- N,N-Dimetiltriptamina
- Reseptor serotonin
- 5-MeO-DMT
- Penggunaan obat psikoaktif untuk rekreasi
- Psilosibin
- Bufotenin
- Colorado River toad
- Anadenanthera peregrina
- Aphrodisiac
- Legal status of psychoactive Amanita mushrooms
- List of psychoactive plants, fungi, and animals
- 5-MeO-DMT
- N,N-Dimethyltryptamine
- Diplopterys cabrerana
- Cane toad
- Bufotenin - Wikipedia
- Bufotenine | Definition, Uses, Effects, & Facts | Britannica
- Bufotenin - PsychonautWiki
- Bufotenine: Uses, Interactions, Mechanism of Action - DrugBank …
- Bufotenin - Psychedelic Science Review
- Bufotenin | C12H16N2O | CID 10257 - PubChem
- Bufotenin - American Chemical Society
- Bufotenin - an overview | ScienceDirect Topics
- Bufotenine: Effects, Dosage, How To Take It & More - TrippyWiki
- Bufotenine: toward an understanding of possible psychoactive
Bufotenin GudangMovies21 Rebahinxxi LK21
Bufotenin, also known as dimethylserotonin or as 5-hydroxy-N,N-dimethyltryptamine (5-HO-DMT), is a serotonergic psychedelic of the tryptamine family. It is a derivative of the psychedelic dimethyltryptamine (DMT) and of the neurotransmitter serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine; 5-HT). The compound is an alkaloid found in some species of mushrooms, plants, and toads. It is also found naturally in the human body in small amounts. Bufotenin, for instance derived from the trees Anadenanthera colubrina and Anadenanthera peregrina, appears to have a long history of entheogenic use in South America.
The name bufotenin originates from the toad genus Bufo, which includes several species of psychoactive toads, most notably Incilius alvarius (formerly Bufo alvarius), that secrete bufotoxins from their parotoid glands. However, Bufo species like Incilius alvarius contain only trace amounts of bufotenin, with their major active component instead being 5-MeO-DMT. In addition to DMT and serotonin, bufotenin is similar in chemical structure to other psychedelics such as 5-MeO-DMT and psilocin (4-HO-DMT). These compounds also occur in some of the same fungus, plant, and animal species as bufotenin.
Bufotenin acts as a potent and non-selective serotonin receptor agonist, including of the serotonin 5-HT1A, 5-HT2A, 5-HT2C, and 5-HT3 receptors, among others. It also acts as a potent and specific serotonin releasing agent. The compound is more hydrophilic than other related tryptamines and consequently is more peripherally selective. In relation to this, bufotenin has been associated with prominent peripheral serotonergic side effects, such as cardiovascular changes.
For many decades and even into the present, bufotenin has been considered by many experts, such as David E. Nichols, to be either inactive or only weakly active as a psychedelic in humans and to produce robust toxic effects. Alexander Shulgin was also uncertain whether bufotenin was an active psychedelic. However, Jonathan Ott found in 2001 via self-experimentation that bufotenin is in fact a potent psychedelic and does not necessarily produce serious adverse effects. Hamilton Morris has further supported these findings with his own self-experimentation, although bufotenin was reported to be strongly nauseating for himself and many others. According to Morris, the psychedelic effects of bufotenin are like a cross between those of DMT and 5-MeO-DMT. Morris has stated that bufotenin may in fact be the psychedelic with the longest history of human entheogenic use. Bufotenin has also been encountered as a recreational drug in forensic samples, for instance in New York City.
Nomenclature
Bufotenin (bufotenine) is also known by the names 5-hydroxy-N,N-dimethyltryptamine (5-HO-DMT), N,N-dimethyl-5-hydroxytryptamine, dimethylserotonin, and mappine, among others.
History
Bufotenin was isolated from toad skin, and named by the Austrian chemist Handovsky at the University of Prague during World War I. The structure of bufotenine was confirmed in 1934 by Heinrich Wieland's laboratory in Munich, and the first reported synthesis of bufotenine was by Toshio Hoshino and Kenya Shimodaira in 1935.
Sources
= Toads
=Bufotenin is found in the skin and eggs of several species of toads belonging to the genus Bufo, but is most concentrated in the Colorado River toad (formerly Bufo alvarius, now Incilius alvarius), the only toad species with enough bufotenin for a psychoactive effect. Extracts of toad toxin, containing bufotenin and other bioactive compounds, have been used in some traditional medicines such as ch'an su (probably derived from Bufo gargarizans), which has been used medicinally for centuries in China.
The toad was "recurrently depicted in Mesoamerican art", which some authors have interpreted as indicating that the effects of ingesting Bufo secretions have been known in Mesoamerica for many years; however, others doubt that this art provides sufficient "ethnohistorical evidence" to support the claim.
