.08, .02-.04
- (% of dry weight
- of seeds)
-
- *****
-
- ANTHROPOLOGY:
-
- _The Road to Eleusius_ by Hoffman, Wasson, and Ruck.
-
- Summary: A secret religion existed for 2,000 years in Greece (until
- the christians displaced it around 400 AD). The initiation was open
- to anyone who spoke Greek and hadn't committed murder, once in their
- life. After 6 month long preparatory rituals, members walked to
- Eleusius whereupon they underwent secret rituals. The rituals
- remained secret until the 1970's.
-
- Wasson, an ethnomycological scholar and former banker (and the first
- white to trip on shrooms with the mexican indians) proposed the
- following explanation of the Eleusian mysteries to Hoffman, an
- ergot-alkaloid expert chemist, and Ruck, a greek scholar:
-
- The Secret of the ritual involved the personal visions induced by
- drinking the grain decoction administered to the initiates. The
- domestication of grains permitted the development of greek
- civilization; it also brought ergot fungus (of St. Anthony's fire
- infamy).
-
- The thin book contains their argument for the use of the ergot fungus
- in Eleusian rites, Wasson providing some background on the use of
- mushrooms and grains and their role in the culture; Hoffman on the
- psychoactivity of ergot strains; and Ruck on the mythological and
- cultural backround of the sect.
-
- Evidence includes: Hoffman dosed himself with large (ergot-derived)
- doses of obstetric compounds to assay their hallucinogenic potential,
- and found them to possess such activity. The Eleusian temple site still
- remains, but there is no room to view theatric performances, just rows of
- tripping initiates, further supporting their argument.
-
- An interesting read, and its neat to think that the culture that
- more or less lead to the western industrial one had psychedelic rites.
- (Various greek prominant figures attended the rituals, including Plato).
-
- .....
-
- IPOMOEA PURPUREA: A NATURALLY OCCURRING PSYCHEDELIC
-
- Charles Savage, Willis W. Harman and James Fadiman
-
- >From "Altered States of Consciousness, A Book of Readings"
- edited by Charles Tart BF311.T28
-
- Of the naturally occurring plant alkaloids used in ancient and modern
- religious rites and divination one of the least studied is ololiuqui. The
- earliest known description of its use is by Hernandez, the King of Spain's
- personal physician, who spent a number of years in Mexico studying the
- medicinal plants of the Indians and "accurately illustrated ololiuqui as a
- morning glory in his work which was not published until 1651" (Schultes,
- 1960). In his words, "When a person takes ololiuqui, in a short time he loses
- clear reasoning because of the strength of the seed, and he believes he is in
- communion with the devil" (Alacon, 1945). Schultes (1941) and Wasson (1961)
- have reported in detail on the religious and divinatory use of two kinds of
- morning-glory seeds, Rivea corymbosa and Ipomoea violacea, among the Mazatec
- and Zapotec indians. The first of these is assumed to be the ololiuqui of the
- ancient Aztecs.
-
- In 1955 Osmond described personal experiments with Rivea corymbosa seeds and
- reported that the effects were similar to those of d-lysergic acid
- diethylamide (LSD-25). He suggested (1957) that the word psychedelic (meaning
- mind-manifesting) be used as a generic term for this class of substances to
- refer to their consciousness-expanding and psychotherapeutic function as
- contrasted with the hallucinogenic aspect. In 1960 Hoffman reported that he
- had isolated d-lysergic acid amide (LA) and d-isolysergic acid amide from the
- seed of both Rivea corymbosa and Ipomoea violacea. LA is very similar to LSD
- in its psychological and physiological manifestations but is reported to have
- about one twentieth the psychological effectiveness of LSD (Cerletti &
- Doepfner, 1958).
-
- The work of these investigators led us to a preliminary study of the
- psychedelic properties of species of Ipomoea which are commonly found within
- the continental United States. The seeds of Ipomoea purpurea, the common
- climbing morning glory, resemble the seeds of Ipomoea violacea and have been
- found to have similar psychedelic properties. Recent analysis by Taber et al.
- (1963) has verified that LA is present in the varieties used and is probably
- the primary active agent.
-
- The effects of the seeds of Ipomoea purpurea (varieties Heavenly Blue and
- Pearly Gates) in a total of 45 cases are summarized below. The subjects are
- all normally functioning adults and the majority had previous experience with
- LSD. The onset of effects is about half an hour after the seeds have been
- chewed and swallowed and they last from five to eight hours.
-
-
- Low Dose, 20-50 Seeds (11 Subjects)
-
- This dosage rarely produces any visual distortions, although with eyes
- closed there may be beginning imagery. Restlessness, evidenced by alternating
- periods of pacing about and lying down, may be present. There tends to be a
- heightened awareness of objects and of nature, and enhanced rapport with
- other persons. A feeling of emotional clarity and of relaxation is likely to
- persist for several hours after other effects are no longer noticeable.
-
- Medium Dose, 100-150 Seeds (22 Subjects)
-
- In this range the effects resemble those reported for medium-dose (75-150
- micrograms) LSD experiences, including spatial distortions, visual and
- auditory hallucinations, intense imagery with eyes closed, synaesthesia and
- mood elevation. These effects, which occur mainly during the period of 1 to 4
- hours after ingestion, are typically followed by a period of alert calmness
- which may last until the subject goes to sleep.
-
- High Dose, 200-500 Seeds (12 Subjects)
-
- In this range the first few hours may resemble the medium-dose effects
- described above. However, there is usually a period during which the
- subjective states are of a sort not describable in terms of images or
- distortions, states characterized by loss of ego boundaries coupled with
- feelings of euphoria and philosophical insight. These seem to parallel the
- published descriptions of experiences with high doses (200-500 micrograms) of
- LSD given in a supportive, therapeutic setting as reported by Sherwood et al.
- (1962).
-
- All the subjects who had previous experience with LSD claimed the effects of
- the seeds were similar to those of LSD. Transient nausea was the most
- commonly reported side effect, beginning about one half hour after ingestion
- and lasting a few minutes to several hours. Other reported side effects not
- commonly found with LSD were a drowsiness or torpor (possibly due to a
- glucoside also present in the seeds) and a coldness in the extremities
- suggesting that the ergine content of the seeds may be causing some vascular
- constriction. (If this is the case, there may be some danger of ergot
- poisoning resulting from excessive dosages of the seeds.) The only untoward
- psychic effect was a prolonged (eight hours) disassociative reaction which
- was terminate with chlorpromazine [Thorazine]. The possibility of prolonged
- adverse reactions to the psychological effects of the seeds is essentially
- the same as with LSD, and the same precautions should be observed (Cohen &
- Ditman, 1963).
-
- .....
-
- IPOMOEA.003 7-MAY-90
-
- Additional Notes:
- Ipomoea purpurea is sold as the "Heavenly Blue" variety of morning glory.
- "Ipomoea tricolor" is the trade name used for that variety. It is identical
- with the species of morning glory described above.
-
- The seeds must be chewed or ground in order to be effective. Soaking the
- ground seeds in water for several hours, filtering out the grounds,
- and then drinking only the water portion of the mixture can reduce
- some of the stomach-upset symptoms if such occur.
-
- Unpleasant LSD and morning glory trips can be smoothed out or even
- stopped by taking niacin (in the form of nicotinic acid, vitamin B-3 or
- "niacin"). Vitamin C has been shown to reduce the incidence of paranoia and
- prevent depletion of the vitamin from the adrenal glands during LSD trips.
-
- There have been reports that commercially available packets of morning
- glory seeds from some distributors are coated with fungicides or
- other chemicals to increase shelf life or discourage the practice
- of eating them. Seeds from plants grown in one's own garden will
- be safe as long as you do not spray them with insecticides.
-
- The last few notes about Niacin and Vitamin C are based on
- a paperback edition of Hoffer & Osmonds "The Psychedelics"
-
- It's pretty clear that the latin names of this plant are somewhat
- confused (which is typical). Ipomoea purpurea, Ipomoea tricolor,
- Ipomoea violacea and Ipomoea rubro-caerulea are all the same plant.
-
- The other variety of morning glory, "Ololiuhqui" has at least two
- Latin names as well: Rivea corymbosa, and Turbina corymbosa.
-
- .....
