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- Newsgroups: alt.drugs
- From: grigsby@rintintin.Colorado.EDU (Scott Grigsby)
- Subject: Why opium causes constipation
- Message-ID: <CL1Fz1.2Jn@cnsnews.Colorado.EDU>
- Date: Fri, 11 Feb 1994 02:23:24 GMT
-
- Well, I bugged all of you to tell me why opium causes constipation.
- I hadn't received a reply, so while on my way to class today
- I stopped at the library (and never quite made it to class. The
- library has that effect...). When I got home, I found that someone
- had sent me a reply, confirming what the library told me. So here's
- what I found out (you're dying to know, aren't you?):
-
- The gastrointestinal tract contains many opioid receptors (gamma,
- kappa, and sigma, I think), to which the opiods bond (duh).
- The rest I'll copy from this book (I forgot the title, but the
- authors (of this chapter) are T.H. Bewley and A.H. Ghodse):
-
- "There is a decrease of motility with increase in tone of the central
- part of the stomach. There is an increase tone in the first part
- of the duodenum... Digestion of food in the small intestine is
- delayed where propulsive contractions are markedly decreased. The
- action on the small intestine is thought to cause about a quarter
- of the total constipating effect. In the large intestine,
- propulsive peristaltic waves in the colon are diminished or
- abolished after morphine. Delay in passage of contents causes
- dessication of feces. Anal sphincter tone is augmented."
-
- So that's it.
-
- Scott
- --
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~\__________/~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- Scott Grigsby ///-///-/// The cut worm forgives the plow.
- \\\-\\\-\\\ -Blake
- grigsby@rtt.colorado.edu ///-///-///
-
- =============================================================================
-
- Date: Thu, 17 Mar 1994 11:56:17 +1300
- From: Brandon Hutchison <hutch@CIVL.CANTERBURY.AC.NZ>
- Subject: Re: natural history of opiate addiction
- Sender: "Academic & Scholarly discussion of addiction related topics."
- <ADDICT-L@KENTVM.BITNET>
- Message-id: <01HA1QDIZ2W68WYYFD@ymir.claremont.edu>
-
- On Tue, 15 Mar 1994, ROB ANDERSON wrote:
- > > If those causes consisted of gunshot or stab wounds,accidental
- > > overdose,hepatitis,HIV, etc then I would suggest you are
- > > looking at the "unnatural" history of opiate addiction as these deaths are
- > > generally a consequence of prohibition
- > >
- >
- > I think that this is an oversimplification. BTW, could you please
- > explain to me why you think that "accidental overdose" is generally a
- > consequence of prohibition?
-
- I don't think this is oversimple. Was it the CATO institute that
- estimated that 80% of the deaths associated with opiates would not have
- occurred under a legal regime?
-
- Accidental overdoses can occur when the dose taken is greater than what
- one is used to. (excuse me for stating the obvious)
- How much heroin is in a given illicit sample is usually quite variable.
- Depends on how often its been cut, where it came from etc.
- (excuse me again for stating the obvious)
-
- If a batch of stronger stuff gets out onto the street then there is likely to
- be an increase of ODs. This happened last year in the New York area and
- eastern Canada, so I read in our papers.
-
- It seems paradoxic to some people, but the greater the purity the safer
- the stuff is, though consistency is obviously the critical factor. Under a
- legal regime, such problems would be solved. Overdoses, while not eliminated
- would be substantially reduced.
-
- Here 's a little article I picked up which discusses these issues...
-
- Copied from p.56 (Box 5-1) of 'Drugs and Behavior' by William A. McKim.
-
- One of the greatest risks of being a heroin addict is death from heroin
- overdose. Each year about one percent of all heroin addicts in the United
- States die from an overdose of heroin despite having developed a fantastic
- tolerance to the effects of the dr ug. In a nontolerant person the
- estimated lethal dose of heroin may range from 200 to 500 mg, but addicts
- have tolerated doses as high as 1800 mg without even being sick[1]. No
- doubt, some overdoses are a result of mixing heroin with other drugs, but
- appear to result from a sudden loss of tolerance. Addicts have been killed
- one day by a dose that was readily tolerated the day before. An
- explanation for this sudden loss of tolerance has been suggested by
- Shepard Siegel of McMaster University, and his a ssociated, Riley Hinson,
- Marvin Krank, and Jane McCully.