In addition to bufotenin, Bufo secretions also contain digoxin-like cardiac glycosides, and ingestion of these toxins can be fatal. Ingestion of Bufo toad poison and eggs by humans has resulted in several reported cases of poisoning, some of which resulted in death. A court case in Spain, involving a physician who dosed people with smoked Mexican Toad poison, one of his customers died after inhaling three doses, instead of the usual of only one, had images of intoxicated with this smoke suffering obvious hypocalcemic hand muscular spasms.
Reports in the mid-1990s indicated that bufotenin-containing toad secretions had appeared as a street drug, supposedly but in fact not an aphrodisiac, ingested orally in the form of ch'an su, or as a psychedelic, by smoking or orally ingesting Bufo toad secretions or dried Bufo skins. The use of chan'su and love stone (a related toad skin preparation used as an aphrodisiac in the West Indies) has resulted in several cases of poisoning and at least one death. The practice of orally ingesting toad poison has been referred to in popular culture and in the scientific literature as toad licking and has drawn media attention. Albert Most, founder of the defunct Church of the Toad of Light and a proponent of spiritual use of Bufo alvarius toxin, published a booklet in 1983 titled Bufo alvarius: The Psychedelic Toad of the Sonoran Desert which explained how to extract and smoke the secretions.
Bufotenin is also present in the skin secretion of three arboreal hylid frogs of the genus Osteocephalus (Osteocephalus taurinus, Osteocephalus oophagus, and Osteocephalus langsdorfii) from the Amazon and Atlantic rain forests.
= Anadenanthera seeds
=Bufotenin is a constituent of the seeds of Anadenanthera colubrina and Anadenanthera peregrina trees. Anadenanthera seeds have been used as an ingredient in psychedelic snuff preparations by indigenous cultures of the Caribbean, Central and South America since pre-Columbian times. The oldest archaeological evidence of use of Anadenanthera beans is over 4,000 years old.
= Other sources
=Bufotenin has been identified as a component in the latex of the takini (Brosimum acutifolium) tree, which is used as a psychedelic by South American shamans, and in the seeds of Mucuna pruriens. Bufotenin has also been identified in Amanita muscaria, Amanita citrina, A. porphyria, and A. tomentella.
= Humans
=Bufotenin occurs in trace amounts in the human body. It can be biosynthesized from serotonin by indolethylamine N-methyltransferase (INMT) enzymes.
Association with schizophrenia and other mental disorders
A study conducted in the late 1960s reported the detection of bufotenin in the urine of schizophrenic subjects; however, subsequent research failed to confirm these findings until 2010.
Studies have detected endogenous bufotenin in urine specimens from individuals with other psychiatric disorders, such as infant autistic patients. Another study indicated that paranoid violent offenders or those who committed violent behaviour towards family members have higher bufotenin levels in their urine than other violent offenders.
A 2010 study utilized a mass spectrometry approach to detect levels of bufotenin in the urine of individuals with severe autism spectrum disorder (ASD), schizophrenia, and asymptomatic subjects. Their results indicate significantly higher levels of bufotenin in the urine of the ASD and schizophrenic groups when compared to asymptomatic individuals.
Effects
= Fabing & Hawkins (1955)
=In 1955, Fabing and Hawkins administered bufotenin intravenously at doses of up to 16 mg to prison inmates at Ohio State Penitentiary. A toxic effect causing purpling of the face was seen in these tests.
A subject given 1 mg reported "a tight feeling in the chest" and prickling "as if he had been jabbed by needles." This was accompanied by a "fleeting sensation of pain in both thighs and a mild nausea."
Another subject given 2 mg reported "tightness in his throat." He had tightness in the stomach, tingling in pretibial areas, and developed a purplish hue in the face indicating blood circulation problems. He vomited after 3 minutes.
Another subject given 4 mg complained of "chest oppression" and that "a load is pressing down from above and my body feels heavy." The subject also reported "numbness of the entire body" and "a pleasant Martini feeling-my body is taking charge of my mind." The subject reported he saw red spots passing before his eyes and red-purple spots on the floor, and the floor seemed very close to his face. Within 2 minutes these visual effects were gone, and replaced by a yellow haze, as if he were looking through a lens filter.
Fabing and Hawkins commented that bufotenin's psychedelic effects were "reminiscent of [LSD] and mescaline but develop and disappear more quickly, indicating rapid central action and rapid degradation of the drug".
= Isbell (1956)
=In 1956, Harris Isbell at the Public Health Service Hospital in Lexington, Kentucky, experimented with bufotenin as a snuff. He reported "no subjective or objective effects were observed after spraying with as much as 40 mg bufotenine"; however, subjects who received 10–12 mg by intramuscular injection reported "elements of visual hallucinations consisting of a play of colors, lights, and patterns."