-
- "Recreational use of Ergoline Alkaloids from Argyreia Nervosa"
- William E. Shawcross
- Journal of Psychedelic Drugs Vol. 15(4) Oct-Dec 1983
-
- CHEMISTRY AND EFFECT OF THE SEEDS
- The Hawaiian baby woodrose entered the drug scene in 1965 with the
- publication of a paper in "Science" entitled "Ergoline Alkaloids in Tropical
- Wood Roses" by Hylin and Watson. The wide circulation of this journal assured
- thorough dissemination of the information they presented. They wrote, "The
- possible health and legal problems associated with the presence of similar
- compounds in commercially cultivated plants led us to examine the ornamental
- wood roses, Ipomoea tuberosa and Argyreia nervosa, both common Hawaiian crops
- that have assumed commerical importance as components of [the] dried tropical
- flower industry." Comparing the seeds of these two plants with those of the
- morning glory varieties Pearly Gates and Heavenly Blue, they found the
- following yield of alkaloids (mg of alkaloid/g of seed material):
-
- Heavenly Blue 0.813
- Pearly Gates 0.423
- I. tuberosa [None]
- A. nervosa 3.050
-
- The seed of A. nervosa is the best plant source of ergoline alkaloids
- discovered; it contains approximately 3 mg of alkaloidal material per gram of
- seed. Approximately one-eighth of this is lysergamide.
-
- Hylin and Watson found the major alkaloidal constituents in A. nervosa seeds to
- be ergine (780 mcg/g of fresh seed) and isoergine and penniclavine (555 mcg).
-
- [Note: Argyreia nervosa has NO history of shamanic use as a hallucinogen]
-
- This is an excerpt from the article cited.
- There's no record of Argyreia being used as an hallucinogen in
- India, but it was used externally as some kind of skin medicine.
- There's been speculation that Argyreia might have been a component
- of "Soma", but there's no evidence for that, apparently.
- Because there's not a long history of human usage of Argyreia,
- it may be that there are glycosides not mentioned here that
- take effect at higher doses or might cause stomach upset, tachycardia
- etc. The article mentioned intestinal complaints in one or two
- cases at higher experimental doses.
-
- *****
-
- CHEMISTRY:
-
- lysergic acid diethylamide _is_ lysergic acid diethylamide (or...
- N,N-diethyl-D-lysergamide or...
- 9,10-Didehydo-N,N-diethyl-6-methylergoline-8B-carboxamide).
-
- Only one stereoisomer (the d-) is psychoactive. Thus, racemic (l/d 50-50 mix)
- lsd shows half the potency of the dextro form. In synthesis it is possible
- to recover the l-form for the lysergic acid.
-
- Lysergic Acid Diethylamide is LSD rather than LAD because the German word
- for acid is saeure (sp).
-
- Ergot is a product of the fungus Claviceps purpurea. The bio-active
- ingredients of ergot are all derivatives of lysergic acid. LSD is a
- semisynthetic derivative of lysergic acid. Thus LSD is an
- "ergot"-like substance.
-
- From the Merck Index:
-
- 5505. Lysergamide. 9,10-Didehydro-6-methylergoline-
- 8beta-carboxamide; lysergic acid amide; ergine. C16H17N3O;
- mol wt 267.32. C 71.88%, H 6.41%, N 15.72%, O 5.99%.
- Isoln from _Rivea_corymbosa_(L.) and from _Ipomoea_tricolor_
- Cav., _Convolvulaceae_: Hofmann, Tscherter, _Experientia_ 16,
- 414 (1964). Prepn from lysergic acid hydrazide: Ainsworth,
- U.S. pat. 2,756,235 (1956 to Lilly); from lysergic acid and
- phosgene-dimethylformamide complex: Patelli, Bernardi,
- U.S. pat. 3,141,887 (1964 to Farmitalia). Microbiological
- production: Rutschmann, Kobel, U.S. pat. 3,219,545 (1965
- to Sandoz).
-
- H. CONH2
- '. /
- / \
- / \
- || |
- || N
- /\\ /\ / \
- / \\ / \ / CH3
- || | | \
- || | | H
- \ // \ /
- \// \/
- | ||
- | ||
- HN-------
-
- Prisms from methanol. dec 242deg. [alpha](5461)(20) + 15% (c = 0.5 in
- pyridine).
- Methanesulfonate, C7H21N3O4S, prisms from methanol +
- acetone, dec 232deg.
- Note: This is a controlled substance (depressant) listed in
- the U.S. code of Federal Regulations, Title 21 Part 1308.13
- (1987).
-
- 5506. Lysergic Acid. 9,10-Didehydro-6-methylergoline-
- 8-carboxylic acid. C16H16N2O2; mol wt 268.32. C 71.62%,
- H 6.01%, N 10.44%, O 11.93%. Lysergic acid and isolyser-
- gic acid are the main cleavage products formed on alkaline
- hydrolysis of the alkaloids which are characteristic of ergot.
- Jacobs, Craig et al., _J._Biol._Chem._ 104, 547 (1934); 125, 289
- (1938); 130, 399 (1939); 145, 487 (1942); _J._Org._Chem._ 10,
- 76 (1945). High-yield production by _Claviceps_paspali_:
- Arcamone et al., _Proc._Roy._Soc._ (London), _Ser._B_, 155, 26
- (1961). total synthesis: Kornfeld et al., _J._Am._Chem._Soc._
- 76, 5256 (1954); 78, 3087 (1956); M. Julia et al., _Tetrahedron_
- _letters_ 1969, 1569; V.W. Armstrong et al., ibid. 1976, 4311;
- W. Oppolzer et al., _Helv._Chem._Acta_ 64, 478 (1981); R.
- Ramage et al., _Tetrahedron_ 37, Suppl. 9, 157 (1981); J.
- Rebek, D.F. Tai, _Tetrahedron_Letters_ 24, 859 (1983). Ste-
- reochemistry: Stoll et al., _Helv._Chem._Acta 37, 2039 (1954);
- Stenlake, _J._Chem._Soc._ 1955, 1626; Leeman, Fabbri, _Helv._
- _Chim._Acta_ 42, 2696 (1959). Absolute configuration: Stad-
- ler, Hoffman, ibid. 45, 2005 (1962).
-
- H. COOH
- '. /
- / \
- / \
- || |
- || N
- /\\ /\ / \
- / \\ / \ / CH3
- || | | \
- || | | H
- \ // \ /
- \// \/
- | ||
- | ||
- HN-------
-
- Haxagonal scales, plates with one or two moles H20 from
- water, mp 240deg (dec). [alpha](D)(20) + 40deg (c = 0.5 in pyridine).
- Behaves as an acid and base, pKa 3.44, pKb 7.68. Moder-
- ately sol in pyridine. Sparingly sol in water and in neutral
- organic solvents; sol in NaOH, NH4OH, Na2CO3, and HCL
- solns. Slighly sol in dil H2SO4.
- Methyl ester, thin leaflets from benzene, mp 168deg.
- Note: This is a controlled substance (depressant) listed in
- the U.S. code of Federal Regulations, title 21 Part 1308.13
- (1987).
-
- 5507. Lysergide. 9,10-Didehydro-N,N-diethyl-6-meth-
- ylergoline-8beta-carboxamide; N,N-diethyl-D-lysergamide; D-
- lysergic acid diethylamide; LSD; LSD-25; Lysergsaure Di-
- ethylamid. C20H25N3O; mol wt 323.42. C 74.27%, H 7.79%,
- N 12.99%, O 4.95%. Microbal formation by _Claviceps_pas-
- pali_ over the hydroxyethylamide; Arcamone et al., _Proc._
- Roy._Soc._(London) 155B, 26 (1961). Partial synthesis: Stoll,
- Hofmann, _Helv._Chim._Acta_ 26, 944 (1943); 38, 421 (1955).
- Industrial prepn: Pioch; Garbrecht, U.S. pats. 2,736,728;
- 2,774,763 (both 1956 to Lilly); Patelli, Bernardi, U.S. pat.
- 3,141,887 (1964 to Farmitalia). Isotope-labeled LSD: Stoll
- et al., _Helv._Chim._Acta_ 37, 820 (1954). Toxicity data: E.
- Rothlin, _Ann._N.Y._Acad._Sci._ 66, 668 (1957). Review: Hof-
- fer, _Clin._Pharmacol._Ther._ 6, 183 (1965). Book: _The_Use_of_
- LSD_in_Psychotherapy_and_Alcoholism_, H.A. Abramson, Ed.
- (Bobbs-Merrill, Indianapolis, 1967) 697 pp.
-
- / C2H5
- H. CON
- '. / \ C2H5
- / \
- / \
- || |
- || N
- /\\ /\ / \
- / \\ / \ / CH3
- || | | \
- || | | H
- \ // \ /
- \// \/
- | ||
- | ||
- HN-------
-
- Pointed prisms from benzene, mp 80-85 degs. [alpha](D)(20) + 17deg (c =
- 0.5 in pyridine). uv max (ethanol): 311 nm (E(1 cm)(1%) 257).
- LD50 in mice, rats, rabbits (mg/kg): 46, 16.5, 0.3 i.v.
- (Rothlin).
- D-Tartrate, C46H64N6O10, solvated, elongated prisoms from
- methanol, mp 198-200deg. [alpha](D)(20) + 30 deg. Soluble in water.