-
- Siegel reasoned that the tolerance to heroin was partially conditioned to
- the environment where the drug was normally administered. If the drug is
- consumed in a new setting, much of the conditioned tolerance will
- disappear and the addict will be more like ly to overdose. To test this
- theory Siegel and associates ran the following experiment[2].
-
- Rats were given daily intravenous injections for 30 days. The injections
- were either a dextrose placebo or heroin and they were given in either the
- animal colony or a different room where there was a constant white noise.
- The drug and the placebo were giv en on alternate days and the drug
- condition always corresponded with a particular environment so that for
- some rats, the heroin was always administered in the white noise room and
- the placebo was always given in the colony. For other rats the heroin ways
- given in the colony and the placebo was always given in the white noise
- room. Another group of rats served as a control: these were injected in
- different rooms on alternate dates, but were only injected with the
- dextrose and had no experience with th e heroin at all.
-
- All rats were then injected with a large dose of heroin: 15.0 mg/kg. The
- rats in one group were given the heroin in the same room where they had
- previously been given heroin. (This was labeled the ST group.) The other
- rats, the DT group, were given the he roin in the room where they had
- previously been given the placebo.
-
- Siegel found that 96 percent of the control group died, showing the lethal
- effect of the heroin in nontolerant animals. Rats in the DT group who
- receieved heroin were partially tolerant, and only 64 percent died. Only
- 32 percent of ST rats died, showing t hat the tolerance was even greter
- when the overdose test was done in the same environment where the drug
- previously had been administered.
-
- Siegel suggested that one reason addicts suddenly lose their tolerance
- could be because they take the drug in a different or unusual environment
- like the rats in the DT group. Surveys of heroin addicts admitted to
- hospitals suffering from heroin overdose tend to support this conclusion.
- Many addicts report that they had taken the near-fatal dose in an unusual
- circumstance or that their normal pattern was different on that day[2].
-
- [1] Brecher, E. M., & the editors of Consumer Reports (1972). _Licit and
- illicit drugs_ Mount Vernon, New York: Consumers Union.
-
- [2] Siegel, S. (1982). Drug dissociation in the nineteenth century. In F.
- C. Colpart & J. L. Slangen (Eds.), _Drug discrimination: Applications in
- CNS pharmacology (pp. 257-262). Amsterdam: Elsevier Biomedical Press.
-
- Brandon Hutchison,University of Canterbury, Christchurch
- New Zealand
- (Long 172deg35min00sec,Lat43deg31min13sec south)
-
- =============================================================================
-
- Subject: Re: death sentence for drug users
- From: den0@quads.uchicago.edu (funky chicken)
- Date: 13 May 91 02:50:05 GMT
-
- In article <1991May12.131321.4087@elevia.UUCP> alain@elevia.UUCP responds
- to my claim that heroin "IS reasonably safe and a lot of fun" by writing:
-
- > Considering that my only source of information on heroin
- > is the Voice of Daddy Knows Best, and his little brothers
- > in propaganda, I can safely say I know fuck all about it.
- > I will not necessarily assume that their lie means heroin
- > is safe and fun. Since you said this, can you please tell
- > us more, and document it please?
-
- Sure, Old Man. I assume that the provocative part of my statement concerns
- its safety and I will therefore not discuss the issue of whether heroin
- is fun.
-
- Let me first qualify my provocative statement by saying that heroin use
- CAN BE reasonably safe, if used in a smart manner. Heroin in itself seems
- to pose no real health problems, even when it is used for long periods of
- time. G. Dimijian in "Contemporary Drug Abuse" (in _Medical Pharmacology:
- Principles and Concepts_ ed A. Goth, p. 299) describes an 84-yr old
- physician who had been a morphine addict for 60 years and seemed to have
- no mental or physical problems from the addiction. In general, it seems
- that middle-class heroin/morphine addicts are no less healthy than the
- general population (see D. Musto and M. Ramos (1981) "Follow-up Study of the
- New England Morphine Maintenance CLinic of 1920," _New Eng J Med_ 308(30):
- p. 1075-76; J. Ball and J. Urbaitis (1970) "Absence of Major Medical
- Complications among Chronic Opiate Addicts" in _The Epidemiology of Opiate
- Addiction in the United States (eds J. Ball and C. Chambers), p. 301-6.)
- There may be some problems associated with long-term controlled use of H,
- but they aren't well documented and they are certainly not comparable to
- those associated with either tobacco or alcohol.