- Caution: This is a controlled substance (hallucinogen)
- listed in the U.S. Code of Federal Regulations, Title 21 Part
- 1308.11 (1987).
- USE: In biochemical research as an antagonist to serotonin.
- Has been used experimentally as adjunct in study and treat-
- ment of mental disorders.
-
- NOTES: Not guaranteed to be free from typos.
- Underlines are supposed to be italic (ie book/journal titles, etc)
- Alpha, beta, and deg are the greek letters and the degree symbol
- [alpha](D)(20) means a greek letter in [] followed by a subscript
- and then a superscript (I don't know *WHAT* this actually is)
- The chemical structures are almost exactly what the Merck manual has
- drawn. Almost nothing was lost in the conversion to ASCII.
-
- *****
-
- MECHANISM OF ACTION:
-
- (Note: the mechanism of action of LSD and other psychedelics is uncertain.)
-
- From a chapter titled Hallucinogens and Other Psychotomimetics: Biological
- Mechanisms by S.J.Watson
-
- "The current thesis of the effect of indole hallucinogens on
- 5-hydroxytrypamine might be stated as follows: LSD acts to preferentially
- inhibit serotonergic cell firing and seems to spare postsynaptic serotnergic
- receptors. This preference is shared by other simillar hallucinogens but in
- a limited fashion. Nonhallucinogenic analogs of LSD show no preference.
- These results suggest that there are two different steric conformation of
- serotonergic receptors, one of which has higher affinity for LSD than the
- other. In general, 5-ht is an inhibitory transmitter; thus, when its
- activity is decreased, the next neuron in the chain is freed from inhibition
- and becomes more active. Since serotnergic systems appear to be intimately
- involved int eh control of sensation, sleep, attention, and mood, it may be
- possible to explain the actions of LSD and other hallucinogens by their
- disinhibition of these critical systems.
-
- There is also evidence for interaction with dopaminergic systems.
-
- .....
-
- LSD acts as a 5HT autoreceptor agonist in the raphe nucleus. These
- autoreceptors are typically considered to be 5HT1As. It also acts as a 5HT2
- agonist, which is thought to be the main site of hallucinogenic activity.
- It's probably best called a a mixed 5HT2/5HT1 receptor partial agonist.
-
- I don't know of its effects on dopamine. Wouldn't be surprised if it has
- 'em; the systems aren't really functionally separable. The DA effects
- wouldn't be necessary for hallucinogenic activity, I'd bet.
-
- .....
-
- (From Snyder, "Drugs and the Brain", 1986, Sci Am Books Inc., Reprinted w/o
- permission, blah, blah, blah... )
-
- In more recent studies, Aghajanian has focuses not on the serotonin neu-
- rons of the raphe nuclei but on the norepinephrine neurons of the locus
- coeruleus. As we saw in Chapter 6, the locus coeruleus cell bodies give rise to
- axons that ramify all over the brain and provide the majority of the norepi-
- nephrine neuronal input in most brain regions. Amphetamine releases norepi-
- nephrine from these nerve terminals by diplacing the norepinephrine from the
- neurotransmitter storage vesicles. Presumably, the overall influence of amphet-
- amine on brain function is therefore somewhat different than what occurs
- when the locus coeruleus fires rapidly. The amphetamine-induced seepage of
- norepinephrine out of nerve terminals probably elicts a milder type of activa-
- tion than does the repetitive and presumably more robust ejection of norepi-
- nephrine that occurs with rapid firing of the locus coeruleus. Drug-induced
- changes in animal behavior support this conceptual model. Amphetamine elic-
- its behavioral activation, represented by the rats or mice running about the
- cage. In contrast, electrical stimulation of the locus coeruleus produces a more
- dramatic startle response. It is difficult to observe a rat and make inferences
- about what the animal is feeling, but rats in whom the locus coeruleus has been
- stimulated seem to go into a state of panic. They stare about, hyper-responsive
- to all stimuli in the enviornment, whether visual, auditory, or tactile.
- Rats show the same hyper-responsiveness to environmental-stimuli--
- jumping abruptly at the sound of fingers snapping or in response to a puff of
- air in the face--when they have been treated with a psychedelic drug. And as
- you will recall, hyper-responsiveness to sensory stimuli of all modalities is
- just what one observes in humans under the influence of psychedelic drugs. At-
- tracted by the similarity between the behavior of rats on LSD and their reac-
- tion to stimulation of the locus coeruleus, Aghajanian embarked in 1980 upon
- a series of studies to evaluate how psychedelic drugs affect the locus
- coeruleus. He showed that any kind of sensory stimulation--sight, sound, smell,
- taste, or tactile sensation--speeds up the firing of locus coeruleus neurons in
- rats, and that the accelerated firing is greatly enhanced by treating the
- animals with LSD or mescaline. In contrast, nonpsychedelic drugs, such as
- amphetamines and antidepressants, fail to exert this effect. Moreover, the LSD
- analogue methysergide, which has no psychedelic effects in humans, is
- correspondingly ineffective in enhancing the reactivity of locus coeruleus
- neurons to sensory stimulation.
- Although psychedelic drugs increase the response of locus coeruleus cells to
- sensory stimulation, they do not cause the neurons to fire spontaneously in the
- absence of such stimulation. Moreover, directly applying LSD or mescaline to
- locus coeruleus neurons does not enhance the neurons' reponse to sensory
- stimulation. We must therefore conclude that the effect of psychedelic drugs on
- sensory stimulation is indirect--the drugs presumably interact with a different
- set of neurons that in turn make direct contact with the locus coeruleus.
- What is particularly fascinating about Aghajanian's findings is how nicely
- they correspond to what we know about the effects of psychedelic drugs in
- humans, and how readily they explain the way psychedelic drugs accentuate all
- our sensory perceptions. The locus coeruleus is a funneling mechanism that
- integrates all sensory input. Viewed in this way, the observations of
- Aghajanian can explain synesthesia. If the locus coeruleus lumps all types of
- sensory messages--from sights, sounds, tactile pressures, smells, tastes--into
- a generalized excitation system within the brain, one can readily appreciate
- that stimulation of the locus coeruleus will cause the drug user to feel that
- sensations are crossing the boundaries between different modalities.
- Aghajanian's research may also illuminate how LSD influences the user's
- sence of self. The greatly accelerated firing of the locus coeruleus presumably
- provokes a powerful, patterned release of norepinephrine from nerve terminals
- throughout the brain. As we discussed earlier, the consequent alerting action
- would be much more pronounced than what occurs with the far more gradual
- leaking out of norepinephrine produced when amphetamine displaces the
- transmitter from the storage vesicles. This extremely enhanced level of alert-
- ness might possibly account for the "transendent" mental state produced by
- psychedelic drugs. In other words, in a state of such heightened awareness, the
- drug user may become conscious of an "inner self" to which he or she is
- normally oblivious.
-
- Did that answer any of your questions? Probably not, but I thought it was
- interesting.
-
- P.S. Snyder has tripped before =)
-
- .....
-
- >>Lysergic-acid diethylamide
- >>
- >>When ingested into the human body, LSD act as 5-HT (Serotonin) autoreceptor
- >>inhibitor, thus it is a 5-HT agonist. LSD increases the level of active
- >>5-HT molecules by disaffecting their autoreceptors (a safeguard type feature
- >>in the brain which reduces levels of certain neurotransmitter and the like).
-
- That "thus" in the first sentence should be an "and." I'm not certain
- what "disaffecting" should be (autoreceptors' only true loyalty is
- to the laws of chemistry & physics) for the second sentence to be
- true.
-
- The autoreceptors in question are 5-HT1As. 5-HT2s, which are not
- autoreceptors and which hallucinogens agonize, seem to be the more
- important ones for hallucinogenic activity. Hallucinogens need not
- affect 1As directly (some definitely don't). However, 5-HT2 receptor
- activation seems to facilitate presynaptic 1A function (such that,
- for example, hallucinogen use produces rapid 5-HT2 downregulation
- which, in turn, decreases 5-HT1A function). So hallucinogens would
- inhibit autorecetpor activity, but not necessarily directly.
-
- >LSD also has effects on 5-HT1C receptors, and its not entirely sure what the
- >specific receptor mechanism is -- there's also the question of why the
- >psychological effects seem to last much longer than the presence of the LSD
- >molecule. One thing that is fairly sure is that LSD shuts down the firing of
- >the seratonin neurons in the raphe, though.
-
- It is difficult to separate 1Cs from 2s because of their great similarity.
- However, hallucinogens seem to be all 2 & 1C agonists. Molecules which (like
- LSD) are partial 2 agonists, and which (unlike LSD) are 1c antagonists
- are not hallucinogenic.
-
- I believe that the effects of DOI (and probably LSD) on firing in the
- raphe nucleus are not blocked by 5-HT2 antagonists (like ketanserin),
- implying that these effects are not mediated by 5-HT2 receptors.
- Oddly enough, ritanserin (which antagonizes 2 and 1C) doesn't block
- 'em either. That's kind of mysterious to me.
-
- > 5-HT has been implicated in
- >>certain behaviors, notably dreaming and sleep, which explains the hallucinatory
- >>effect. We are in effect dreaming while completely awake and aware.
-
- >Actually, a better explanation is the increased firing of the locus coereleus
- >by its disinhibition due to the neurons in the raphe slowing down (since you
- >are inhibiting an inhibitory neuron the result is excitation...). The l.c.
- >has been associated with being a "sensory highway" in the brain, and has also
- >been associated with feelings of anxiety, and theorized that its invovled
- >with depression. My guess is that the hallucinations and stimulatory effects
- >of LSD come from potentiating the l.c., while the effect on the 5-HT neurons
- >in the raphe is responsible for its entheogenic effect on the mind.
-
- This isn't the full story since this decrease in firing (in the raphe) is still
- produced by hallucinogens even after chronic treatment with hallucinogens.
- Since tolerance does develop to hallucinogens, we would have
- expected to see it in the firing. Of course, rate of firing and amount
- of 5-HT released _are_ two different things. Besides, tolerance may
- occur via another route.
-
- *****
-
- RELATED COMPOUNDS:
-
- Related compounds are the indole hallucinogens including DMT
- (dimethyl-tryptamine), DET (diethyl-), etc.; psilocybin; lysergic acid. DMT
- is very fast acting, lasting less than an hour. Psilocybin, found in
- hallucinogenic (aka magic or mexican) mushrooms, has effects similar to LSD
- but they work for approximately half the duration. These are all indole
- derivatives like the neurotransmitter serotonin, 5-hydroxy-tryptamine.
- "Indole" is the name of the 6-carbon ring attached to the 5-ring containing
- a nitrogen. The lysergic acid molecule contains an indole structure plus
- additional rings.
-
- LSD's two ethyl groups hanging off the amine may be replaced with
- other carbon chains for compounds with different durations, potencies,
- and effects.
-
- While LSD is semi-synthetic, DMT and psilocybin are found in nature.
- See the sections on BOTANY and ANTHROPOLOGY for info on related
- natural (plant) compounds and their uses. Also see the Psilocybe
- Mushroom and DMT FAQs for more information on these compounds.
-
- *****
-
- MANUFACTURE:
-
- Forget it. Precursors (ergot alkaloids, used medicinally for migraines and
- ob/gyn due to their vasoconstrictive effects) are closely watched. (They
- are obtained through commercially cultured ergot fungus; one could
- theoretically extract lsyergic amides from morning glory or Hawaiian wood
- rose seeds.) (Though there are routes to synthesize lysergic acid from
- "scratch", these are complicated also.) Other typically needed chemicals
- are very dangerous. Serious experience in organic chemistry lab would be
- necessary. If you have to ask where to find the recipes, you don't know
- enough about chemistry to try it. (For the curious: the _Anarchists
- Cookbook_ is a bad place to start. _Psychedelic Chemistry_ is better, the
- patent office or chem. lit. better.) And you'll probably trip during
- manufacture if you actually succeed. Its easier and safer to buy it on the
- black market.
- .....
-
- >In the Journal of Psychoactive Drugs, 1980, there is an article
- >on an ergot derivative used in obstetrics which is an hallucinogen.
- >Although the dose required is ten times the ED50 (.2 mg) no
- >significant ill effects were reported.
- >I believe the name of this drug is methyl ergovine(?) The drug
- >without the methyl group is supposed to be more effective. It
- >was (is?) a Sandoz drug, for those with a PDR.
-
- Ergonovine and methylergonovine are both oxytocic agents: they increase
- uterine tone and are used (rarely) to assist in delivery and (more
- frequently) to stop post-partum uterine hemorrhage. Less frequently,
- they can be used to abort a migraine headache. If they have any
- hallucinogenic effects, it is certainly a well-kept secret.
-
- I would be quite concerned about taking 10x the therapeutic dose
- of a drug like ergonovine, since it can cause arterial spasm and
- precordial distress even in healthy persons, and intense vaso-
- constriction and gangrene can follow from an overdose. These
- are not drugs to fool around with.
-
- Another related drug, 1-methyl-methylergonovine, or methysergide
- (Sansert), is used in migraine prophylaxis, and is claimed to have
- LSD-like actions when high doses are taken. The methyl group on
- the indole nitrogen reduces the drug's vasoconstrictive actions.
- Chronic, uninterrupted use of the drug causes a fibrosis of the
- heart valves and the lungs.
-
- .....
-
- >You mean to tell me that the people who make LSD have a GC/MS in their
- >basement and know how to use it properly.
-
- No, but they probably run the GC/MS where they work and can sneak samples
- in -- or else know someone in a chem department somewhere that can do it
- for them.
-
- >I had no idea that the field was
- >so high tech.
-
- LSD is not particularly easy to synthesize. It certainly takes a little bit
- more than 2nd year O-Chem to do it. There are various synthetic methods
- floating around the net, along with methods published in _psychedelic
- chemistry_ but i gather that they're all more difficult than some relatively
- recent methods...
-
- .....
-
- When I saw the subjects relating to the synthesis of LSD, I knew the
- information would be outdated. It's humourous to see people who think
- they're in the know giving out information that was outdated even in the 70's.
- Lysergic acid amides are commonly made by a simple and efficient procedure
- using POCl3 and the desired amine in CHCl3 solution. I doubt that this
- procedure is used by the majority of clandestine chemists, but since I
- don't know any, I wouldn't know. By the description of the procedure,
- it's simple and uses relatively safe reagents. (I have a reference, but
- not handy...) And you won't find it in any obvious places even in the
- most recent Merck because LSD is not the product of focus in the article.
- This is why I doubt that unsavvy clandestine chemists would be using this
- procedure. But according to the article, the method has a broad scope
- and has been used by Nichols and Oberlender for some other lysergic acid
- amides. (The article in question regards 9,10 saturated derivatives
- tested for emetic properties.) It's time to stop turning to those stupid
- "how to make your very own drug" guides and learn how to read real chemsitry
- literature. If you can't, don't bother...
- Even the synthesis of lysergic acid is outdated. Rebek has described
- an extremely elegant synthesis of methyl lysergate from L-tryptophan
- which gives only the natural isomer of lysergic acid. It's still a
- several step procedure, but most of the reagents are fairly common and the
- yields are greatly improved over past syntheses.
- This brings me to an interesting side-note. Several years ago, analogues
- of LSD that were 2 and 3 times as potent as LSD were synthesized. These
- went largely unnoticed and would most likely prove of little interest
- to clandestine chemists because LSD was the precursor used and the loss
- in synthesis outweighed the gain in potency. But using Rebek's synthesis,
- one could simply alter the procedure slightly and intorduce the groups
- that make the compounds more potent. When the 6N-methyl group is replaced
- by ethyl or allyl, it becomes 2 and 3 times as potent respectively.
- I am posting this for general information. I may post references if I
- decide it would be prudent. Requests will be ignored and I ask you not to
- send e-mail requesting references. But if you just want to chat about them
- and maybe speculate on subjective effects or other avenues of substitution...
- I don't know if I'll ever see the day that research in this area is open
- and legal, but I'd love to...
-
- *****
-
- DRUG TESTING:
-
- No risk. Its not looked for, hard to find, and transient.
-
- .....
-
- "A maximum concentration of 2-8 ng/ml [Plasma concentration of LSD]
- was reached 1.0-1.25 h after an oral dose of 160 ug.
- ...[A] value of 2.9 h for the elimination half-life of LSD from
- plasma [was reached].
- [Upshall, D.G., Wailling, D.G.: The determination of LSD in
- human plasma following oral administration.
- Clinica Chimica Acta 36, 67-73 (1972)]
-
- Second of all, LSD and its metabolites are detectable in the urine
- for much longer than one hour.
-
- "LSD and its metabolites were still detectable in human urine for
- as long as 4 days after the ingestion of 0.2 mg of the drug.
- [Faed, E.M., McLeod, W.R.: A urine screening test of lysergide.
- Journal of Chromatographic Science. 11, 4-6 (1973)]
-
- Note that standard, cheap initial drug screening does not use
- chromatography or mass-spectrometry, and does not look for LSD.
-
- .....
-
- There were rumors going around that LSD could be detected
- by drug tests fo thirty days. I think this reference and
- abstract makes it clear that it is probably 4 days, max.
- (see the end of the abstract)
-
- IDNUM 03319915
- TYPE Journal paper
- DATE 880715
- AUTHOR Heng Keang Lim; Andrenyak, D.; Francom, P.; Foltz, R.L.; Jones, R.T.