-
- So where do the health problems of heroin come from? Primarily from the use
- of needles, the presence of adulterants in the drug, the poor nutrition and
- health care associated with the hard core addict liife-style; and the
- violence associated with said life-style. Before I discuss these, we should
- note that all of these factors except adulterants are controllable by the
- user. The many "chippers" (that being the term for non-addicts who use
- addictive drugs in a controlled fashion; see, for example N. Zinberg and
- R. Jacobson's (1976) "The Natural History of 'Chipping,'" _Amer J Psych_
- 133(1): p. 37-40.) who avoid injections (usually by "chasing the dragon"
- ie smoking it) have few problems.
-
- Let's start with needles. There are two reasons to use needles: it gives
- a bigger rush, and it makes more effective use of the drug. This second
- reason is, of course, only a consideration because the drug is expensive
- and difficult to get. The problems with needles are that you inject a
- lot of crap into your body (adulterants and dilutants), you run the risk
- of infecting yourself with something (HIV or a Hepatitis virus), and
- you wreck your veins and skin. Most IV Heroin users are constantly
- plagued by irritated, infected skin. Hey, you inject talc into your skin,
- that's what you get. Even the quinine (which is believed to have originated
- in heroin during an outbreak of malaria among addicts) can cause
- numerous health problems (there's a large literature on the problems of
- adulterants and dilutants in heroin and cocaine).
-
- The life-style that an addict leads is generally pretty unhealthy as well.
- Often, addicts don't get an adequate diet. Vitamin deficiencies are not
- uncommon. Constipation caused by a combination of poor eating that the
- effects of the drug on the bowels can lead to haemorrhoids. Chest
- infections seem pretty common too, especially among cigarette smokers.
- Then you've got the problems of trafficking in the (potentially) violent
- underworld. Joe and Leishman (et al (1982), "Addict Death Rates During
- a Four-Year Post-Treatment Follow-up," _Amer J of Public Health_ 72:
- p. 703-9.) found that 28% of deaths among addicts were from violence (17%
- were from natural causes, and 44% were drug related).
-
- So, it would seem that if one had clean heroin from a reliable source
- and avoided the IV route, there'd be few health problems. Potential
- problems would arise from becoming addicted and becoming unproductive
- or from accidentally ODing. It seems that "Chippers" avoid addiction
- by setting strict limits on their use ("I'll only do it on weekends"
- being a common limit). In the lab, it takes a couple weeks of 3 shots
- a day before one gets withdrawl symptoms. So, if you avoid hanging
- around hardcore addicts, it is not that hard to avoid an addiction.
- The existence of non-addict users shouldn't be surprising. It is only
- because of silly people like Anslinger and Henry Giordano (head of the
- FB of Narc, who testified that anyone who used H more than six times
- would become an addict). Admittedly, controlled heroin use is
- difficult to locate, since the users stay out of trouble to the best of
- their abilities. However, if we look at who has used heroin daily
- (a nice substitute for the vague notion of 'addict'), we find substantial
- numbers of regular users who have never taken H on a daily basis (see,
- for example, J. O'Donnell's (1976) "Young Men and Drugs," _NIDA Res Mon_ 5,
- p. 13, where only a third of the users taken from a cross-section of
- American males had ever used H daily). In fact, considering the small
- amount of H in street samples, it is a wonder that users can even
- become true addicts. (As a side note, many of the people who present
- themselves or are presented by the Feds to clinics are not physicially
- dependent on cocaine, heroin, etc.) D. Waldorf's _Careers in Dope_
- provides examples of H addicts who have held employment for long periods
- of time. So, even addicts can hold down jobs. Dr. William Halsted,
- a great surgeon and one of the founders of Johns Hopkins was a
- morphine addict. Surprise surprise, they aren't all the domestic version
- of Viet Cong, despite what the Man tells us.
-
- Overdose is a probably largely due to people not knowing the purity
- of their H, the presence of adulterants which act in conjunction
- with the H, and addicts misjudging their tolerance. Using non-IV
- routes probably reduces the chances of ODing. R. Gardner (1970) in
- "Deaths in UK Opioid Users 1965-69" _Lancet_ 2: p. 650-3 found that
- 26 of the 42 accidental ODs recorded happened after a period of
- abstinence, so maybe 60% of ODs are from misjudging tolerance.