- Center for Human Toxicology, Utah Univ., Salt Lake City, UT, USA
- TITLE Quantification of LSD and N-demethyl-LSD in urine by gas
- chromatography/resonance electron capture ionization mass
- spectrometry
- SOURCE Analytical Chemistry; vol.60, no.14; 15 July 1988; pp. 1420-5
- SUBJECT chromatography; electron capture; mass spectroscopic chemical
- analysis; organic compounds; quantification; gas chromatography;
- resonance electron capture ionisation mass spectrometry; LSD;
- N-demethyl-LSD; urine; lysergic acid diethylamide; human; in vitro;
- in vivo; aromatic hydroxylation; drug; metabolite;
- N-tri-fluoroacetyl derivatives; calibration curves; urinary
- concentrations; adult volunteer; excretion; elimination half-lives;
- 4 to 6 hrs; 8 to 10 hrs
- Numerical data: time 1.4E+04 to 2.2E+04 s; time 2.9E+04 to 3.6E+04 s
- Class codes: A8280M; A8280B; A3470
- CODEN ANCHAM
- ABSTRACT Demethylation of lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD) in the human has
- been demonstrated, both in vitro and in vivo, and aromatic
- hydroxylation at positions 13 and 14 has been tentatively
- identified. A gas chromatography/resonance electron capture
- ionization mass spectrometry (GC/MS) assay for LSD and
- N-demethyl-LSD in urine has been developed, in which the drug and
- its metabolite are converted to their N-tri-fluoroacetyl derivatives
- prior to GC/MS analysis. Linear and reproducible calibration curves
- have been obtained for LSD concentrations from 0.05 to 5.0 ng/mL,
- and for N-demethyl-LSD concentrations from 0.03 to 5.0 ng/mL. The
- assay was used to determine the urinary concentrations of LSD and
- N-demethyl-LSD following administration of a single oral dose of the
- drug (1 mu g/kg) to an adult volunteer. The rates of excretion of
- LSD and N-demethyl-LSD reached maxima in urine collected at time
- intervals of 4-6 and 8-10 h after administration, respectively. The
- elimination half-lives for LSD and N-demethyl-LSD were 3.6 and 10.0
- h, respectively
- MISCELLANEOUS
- Treatment: experimental
- Anal. Chem. (USA)
- Abstract number(s): A89037987
- ISSN: 0003-2700
- Refs: 15
-
- .....
-
- If you smoke only occasionally (once or twice a month) you are likely
- to pass a urine test within no more than 3-5 days. If you smoke several
- times a week, you should allow at least 3-4 weeks, and if you smoke
- several time daily, you may need 6 weeks or more (84 days is the record).
- However, there are ways that can help you pass a urine test on shorter
- notice. For info, contact California NORML, 2215-R Market St. #278,
- San Francisco CA 94114; (415) 563-5858.
-
- What they are most likely to detect about a diluted sample is incorrect
- temperature. More and more labs are checking to see that the specimen is
- within the range 92-100 degrees F. To my knowledge, no one looks at cholrine
- or fluorine. Howver, there has been some talk of testing creatanin levels,
- which can tell if urine has been diluted.
- Actually, your friend took an unnecessary risk in diluting his sample
- in the first place. The fact is that occasional marijuana use (say, on the
- order of once a month or two weeks) is typically detectable only 2-5 days.
- A lot of occasional users get really paranoid because they hear of marijuana]
- staying around 4-6 weeks, but this is true only for regular users who smoke
- every day. For info about urine testing, send to Cal. NORML, 2215-R Market
- St. #278, San Francisco CA 94114 (415) 563-5858.
-
- .....
-
- Spinal taps are not particularly useful (cerebro-spinal fluid doesn't
- concentrate LSD or metabolites) and are never done under any
- circumstances: they are painful and dangerous.
-
- .....
-
- You might want to mention that Abbie Hoffman's _Steal This Urine Test_
- has a table which claims lsd is detectable for 40 days. I'm almost sure
- this was a typo.
- .....
-
- > 1] How long can LSD be detected in the body?
-
- This varies by the test being used, the detection limit placed on the test,
- the point of collection and type of the sample fluid, the amount of LSD that
- was taken, and the individual in question.
-
- Assuming the testers are using an RIA screening test with the cutoff set at
- 0.1 ng/ml and assuming that the user has recently emptied their bladder,
- then the detection limit for one hit (100 ug) is normally around 30 hours.
- Each doubling of the initial amount will add about 5 hours. Thus taking 8
- hits will leave a user vulnerable for approximately 2 days. (NOTE: This is
- based on the data in [7])
-
- > 2] What exact form of test can be used to detect LSD in the body? There
- are a number of tests which can be used to detect LSD in the body.
-
- Abuscreen, a product of Roche Diagnostic Systems, is a series of
- RadioImmunoAssay (RIA) tests, one of which is used to detect LSD and its
- metabolites in whole blood, serum (blood), urine and stomach contents [1].
- RIA can in theory be used to detect quantities as small as 0.020 nanograms
- (ng) per milliliter (ml) of sample [2]. Laboratory tests have shown that
- RIA results are accurate down to at least 0.1 ng/ml [3]. The manufacturer
- recommends limiting the cutoff to 0.5 ng/ml.
-
- EMIT, a product of Syva Corporation, is another series of tests, one of
- which can be used to detect LSD and its metabolites in serum and urine.
- EMIT stands for Enzyme Multiplied Immunoassay Technique.
-
- Both EMIT and Abuscreen are "positive/negative" response tests (much like
- pregnancy tests) which require periodic equipment calibration and consume
- chemicals for each test performed. A basic battery of tests costs approx.
- $15-$25 per person [4]. The basic tests (recommended by NIDA) include
- marijuana, cocaine, amphetamines, opiates, and phencyclidine (PCP).
- Normally, unless an (employer) specifically requests the test, an LSD assay
- is not run.
-
- Both Roche and Syva recommend confirmation of positive results by using a
- different test. The usual method of confirming positive results is some
- form of chromatography. These include High Performance Thin Layer
- Chromatography (HPTLC)[3], and different forms of Gas Chromatography/Mass
- Spectrometry (GC/MS)[5][6][7][8][9]. HPTLC and GC/MS can be used to give
- quantitative results as opposed to the Boolean results from EMIT or
- Abuscreen. Laboratory tests have shown that GC/MS test for LSD in urine[6]
- and blood[7] can be accurate down to 0.1 ng/ml. The cost for confirmation
- of a positive screening test is approximately $50-60.
-
- Positive results to either EMIT and RIA are held to be "probable cause" by
- U.S. courts. GC/MS results are held to be "proof" by U.S. courts.
-
- > I am asking for an actual text message containing a short, precise >
- description of each test,
-
- Immunoassays chemicals are created by injecting animals (rabbits, sheep,
- donkey, etc) with the drug to be tested for and an albumin which force the
- animal to produce antibodies. The antibodies are then removed from the
- animal, purified and bottled. In RIA tests, the antibodies are then added
- to the fluid sample with a radioactively labeled chemical. Any of the drug
- (or similar chemicals) found in a sample that is being tested will react
- with this glop and by measuring the radioactivity, the amount of drugs can
- be determined [2][10].
-
- > 3] How can such a test be beaten?
-
- While there is some literature on adulterating urine samples to produce
- false negative results [11], there has been little written that applies
- specifically to the LSD screening tests.
-
- The immunsoassay tests vary in their specificity. Some display a relatively
- low cross-reactivity[13], others a high cross-reactivity[14]. The exact
- metabolites of LSD in humans have not been fully determined yet, though
- animal studies have been done. The only verified human metabolite I could
- find in the literature was N-demethyl-LSD[6] but I did not check all the
- references.
-
- FOOTNOTES:
- [1]
- Altunkaya, D; Smith R.N.
- "Evaluation of a commercial radioimmunoassay kit for the detection of
- lysergide (LSD) in serum, whole blood, urine, and stomach contents"
- Forensic Science International. v47n2, September 1990, p113-21.
- [2]
- Taunton-Rigby, A.; Sher, S.E.; Kelley, P.R.
- "Lysergic Acid Diethylamide: Radioimmunoassay"
- Science. v181, July 13 1973, p165-6.
- [3]
- McCarron, M.M.; Walberg, C.B.; Baselt, R.C.
- "Confirmation of LSD intoxication by analysis of serum and urine."
- Journal of Analytical Toxicology. v14n3, May-June 1990, p165-7.
- [4]
- Berg, E.
- "Drug-testing methods: what you should know."
- Safety & Health. v142n6, Dec 1990, p52-6.
- [5]
- Lim, H.K.; Andrenyak, D.; Francom, P.; Bridges, R.R.; Foltz, R.L.