- Since abstinence is often forced, I can only imagine that most ODs
- could be avoided entirely by proper measures.
-
- Oddly enough, British addicts, who get clean heroin, have about as high a
- mortality rate as Americans who shoot street shit (see T. Bewley et al (1968)
- "Morbidity and Mortality from Heroin Dependence, 1: Survey of Heroin
- Addicts Known to the Home Office," _Brit Med J_ 23 March: p 725-26).
-
- Tolerance is a funny thing. Addicts have been known to die from their
- second shot of the day after dividing their daily amount into three
- piles. It would therefore seem that their tolerance had been reduced since
- the first shot. Someone conjectured that tolerance was partially a matter
- of place-conditioning and that addicts who shoot in a particular gallery
- get conditioned so that their body begins to gear up for a shot when
- they go their and that therefore they have higher tolerance there. When
- they shoot up someplace else, their body isn't ready and they OD.
-
- Before I quit typing, I'll say something about the myth of "pushers."
- John Kaplan (1983), in his excellent book _The Hardest Drug_, points
- out the numerous holes in this myth. The idea of the "pusher" is that
- a dealer tries to get people hooked through free samples so that
- he can have a helpless and reliable market for high-priced drugs.
- This model works pretty well for cigarette companies. However, it
- is totally off the mark with respect to H sellers. To begin with, as
- Big Bill Burroughs has documented, the model is empirically wrong
- since there is no clear distinction between users and sellers. Most
- users sell to their friends, making a little profit. In the social
- network of users, some will sell on a large scale, but typically not
- for a long period of time, as it is a hassle. The only real organization
- in drug dealing is at the higher levels where the drugs are purified,
- smuggled, and cut. Furthermore, ignoring empirical facts, the image
- of the pusher is pretty unsound. It only makes sense to spend time
- hooking people if you plan on selling to them for a long time and they
- will not be able to go elsewhere. Neither condition tends to be true.
- Addicts are notoriously unreliable customers. Furthermore, as I have
- already mentioned, it is difficult to get hooked on H. Addiction is
- rare within the first 6 months of H use. (See Kaplan, p. 27). So,
- you'd have to be giving out samples for a while before you had an
- addict customer. Finally, associating with non-addicts is the surest
- way to get busted. Dealers stick to themselves; they don't hang out
- on play grounds.
-
- Anything I left out that should be discussed?
-
- >William "Alain" Simon
- > UUCP: alain@elevia.UUCP
-
- --Matt Funkchick
-
- =============================================================================
-
- According to a Cato Institute Policy Analysis (May 25, 1989, no. 121),
- 80 percent of the deaths attributed to cocaine and heroin are actually
- caused by black market factors. For example, many heroin deaths are
- caused by an allergic reaction to the street mixture of the drug, while
- 30 percent are caused by infections.
-
- Decriminalization and proper regulation would lower these deaths markedly.
-
- Of course, LAPD Chief Darryl Gates has said that casual drug users should
- be executed for "aiding the enemy in time of war."
-
- =============================================================================
-
- Newsgroups: alt.drugs
- From: jerry@teetot.acusd.edu (Jerry Stratton)
- Subject: Heroin and Alcohol
- Message-ID: <1993Nov12.233608.15609@teetot.acusd.edu>
- Date: Fri, 12 Nov 93 23:36:08 GMT
-
- Thanks to Lamont for providing the pointer to this study. Here are some
- highlights from it:
-
- THE ROLE OF ETHANOL ABUSE
- IN THE ETIOLOGY OF HEROIN-RELATED DEATHS
- Ruttenber, A. J., Kalter, H.
- D., and Santinga, P.
- Journal of Forensic Sciences,
- Vol 35, No. 4, July 1990, pp
- 891-900
-
- p. 891
- "Our data suggest that ethanol enhances the acute toxicity
- of heroin, and that ethanol use indirectly influences fatal
- overdose through its association with infrequent
- (nonaddictive) heroin use and thus with reduced tolerance to
- the acute toxic effects of heroin."
-
- [Ruttenber, A. J. and Luke, J. L., "Heroin-Related Deaths:
- New Epidemiologic Insights," Science, Vol 226, Oct 5, 1984,
- pp 14-20] "found that blood ethanol concentrations in excess
- of 1000 mg/L raised by a factor of 22 the odds of a heroin
- user experiencing a fatal overdose."
-
- "The concomitant use of heroin and ethanol is well
- recognized and considered dangerous..."
-
- "The phenomenon of combining ethanol and opiate use and the
- resultant toxic effects were noted as early as 1881
- [Hubbard, F. H., The Opium Habit and Alcoholism, Barnes, New
- York, 1881, pp 3-14]."
-
- Possibilities examined:
- 1. Ethanol and heroin act additively or
- synergistically on the central nervous and
- respiratory systems, producing cardiopulmonary
- arrest that is more often fatal than that
- produced by heroin alone.
- 2. Ethanol interferes with the metabolism of
- heroin, prolonging toxic effects.
- 3. Ethanol consumption is commonly associated
- with infrequent (nonaddictive) use of heroin,
- [Greene, M. H., Luke, J. L., and Dupont, R.
- L., "Opiate 'Overdose' Deaths in the District
- of Columbia," Medical Annals of the District
- of Columbia, Vol 43, #4, April 1974, pp 175-
- 181] which results in reduced tolerance to
- acute toxicity of heroin.
-
- Decedents with toxicological evidence of drugs other than
- heroin/ethanol were excluded from the study.
-
- p. 895
- "We determined that HE [High Ethanol] decedents had
- significantly lower blood morphine concentrations than LE
- [Low Ethanol] decedents and identified a significant inverse
- correlation between concentrations of ethanol and morphine
- in the blood. These findings suggest that there is a dose-
- response relationship between consumption of ethanol and the
- acute toxicity of heroin. However, blood ethanol
- concentrations explained only 11% of the variation in blood
- morphine concentrations, indicating that additional factors
- are probably involved in the etiology of fatal overdose by
- users of heroin and ethanol."
-
- "There is no evidence from our study that ethanol interferes
- with the metabolism of heroin." (This is in response to possibility
- 3.)
-
- p. 897
- "Our data suggest that decedents who consumed large
- quantities of ethanol before death also had used heroin
- infrequently in the days before death."
-
- "Data presented here and in other studies [Ruttenber, A. J.
- and Luke, J. L., "Heroin-Related Deaths: New Epidemiologic
- Insights," Science, Vol 226, Oct 5, 1984, pp 14-20; and
- Kalter, H. D., Ruttenber, A. J., and Zack, M. M., "Temporal
- clustering of Heroin Overdoses in Washington, DC," Journal
- of Forensic Sciences, Vol. 34, No. 1, Jan. 1989, pp. 156-
- 163.] indicate that fatal heroin overdose can be influenced
- by the toxic effects of other drugs and by other risk
- factors and is not merely the consequence of injecting
- unusually high doses of heroin. Our results suggest that
- simply discouraging the practice of drinking and injecting
- heroin may not be effective in preventing fatal overdose.
- Combining chronic ethanol abuse with infrequent
- (nonaddictive) heroin use should also be discouraged. Since
- fatal overdoses are commonly associated with ethanol use,
- public health measures directed towards those who use both
- drugs may help reduce the incidence of these deaths."
-
- "Address requests for reprints or additional information to
- A. James Ruttenber, Ph.D., M.D.
- Center for Environmental Health and Injury Control
- Centers for Disease Control
- Mail Stop F-28
- Atlanta, GA 30333"
-
-
- Jerry Stratton
- jerry@teetot.acusd.edu (Finger/Reply for PGP Public Key)
- ------
- "You need only reflect that one of the best ways to get yourself a
- reputation as a dangerous citizen these days is to go about repeating
- the very phrases which our founding fathers used in their struggle
- for independence."
- -- C. A. Beard
-
- =============================================================================
-
- From: lamont@hyperreal.com (Lamont Granquist)
- Newsgroups: alt.drugs
- Subject: chemistry: levorphanol
- Date: 30 May 1994 06:41:38 GMT
- Message-ID: <2sc1r2$7te@news.u.washington.edu>
-
- More copyright violations of Loompanics Books. I'll be getting that catalog
- of theirs up on my WWW site shortly to assuade my guilty conscience...
-
- I have *zero* comments on the process involved, indeed i've yet to read
- through it all...
-
- A small section out of _Recreational Drugs_ by Professor Buzz:
-
-
- Dromoran (Sometimes called Methorphinan or 3-Hydroxy-N-Methyl-Morphinan)
-
- This drug is quite easily synthesized, yet it contains the same
- numbering system as morphine, which is considerably harder to synthesize.