- "Determination of LSD in urine by capillary column gas chromatography
- and electron impact mass spectrometry."
- Journal of Analytical Toxicology. v12n1, Jan-Feb 1988, p1-8.
- [6]
- Lim, H.K.; Andrenyak, D.; Francom, P.
- "Quantification of LSD and N-demethyl-LSD in urine by gas chromatography/
- resonance electron capture ionization mass spectrometry."
- Analytical Chemistry. v60, July 15 1988, p1420-25.
- [7]
- Papac, D.I.; Foltz, R.L.
- "Measurement of lysergic acid dietylamide (LSD) in human plasma by gas
- chromatography/negative ion chemical ionization mass spectrometry."
- Journal of Analytical Toxicology. v14n3, May-June 1990, p189-90.
- [8]
- Paul, B.D.; Mitchell J.M.; Burbage, R.; Moy, M; Sroka, R.
- "Gas chromatographic-electron-impact mass fragmentometric determination
- of lysergic acid diethylamide in urine."
- Journal of Chromatography. v529n1, July 13, 1990, p103-12.
- [9]
- Blum, L.M.; Carenzo, E.F.; Rieders, F.
- "Determination of lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD) in urine by instrumental
- high-performance thin-layer chromatography."
- Journal of Analytical Toxicology. v14n5, Sep-Oct 1990, p285-7.
- [10]
- Ratcliffe, W.A.; Fletcher, S.M.; Moffat, A.C.; et. al.
- "Radioimmunoassay of Lysergic Acid Diethylamide (LSD) in serum and urine
- by using antisera of different specificities."
- Clinical Chemistry. v23n2, Feb 1977, p169-74.
- [11]
- Cody, J.T.; Schwarzhoff, R.H.
- "Impact of adulterants on RIA analysis of urine for drugs of abuse."
- Journal of Analytical Toxicology. v13n5, Sep-Oct 1989, p277-84.
- [12]
- Klonoff, D.C.
- "Acute water intoxication as a complication of urine drug testing in the
- workplace."
- Journal of the American Medical Association. v265n1, Jan 2 1991, p84-6.
- [13]
- Christie J.; White, M.W.; Wiles, J.M.
- "A chromatographic method for the detection of LSD in biological liquids."
- Journal of Chromatography. v120n2, May 26, 1976, p496-501.
- [14]
- Twitchet, P.J.; Fletcher, S.M.; Sullivan, A.T.; Moffat, A.C.
- "Analysis of LSD in human body fluids by high-performance liquid chromatography,
- fluorescence spectroscopy and radioimmunoassay."
- J. Chromatogr. v150n1, March 11 1978, p73-84.
-
- Sorry this was so long but I thought it deserved it :-)
- Enjoy a "referenced" article.
- Tim Basher
-
- .....
-
- There were rumors going around that LSD could be detected
- by drug tests fo thirty days. I think this reference and
- abstract makes it clear that it is probably 4 days, max.
- (see the end of the abstract)
-
- IDNUM 03319915
- TYPE Journal paper
- DATE 880715
- AUTHOR Heng Keang Lim; Andrenyak, D.; Francom, P.; Foltz, R.L.; Jones, R.T.
- Center for Human Toxicology, Utah Univ., Salt Lake City, UT, USA
- TITLE Quantification of LSD and N-demethyl-LSD in urine by gas
- chromatography/resonance electron capture ionization mass
- spectrometry
- SOURCE Analytical Chemistry; vol.60, no.14; 15 July 1988; pp. 1420-5
- SUBJECT chromatography; electron capture; mass spectroscopic chemical
- analysis; organic compounds; quantification; gas chromatography;
- resonance electron capture ionisation mass spectrometry; LSD;
- N-demethyl-LSD; urine; lysergic acid diethylamide; human; in vitro;
- in vivo; aromatic hydroxylation; drug; metabolite;
- N-tri-fluoroacetyl derivatives; calibration curves; urinary
- concentrations; adult volunteer; excretion; elimination half-lives;
- 4 to 6 hrs; 8 to 10 hrs
- Numerical data: time 1.4E+04 to 2.2E+04 s; time 2.9E+04 to 3.6E+04 s
- Class codes: A8280M; A8280B; A3470
- CODEN ANCHAM
- ABSTRACT Demethylation of lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD) in the human has
- been demonstrated, both in vitro and in vivo, and aromatic
- hydroxylation at positions 13 and 14 has been tentatively
- identified. A gas chromatography/resonance electron capture
- ionization mass spectrometry (GC/MS) assay for LSD and
- N-demethyl-LSD in urine has been developed, in which the drug and
- its metabolite are converted to their N-tri-fluoroacetyl derivatives
- prior to GC/MS analysis. Linear and reproducible calibration curves
- have been obtained for LSD concentrations from 0.05 to 5.0 ng/mL,
- and for N-demethyl-LSD concentrations from 0.03 to 5.0 ng/mL. The
- assay was used to determine the urinary concentrations of LSD and
- N-demethyl-LSD following administration of a single oral dose of the
- drug (1 mu g/kg) to an adult volunteer. The rates of excretion of
- LSD and N-demethyl-LSD reached maxima in urine collected at time
- intervals of 4-6 and 8-10 h after administration, respectively. The
- elimination half-lives for LSD and N-demethyl-LSD were 3.6 and 10.0
- h, respectively
- MISCELLANEOUS
- Treatment: experimental
- Anal. Chem. (USA)
- Abstract number(s): A89037987
- ISSN: 0003-2700
- Refs: 15
-
- *****
-
- LEGAL SCHEDULING:
-
- Class I, "no medical use" --- mostly for political reasons, as it was
- and is used in psychotherapy. (Current use is in Switzerland.)
-
- Though LSD has very different subjective qualities than MDMA, Dutch psy
- chiatrist Dr. Hans Bastiaans' use of LSD for decades in the treatment of
- concentration camp survivors is an inspiring example of the beneficial use of
- psychedelics in the treatment of people with severe trauma.
-
- *****
-
- SET and SETTING:
-
- "SET" is the expectations a person brings with them. "Setting" is the
- environment that a person is in. Set includes expectations about the
- drug's actions and how the person will react. Setting includes the
- social and physical conditions. For LSD and the hallucinogen-type
- drug more than other psychoactives, set and setting are very important
- in determining the nature of the experience. These factors make the
- difference between, e.g., the experiences of someone taking the drug
- for enhancement at a concert, for psychotherapy in an doctor's office,
- in a religious context, or in the outdoors for an aesthetic
- experience. For best results, one should take LSD only with people
- one trusts in safe, comfortable surroundings, free of everyday
- intrusions. Tripping alone is a very risky thing to do, that
- inexperienced people should avoid.
-
- *****
-
- STORAGE:
-
- First, note that LSD is a fairly stable organic molecule, no more or
- less fragile than other molecules with comparable structures.
-
- The main factors to be concerned with are moisture (due to leaching
- and facilitated chemical reactions in the presense of moisture),
- oxygen, light, and temperature. Reaction rates typically depend upon
- temperature exponentially. These factors basically apply to all
- organic compounds.
-
- Sealing in AL foil in a cool dark place is fine. Some recommend
- refrigeration, but be careful about nosy guests, condensation, and frost.
- Multiple, redundant seals are suggested, eg., paper in metal foil in
- plastic in a metal candy tin which has been taped shut. Should last
- at least a presidential term.
-
- Wallets are contraindicated as storage locations due to sweat.
-
- *****
-
- SYNERGIES, BAD COMBINATIONS:
-
- Smoking cannabis products considerably increases the effects,
- increasing the visuals and also possibly increasing the cognitive and
- linguistic disorders. As the effects of LSD wear off, marijuana may
- bring them back, and also ease the jitteriness some dislike. Nitrous
- oxide goes well with LSD, though one should be extra careful (not to
- suffocate or fall down) with the nitrous because of the effects of the
- LSD. MDA & cousins can go well, but people on these drugs should not
- take LSD unless they are familiar with the latter's effects.
-
- Alcohol's effects are largely overwhelmed by LSD, and they act in opposite
- ways: alcohol being a depressant and LSD being a (hyper)stimulant.
- Generally mixing stimulants and sedatives is counterproductive.
-
- MAO inhibitors ???
- Amphetamines and cocaine ???
-
- *****
-
- AFTEREFFECTS:
-
- The psychedelic experience is not something that should be undertaken
- lightly. While you will be physically OK after the trip, and odds are
- you'll still have all the bolts in your head screwed in right afterward,
- the trip is very likely to cause lasting mental changes. All the following
- effects are strongest in the days or weeks after the trip, but they
- may well continue in some form for the rest of your life. You may see mild
- hallucinations in dark rooms or with your eyes closed. Objects may seem to
- vibrate. After prolonged use tracers and open-eye hallucinations may
- appear. Especially immediately after the trip, you may experience odd mood
- swings and irrational impulses (harmless ones, but people may still think
- you're nuts if you fulfill the impulse of "Gee, I really want to jump up on
- that rock and bounce on it because life is so wonderful"). Your perception
- of objects is very likely indeed to change. You may become captivated by
- sights such as snow falling on a dark winter night or the shadows caused by
- a candle flame.