- Although Dromoran lacks the oxygen bridge, the Alicyclic double bond, and
- the alcoholic hydroxyl of morphine it is still 4-5 times more powerful, as
- well as longer acting. The average dose is 1-3 mg intramuscularly
- injected. Dromoran has less than one half the addiction liability of
- morphine and is, therefore, used almost exclusively for severe injuries,
- amputations , etc. The incredible feeling of well-being it produces is
- accompanied by addiction, so it cannot be used regularly. It also has no
- marked hypnotic effect, so it may be taken and enjoyed without drowsiness
- or reduced clarity of thought. The drug is wel l tolerated and does not
- depress blood pressure or cause other circulatory disturbances. The
- effects begin after ten minutes and continue for nine to thirteen hours
- with a minimal dose.
-
- This first formula is a street method, but I am sure it was taken
- from the Swiss patents 252,755 and/or 254,106. You should always look up
- all references, even though I know that this method does work and I have
- double checked all the figures.
-
- Prepare a Grignard reagent from 325 parts (as usual all parts
- refer to parts by weight) of p-methoxy-benzyl bromide in 800 parts of
- absolute ether with 40 parts thin clean magnesium (unlike THCs, different
- Grignard reagents cannot be substituted here) an d cool to 0-3 C. 275
- parts of (5,6,7,8) tetrahydroisoquinoline methiodide are added in small
- portions. This mixture is allowed to stand for one hour at 0 C and
- saturate with ammonium chloride after pouring onto cracked ice, then
- basify with ammonia by a dding in small portions and checking pH often.
- Separate the ether solution and extract the base with hydrochloric acid.
- The acid solution is basified with ammonia and extracted with ether, the
- ethereal solution is dried in the usual manner. Remove the ether by
- evaporation in vacuo with gentle heating, or distill it out at a low
- temperature in the next step. Distill with 0.2 mmHg of vacuo, collecting
- the fraction at 149 to 154 C to get the desired base.
-
- The above base is catalytically hydrogenated (platinum oxide seems
- to work the best) to 1-(p-methoxybenzyl)-2-methyl-1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8-
- octahydro-isoquinoline. This is separated from the catalyst and purified
- by distilling under 0.2 mmHg of vacuum, collect ing the fraction at
- 138-142 C. Heat at 150 C for three days with ten times its weight of
- phosphoric acid (specific gravity 1.75). The resulting brown solution is
- cooled with ice (in water and externally) and made alkaline to the
- indicator phenolphthalei n, by carefully adding ammonia. The free base is
- then shaken out with ether (this is an extraction) and the ether is
- removed by evaporation in vacuo. Purify the Dromoran by sublimation on an
- oil bath, at 180-199 C with 0.3 mmHg of vacuo and recrystalliz e once with
- anisole, or recrystallize twice with anisole after evaporating the ether.
- Yield: about 30-35%. To get the hydrochloride form, or the sulphate,
- etc., use any of the above methods for isomethorphinan, amidone, etc.
-
- Dromoran JOC, 24, 2043 (1950)
-
- This method is more modern than the last and it gives details for
- making a lower starting material, eliminating the need for purchasing
- (5,6,7,8) tetrahydroisoquinoline methiodide.
-
- 6.2 g of 2-(1,4-cyclohexadienyl)ethylamine in 80 ml of benzene is
- treated with p-methoxyphenylacetyl chloride (9.4 g in benzene) in the
- presence of sodium bicarbonate (200 ml of a 5% solution) with stirring and
- external cooling. An oily amide results, w hich solidifies (crystallizes)
- upon scratching the flask with a glass rod (see crystallization in the
- equipment chapter). Recrystallize from a mixture of n-hexane and benzene
- to get colorless scales that melt at 86-86.5 C. Yield of this
- N-2(1,4-cyclohex adienyl)ethyl-p-methoxyphenylacetamide is 12.5 grams or
- 92%.
-
- A mixture of the above amide (3 g), phosphoryl chloride (3 g) and
- 50 ml of benzene is refluxed for 30 minutes creating a reddish-yellow
- solution and evolution of hydrogen chloride. Cool, add enough petroleum
- ether to give a reddish precipitate, which is separated by filtration,
- after allowing to stand long enough to make sure no more precipitation
- will occur. Dissolve the precipitate in dilute hydrochloric acid, then
- shake with benzene and filter through a benzene wetted filter paper. Make
- the filtrat e alkaline by carefully adding a strong caustic soda solution
- with external cooling and stirring. Separate the benzene layer and dry,
- evaporate the solvent (benzene) under vacuo in a hydrogen atmosphere.
- Dissolve the red residue in 50 ml of methanol and reduce over 1.5 g of
- Raney nickel (see reductions chapter for complete information, then work
- in 1.5 g of catalyst). The catalyst is removed by filtration and the
- solvent by evaporation in vacuo. The residue is dissolved in benzene and
- purified by runn ing through an alumina filled chromatography column.
- Evaporate the benzene in vacuo and dissolve the resulting yellow, oily
- base in methanol (50 ml), neutralize with hydrobromic acid, and evaporate
- in vacuo. The residue crystallizes on scratching with a glass rod. Use a
- minimum amount of water to dissolve, upon boiling, add decolorizing carbon
- and filter off hot to get 1.5 g of the hydrobromide salt of
- 1-p-methoxybenzyl-1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8-octahydroisoquinoline as colorless
- prisms, mp: 197-198 C.
-
- The above quinoline can be converted in several ways to Dromoran.
- The process given below methylates it at the same time as the reduction
- takes place and is a superior operation.
-
- Reduce the quinoline catalytically in the presence of
- formaldehyde. Most any of the general methods of catalytic reductions
- found in the reductions chapter will work fine, as long as you remember to
- use formaldehyde.
-
- Another method is to proceed after the Raney Nickel reduction like
- this: filter the catalyst off and purify as above. React the product with
- CH2O and hydrogen or HCO2H to get the 2-Me derivative, which is heated
- with H3PO4 at 140-150 C for 70 hours. Note: HCO2H is a strange way to
- say formic acid.
-
- [From _The Merck Index_ Eleventh Edition] slighty abbreviated
-
- Levorphanol. 17-methylmorphinan-3-ol; (-)-3-hydroxy-N-methylmorphinan;
- levorphan; lemoran; Ro 1-5341. C17H23NO; mol wt. 257.38. Orally active
- synthetic morphine analog. Preparation of racemate from 2-methyl-1-
- benzyl-1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8-octahydroisoquinoline: Grewe, Naturwiss. 33, 333
- (1946); Angew. Chem. A59, 198 (1947); Grewe, Mondon, Ber. 81, 279 (1948);
- Swiss pat. 280,674 (1952 to Hoffman-LaRoche), C.A. 47, 7554 (1953).
- Preparation of isomers: Schnider, Grussner, Helv. Chim. Acta. 34, 2211
- (1951); Vogler, U.S. patent 2,744,112 (1956 to Hoffman-LaRoche). Absolute
- configuration: Corrodi, et al., Helv. Chim. Acta. 42, 212 (1959).
- Analgesic activity and toxicity data: L.O. Randall, G. Lehmann, J.
- Pharmacol. Exp. Ther. 99, 163, (1950). HPLC determination in plasma: R.
- Lucek, R. Dixon, J. Chromatog. 341, 239 (1985). Clinical pharmokinetics:
- R. Dixon et al., Res. Commun. Chem. Pathol. Pharmacol. 41, 3 (1983).
- Crystals, mp 198-199 C.
- Tartrate dihydrate, C21H29NO72H2O, Ro 1-5341/7, Dromoran,
- Levo-Dromoran. Crystals, mp. 113-115 C (when anhydrous, mp 206-208 C).
- pH of a 0.2% aq solution 3.4 to 4.0. One gram dissolves in 45 ml water,
- in 110 g alcohol, in 50 g ether.
- dl-Form, racemorphan, methorphinan. Crystals from anisole and dil
- alcohol, mp. 251-253 C.
- dl-Form Hydrobromide, C17H24BrNO, NU-2206. Crystals, mp 193-195.
- Sol in water; sparingly sol in alcohol. Practically insoluble in ether.
- LD50 i.v. in mice: 41 mg/kg (Randall, Lehmann).
- d-Form, Ro 1-6794, dextrorphan. Crystals, mp 198-199 C.
-
-
- [From 48th edition Physicians Desk Reference]
-
- Equianalgesic Dose (mg)
- Name IM PO
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------
- morphine 10 60
- hydromorphone (Dilaudid) 1.5 7.5
- methadone (Dolophine) 10 20
- oxycodone (Percocet) 15 30
- levorphanol (Dromoran) 2 4
- oxymorphone (Numorphan) 1 10 (PR)
- heroin 5 60
- meperidine (Demerol) 75 --
- codeine 130 200
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Note: All IM and PO doses in this chart are considered equivalent to 10 mg
- of IM morphine in analgesic effect. IM denotes intramuscular, PO oral,
- and PR rectal.