-
- Insights acquired during the trip may also have lasting effects. There
- are many cases of people discovering a hidden aspect of themselves, ie.
- that they are homosexual or that the philosophy/religion they have adhered
- to their life is wrong. While the insight itself may be beneficial, the
- process of adjusting to it is often painful.
-
- Very few LSD users regret taking the drug, but before taking it one should
- still be aware of what may happen. LSD is not an ticket to nirvana or the
- cure to all the problems of humanity.
-
- .....
-
- It seems to me that among the many positive benefits from drug use, especially
- acid and to a lesser degree other hallucinogens is an enhanced appreciation of
- beauty. That is finding aesthetically pleasing images that other people tend to
- ignore or not appreciate. Things like enjoying the pattern of frost that forms
- on a glass, or the lights of a city, or just the paterns formed on the inside of
- our eyelids. This is not just limited to the periods when one is actually under
- the effects of the substance. For example while driving into a city at night
- with a mixed group of people, one of the persons in the car who occaisionally
- uses acid was very taken with the image and described it in very poetic
- picturesque words, without exception those who also used drugs were able to
- sympathize and understand what the person was talking about. The rest of the
- car just looked at them strangely. Or another instant that comes to mind is
- the time someone came in from outside very excited and told about how pretty
- the lights shining off the frost on the cars in the parking lot looked, the
- only people who went back out to look at this were those that had at some point
- partaken of these psychoactives. Annother example is a time early in the
- morning after a long night of talking and general togetherness, everyone was
- sitting back with thier eyes closed and talking about the images that were
- coming to thier mind, talking about what they could see in thier mind's eye,
- and sharing it with the others there, going from one person to annother
- around the room, the people who did drugs had visions that were remarkably more
- detailed, vivid, and unusual. Further they could seem to relate to what the
- otehr people were describing better.
-
- Let me emphasize that in none of these instances was anyone under the
- influence of anything, this was merely their normal mindset. It is not that the
- non-users couldn't see the beauty, it is just that they were not excited or
- empassioned about it, it did not touch them as deeply.
-
- *****
-
- REFERENCES & FURTHER READING:
-
- HISTORICAL:
- LSD: My Problem Child [A. Hofmann, PhD] (excellent)
- Storming heaven : LSD and the American dream [Jay Stevens]. (excellent)
- Ceremonical Chemistry [T. Szasz, M.D.] (excellent)
- Acid Dreams
- Drugs and the Brain
- Psychedelics Reconsidered
- Electric Koolaid Acid Test
- Flashbacks (Leary's autobiography)
- The Great Drug War
- Dealing With Drugs
-
- USAGE/INFORMATIONAL:
- Psychedelic Encyclopedia [Stafford] (excellent)
- Psychedelic Chemistry [M.V.Smith]
- Biochemical Basis of Neuropharmacology (technical)
- Consumer Reports: Licit & Illicit Drugs
- Recreational Drugs
-
- REFERENCE:
- Merck Handbook
- Physician's Desk Reference
- The Botany And Chemistry Of Hallucinogens, Shultes & Hofmann
-
- JOURNALS:
- Journal of Psychoactive (formerly Psychedelic) Drugs
-
- .....
-
- AUTHOR: Cohen, Sidney
- AUTHOR AFFILIATION:
- U California School of Medicine, Neuropsychiatric
- Inst, Los Angeles
- TITLE: LSD: The varieties of psychotic experience.
- SOURCE: Journal of Psychoactive Drugs 1985 Oct-Dec Vol 17(4)
- 291-296
- ABSTRACT: Discusses the contributing factors (e.g., preexisting
- character structure, insecurity, negative experience,
- current mood and stress level) and prevention and
- treatment of acute and prolonged psychotic reactions
- to LSD. (10 ref)
-
- .....
-
- Additional (detailed) References (in random order):
-
- "Indole Alkaloids In Plant Hallucinogens" Richard Evans Schultes, PhD.
- Journal of Psychedelic Drugs Vol.8(No.1) Jan-Mar 1976
-
- "Ethnopharmacology and Taxonomy of Mexican Psychodysleptic Plants"
- Jose Luis Diaz M.D.
- Journal of Psychedelic Drugs Vol. 11(1-2) Jan-Jun 1979
-
- "The Botanical and Chemical Distribution of Hallucinogens"
- Richard Evans Schultes, PhD.
- Journal of Psychedelic Drugs Vol.9(No.3) Jul-Sep 1977
-
- "Burger's Medicinal Chemistry" Fourth Edition, Volume III
- Chapter: "Hallucinogens" Alexander Shulgin
-
- J. Psychoactive Drugs Vol 21 (1) Jan-Mar 1989
-
- The Addictive Behaviors: treatment of alcoholism, drug use, smoking, and
- obesity
- W.R. Miller, Ed
- (small amount of info on use of psychedelics in psychotherapy)
- Pergammon press 1986
-
- Biological Basis Of Behavior
- N.Chalmers R. Crawley S.P.R.Rose Eds
- Open Univ Press Harper & Row1971
-
- Recreational Drugs
- Young Klein Beyer
- Collier Books, div of Macmillan pub co 1977
-
- The Biochemical Basis Of Neuropharmacology
- J.R.Cooper F.E.Bloom R.H.Roth
- Oxford Univ Press 1982 (4th ed)
-
- Craving For Ecstasy: Consciousness And Chemistry Of Escape
- H.Milkman S.Sunderwirth
- Lexington Books, DC Heath and co 1987
-
- A Primer of Drug Action
- R.M.Julian
- W.H.Freeman & Co.1978
-
- LSD & Creativity
- O.Janiger, M.D.de Rios
- J. Psychoactive Drugs Vol 21 (1) Jan-Mar 1989
-
- An Introduction To Pharmacology
- J.J.Lewis
- Williams and wilkins Co, Baltimore 1964 (3rd edition)
-
- Metabolism Of Drugs Of Abuse
- Spectrum Publications 1976
- Dist by Halstead Press of John Wiley Press
- L. Lemberger
-
- Medicinal Chemistry: a series of monographs
- G.deStevens Ed
- Vol 4: Psychopharmaceutical agents
- M. Gordon (ed)
- Vol I, ch 13: psychomimetic compounds D.F.Downing
- Vol II, ch 4: psychomimetic agents by A.T.Shulgin
- Academic press 1976
-
- The Road To Eleusis
- Unveiling the secret of the mysteries
- R.G.Wasson, A.Hoffman, C.A.P.Ruck
- harcourt brace jovanovich inc. 1978
-
- Lsd Man And Society
- R.C.Debold, R.C.Leaf Eds
- Wesleyan U press
- Middletown Conn 1967
-
- Hallucinogenic Plants (A Golden Guide) New York: Golden Press
- 1976
- Shultes, R.E., Smith E.W.
-
- The Sun And The Moon
- A.Weil, MD
-
- The Natural Mind
- A.Weil, MD 1986
- Houghton-mifflin pub co.
-
- Sacred Narcotic Plants Of The New World Indians
- H. Schleiffer ed.
- Hafner press 1973
- Div of mcmillan pub co
-
- Moksha: Writings On Psychedlics And The Visionary Experience
- A.C.huxley
- stonehill pub co., NY
- M.Horowitz, C. palmer Eds 1977
-
- Psychedelic Chemistry
- m.v.smith
- 2nd edition 1973
- rip off press
-
- Psychotropic Methoxyamphetamines: Structure And Activity In Man
- S.H.Snyder, E.Richelson, H.Weingartner, LA.Faillace
-
- Ethnopharmacological Search For Psychoactive Drugs
- Proc of a symposium in SF, Ca Jan 28-30 1967
- D.H.Efron, B.Holmstedt, N.S.Kline eds
- US Dept of HEW
-
- The Botany And Chemistry Of Hallucinogens
- R.E.Schultes, A.Hoffman
- charles C Thomas Publisher
- Springfield Ill 1980
-
- The Behavioral Effects Of Drugs
- (Ch 4 Hallucinogens: Complications of LSD: A Review of the Literature;
- Dimensions of the LSD, Methlphenidate, and Chlordiazepoxide
- Experiences; LSD: Injection Early in Pregnancy Produces Abnormality
- in Offspring of Rats; LSD: No Teratogenicity in Rats; Congenital
- Malformation Induced by Mescaline, LSD, and Bromolysergic Acid in
- the Hamster; Drug Motivated-Behavior: The Effect of Morning Glory Seeds
- On Motor Activity In Chicks) (Also Includes Weil'S Study Of "Clinical and
- Psychological Effects Of Marijuana In Man")
- D.W. Matheson M.A. Davidson Holt Rinehart
- Winston Inc 1972
-
- any textbook titled "Physiological Psychology"
-
- .....