-
- --
- Lamont Granquist (lamont@hyperreal.com)
- "And then the alien anthropologists - Admitted they were still perplexed - But
- on eliminating every other reason - For our sad demise - They logged the only
- explanation left - This species has amused itself to death" -- Roger Waters
-
- =============================================================================
-
- Message-ID: <103313Z09031994@anon.penet.fi>
- Newsgroups: alt.psychoactives
- From: an40496@anon.penet.fi (Holden Caulfield)
- Date: Wed, 9 Mar 1994 10:27:13 UTC
- Subject: Re: How to oxidize codeine to hydrocodone
-
- [quoted text deleted -cak]
-
- The Merck Index has this to say about oxycodone:
-
- Prepn by catalytic reduction of hydroxycodeinone, its oxime,
- or its bromination products, or by reduction of hydroxycodeinone
- with sodium hydrosulfite. Bibliography: Small, Lutz, "Chemistry
- of the Opium Alkaloids," Suppl. No. 103 to Public Health Reports,
- Washington (1932); K.W. Bentley, _The Chemistry of the Morphine
- Alkaloids_ (Oxford, 1954).
-
- So, this leaves the question "How do you prepare hydroxycodeinone?" Back
- to the Merck it says, about hydroxycodeinone:
-
- From codeine: Merck, Ger. pat. 411,530; _Frdl._ 15, 1516; K.W.
- Bentley, _The Chemistry of the Morphine Alkaloids_ (Oxford, 1954).
- Improved synthesis [from ??]: F.M. Hauser et al., _J. Med. Chem._
- 17, 1117 (1974).
-
- About hydrocodone:
-
- Prepn by hydrogenation of codeinone: Mannich, Lowenheim, _Arch Pharm_
- 258, 295 (1920); by oxidation of dihydrocodeine, Ger. pat. 415,097
- (1925 to E. Merck), _Frdl._ 15, 1518 (1925-1927); by catalytic
- rearrangement of codeine: Ger. pat. 623,821. Industrial prepn from
- dihydrocodeine: Pfister, Tishler, U.S. pat. 2,715,626 (1955 to Merck
- & Co.). [...] Review: Small, Lutz, "Chemistry of the Opium
- Alkaloids," Suppl. No. 103, Public Health Reports, Washington (1932).
-
- I wonder if all those methods for reduction of the double bond in hydroxycodeine
- to get oxycodone are applicable to reduction of codeine or codeinone.
- The one about "reduction of the bromination products" sounds like they add
- bromine across the double bond and then reduce the halide, I believe hydrides
- (LAH, NaBH4) can be used for this, and maybe H2 + catalyst, but I'm really not
- too sure.
-
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------
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- =============================================================================
-
- Newsgroups: talk.politics.drugs,alt.drugs
- From: jerry@teetot.acusd.edu (Jerry Stratton)
- Subject: Re: Heroin OTC pre-1914 ?
- Message-ID: <1993Nov18.180240.20847@teetot.acusd.edu>
- Date: Thu, 18 Nov 93 18:02:40 GMT
-
- civl097@csc.canterbury.ac.nz writes:
- >I am looking for references or quotes that indicate that heroin, or
- >preparations using it were available over-the-counter in the pre-Harrison
- >Act days.
-
- Opium and Morphine were certainly available OTC. I don't know if heroin
- was available OTC, but the Harrison Act folks seemed to think it was:
-
- From Brecher, Licit & Illicit Drugs, Ch. 8, p. 49:
-
- The patent-medicine manufacturers were exempted even from the licensing
- and tax provisions, provided that they limited themselves to "preparations
- and remedies which do not contain more than two grains of opium, or
- more than one-fourth of a grain of morphine, or more than one-eighth of
- a grain of heroin... in one avoirdupois ounce." (5)
- (5) Public Law No. 223, 63rd Cong., approved December 17, 1914
-
- Jerry Stratton
- jerry@teetot.acusd.edu (Finger/Reply for PGP Public Key)
- ------
- "They play Paranoia seriously. What more can I say?"
- -- T. Kelly
-
-
-
-