-
- *BOOKS*
-
- (For a complete listing of books that we have in the No More
- Drug War Foundation Research Library, e-mail or write your
- address to me:
-
- Gerald Bryan, Secretary
- The No More Drug War Foundation
- 2045 Kearney St.
- Denver, CO 80207-3919
- 303/388-5495 days
- 303/394-3930 evenings)
-
- BREAKING THE IMPASSE IN THE WAR ON DRUGS, by Steven Wisotsky,
- 1986, 279 pages, $35.00, Greenwood Press. Sympathetic to the
- idea of legalization. Can be ordered from publisher at 88
- Post Road West, Box 5007
-
- PSYCHEDELIC DRUGS RECONSIDERED, by Lester Grinspoon & James B.
- Bakalar, 1979, 1981, Basic Books, Inc. Good book that covers
- all aspects of psychedelic drugs, written by Harvard professors.
- You can probably order this from anywhere.
-
- ECSTASY: THE MDMA STORY, by Bruce Eisner, mid-1980s. Covers
- all aspects of this drug, good book, available anywhere.
-
- PSYCHEDELICS ENCYCLOPEDIA, by Peter Stafford, Revised Edition,
- 1983, J.P. Tarcher, Inc. Great resource book, you can probably
- order this from anywhere (huge bookstore in Denver had it in
- stock)
-
-
- *ORGANIZATIONS*
-
- The Drug Policy Foundation The grand-father of all the
- 4801 Massachusetts Ave., N.W. legalization groups, this one
- Suite 400 appeals to educated mainstream
- Washington, D.C. 20016-2087 folk. Holds annual conference,
- 202/895-1634 has respectability. This is a
- MUST-JOIN !!
-
- Multidisciplinary Assoc. for Educational group seeking to
- Psychedelic Studies (MAPS) give drug study legitimization
- 23A Shaler Lane through normal public policy
- Cambridge, MA 02138 channels. Supports drug
- 617/547-7271 research projects worldwide.
-
- The Albert Hofmann Foundation Educational group seeking to
- 132 West Channel Road build a library to house
- Suite 324 vast amount of research work
- Santa Monica, CA 90402 done on consciousness, including
- extensive LSD studies.
-
- Coalition for 100% Drug Reform Political, grass-roots activist
- 9 Bleecker Street group seeking an end to zero-
- New York, NY 10012 tolerance policies and promoting
- 212/995-1245 safe drug use education. They
- have a drug reform conference
- scheduled for Dec 1-3.
-
- The No More Drug War Foundation Activist group seeking to bring
- Box 18780 an end to the drug war through
- Denver, CO 80218 grass-roots political action &
- 303/320-1910 education.
-
- N.O.R.M.L. Still around, still holding pot
- 2001 'S' Street, N.W. rallies. Good for people who
- Suite 640 want MJ legalized but don't care
- Washington, D.C. 20009 about other drugs.
- 202/483-5500
-
- Ed Hassle's Freedom Fighters Activist group associated with
- Trans-High Corp High Times. Similar agenda to
- 211 East 43rd St. NORML.
- NY, NY 10017
-
- PRIDE Yes, this is an anti-drug,
- 50 Hurt Plaza pro-drug-war group, but they
- Suite 210 publish a good newsletter
- Atlanta, Georgia 30303 that informs well on what the
- 404/577-4500 opposition is doing.
- 800/241-7946
-
-
- .....
-
- (about visual disturbances: )
- Migraine: the evolution of a common disorder
- O. Sacks
- U CAl press 1970
-
- Brain Damage, Behavior, And The Mind
- M. Williams
- John Wiley & Sons 1979
- ch 5 Disorders of visual perception
-
- Mescal And Mechanisms Of Hallucinations
- Heinrich Kluver
- U. Chicago Press 1930
-
- Drugs And The Brain
- Perry Black MD, Ed
- Johns Hopkins Press 1969
- behavioral effects of LSD in subhuman primates
-
- Hallucinations
- Sci Am
- R.K.Siegal
- (see also article on phosphenes in amateur scientist column in another issue)
-
- Luria's _The Shattered Mind_
-
- Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies (MAPS) -
- Your Psychedelic Pharmaceutical Company
- by Rick Doblin, MAPS President
- MAPS, 1801 Tippah Avenue, Charlotte, NC. 28205 Phone (704) 3
- 58-9830, FAX (704) 358-1650, e-mail RICKMAPS@aol.com
-
- Becoming a member of the Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic
- Studies, Inc. (MAPS) and receiving the MAPS newsletter is an excellent way to
- stay abreast of the latest developments in psychedelic research around the
- world. In addition, your membership donation will be used to support
- research into the medical uses of MDMA, LSD, marijuana,
- and a cornucopia of other fascinating compounds.
-
- MAPS is an IRS-approved non-profit corporation supported by tax-deductible
- contributions from a membership of about five hundred people and growing.
- MAPS works to develop the medical potential of MDMA and other psychedelics
- by assisting researchers around the world to design, obtain governmental
- approval for, fund, conduct and report on psychedelic research. MAPS is
- also involved in research exploring the medical use of marijuana. MAPS'
- primary goals are to help researchers conduct the studies necessary to
- transform MDMA and marijuana into FDA-approved prescription medicines. For
- MDMA, this is an estimated ten-year, $10 million project; for mar
- ijuana, a two-year, $500,000 task.
-
- MAPS offers its members a quarterly newsletter reporting on MAPS-sponsored
- and other psychedelic research in progress both in the US and abroad,
- political developments that affect psychedelic research and use, and
- conferences, books and articles of interest. In addition, MAPS offers for
- sale various unique publications (for example the protocol submitted to the
- FDA for the investigation of the use of MDMA in the treatment of pain and
- distress in terminal cancer patients), videotapes (of a MAPS benefit held in
- Berkeley in 1990 that featured Jerry Beck, Ram Dass, Bruce Eisner, Rick
- Doblin, Laura Huxley, Emerson Jackson, Mark Kleiman, Timothy Leary, Dennis
- McKenna, Terence McKenna, Ralph Metzner, Andrew Weil, and Robert Zanger), and
- audiotapes (of a MAPS seminar held in Prague in 1992 featuring Ram Dass, Ken
- Ring and Richard Yensen discussing working with the terminally
- ill with psychedelics).
-
- Since its inception in 1986, MAPS has invested about $75,000, donated by
- its members, into preliminary FDA-required 28-day MDMA toxicity studies in
- the dog and rat. These studies were submitted to the FDA in order to open
- MAPS' FDA Drug Master File for MDMA. These toxicity studies were a
- prerequisite for all FDA-approved studies involving the administration of
- MDMA to human volunteers. When UC Irvine psychiatrist Dr. Charles Grob
- applied to the FDA to conduct human research with MDMA, MAPS provided him
- with written permission to cross-reference its MDMA Drug Master File. This
- document saved Dr. Grob from having to reproduce the toxicity data, a hurdle
- that he would have foun
- d prohibitively expensive.
-
- MAPS has also invested an additional $125,000 on pilot studies into the
- effect of MDMA on the serotonin levels of humans, on MDMA neurotoxicity
- studies in the primate, and on protocol design for Phase 1 and Phase 2 human
- studies with MDMA. In addition to MAPS' preliminary toxicity research and its
- subsequent efforts on protocol design, MAPS successfully assisted Dr.
- Charles Grob in obtaining FDA permission to study the effects of MDMA on
- human volunteers. Dr. Grob's study is the first that the FDA has ever
- permitted involving the administration of MDMA to human volunteers. The
- study is designed to gather information for a subsequent study by Dr. Grob
- which will investigate the use of MDMA in the treatment of pain and distress
- in end-stage pancreatic cancer patients. MAPS intends to raise funds for Dr.
- Grob's studies and provide him with whatever scientific and profess
- ional support he may need to conduct his experiments. One function of
- MAPS is to conduct MDMA research as if MAPS were a pharmaceutical company
- interested in making MDMA into a prescription medicine. The critical
- difference is that MAPS makes its data available for free to responsible
- researchers to help advance the field of MDMA research rather than keep the
- data as proprietary information. In this way, duplication of expensive
- required studies is eliminated and researchers can focus on research
- rather than profit considerations.
-
- *****
-
- This file is in the public domain. Distribute freely.
- -- __
- Jani "Gnosis" PoijΣrvi On the neverending quest /(o\ BRAHMAN
- gnosis@brahman.nullnet.fi for knowledge by identity. \o)/ +358-0-498797
-
-