= Turner & Merlis (1959)
=Turner and Merlis (1959) experimented with intravenous administration of bufotenin (as the water-soluble creatinine sulfate salt) to schizophrenics at a New York state hospital. They reported that when one subject received 10 mg during a 50-second interval, "the peripheral nervous system effects were extreme: at 17 seconds, flushing of the face, at 22 seconds, maximal inhalation, followed by maximal hyperventilation for about 2 minutes, during which the patient was unresponsive to stimuli; her face was plum-colored." Finally, Turner and Merlis reported:
on one occasion, which essentially terminated our study, a patient who received 40 mg intramuscularly, suddenly developed an extremely rapid heart rate; no pulse could be obtained; no blood pressure measured. There seemed to have been an onset of auricular fibrillation . . . extreme cyanosis developed. Massage over the heart was vigorously executed and the pulse returned to normal . . . shortly thereafter the patient, still cyanotic, sat up saying: "Take that away. I don't like them."
After pushing doses to the morally admissible limit without producing visuals, Turner and Merlis conservatively concluded: "We must reject bufotenine . . . as capable of producing the acute phase of Cohoba intoxication."
= McLeod and Sitaram (1985)
=A 1985 study by McLeod and Sitaram in humans reported that bufotenin administered intranasally at a dose of 1–16 mg had no effect, other than intense local irritation. When given intravenously at low doses (2–4 mg), bufotenin oxalate caused anxiety but no other effects; however, a dose of 8 mg resulted in profound emotional and perceptual changes, involving extreme anxiety, a sense of imminent death, and visual disturbance associated with color reversal and distortion, and intense flushing of the cheeks and forehead.
= Ott (2001)
=In 2001, ethnobotanist Jonathan Ott published the results of a study in which he self-administered free base bufotenin via insufflation (5–100 mg), sublingually (50 mg), rectally (30 mg), orally (100 mg) and via vaporization (2–8 mg). Ott reported "visionary effects" of intranasal bufotenin and that the "visionary threshold dose" by this route was 40 mg, with smaller doses eliciting perceptibly psychoactive effects. He reported that "intranasal bufotenine is throughout quite physically relaxing; in no case was there facial rubescence, nor any discomfort nor disesteeming side effects".
At 100 mg, effects began within 5 minutes, peaked at 35 to 40 minutes, and lasted up to 90 minutes. Higher doses produced effects that were described as psychedelic, such as "swirling, colored patterns typical of tryptamines, tending toward the arabesque". Free base bufotenin taken sublingually was found to be identical to intranasal use. The potency, duration, and psychedelic action was the same. Ott found vaporized free base bufotenin active from 2 to 8 mg with 8 mg producing "ring-like, swirling, colored patterns with eyes closed". He noted that the visual effects of insufflated bufotenin were verified by one colleague, and those of vaporized bufotenin by several volunteers.
Ott concluded that free base bufotenin taken intranasally and sublingually produced effects similar to those of Yopo without the toxic peripheral symptoms, such as facial flushing, observed in other studies in which the drug was administered intravenously.
= Morris (2020s)
=Hamilton Morris, a psychoactive drug journalist, the creator of Hamilton's Pharmacopeia, and a pharmacologist, has experimented with bufotenin and found that it was an active psychedelic. He has claimed that its effects are like a cross between those of DMT and 5-MeO-DMT, being less visual than DMT but more visual than 5-MeO-DMT. Morris has also stated that bufotenin is very nauseating and this has made it unpleasant for himself and other people. By insufflation, he has said that its duration is about 1 hour and is longer than that of DMT or 5-MeO-DMT.
Morris and others have suggested use of the serotonin 5-HT3 receptor antagonist ondansetron (Zofran) to prevent nausea and vomiting with especially nauseating or serotonin 5-HT3 receptor agonistic serotonergic psychedelics like bufotenin.
= Lethal dose
=The acute toxicity (LD50) of bufotenin in rodents has been estimated at 200 to 300 mg/kg. Death occurs by respiratory arrest. In April 2017, a South Korean man died after consuming bufotenin-containing toads that had been mistaken for edible Asian bullfrogs, while in Dec. 2019, five Taiwanese men became ill and one man died after eating bufotenin-containing Central Formosa toads that they mistook for frogs.
Side effects
Side effects of bufotenin include nausea and vomiting, among others.
Pharmacology
= Pharmacodynamics
=Bufotenin is an analogue of the monoamine neurotransmitter serotonin. Similarly to serotonin and related compounds like dimethyltryptamine (DMT), bufotenin is an agonist of the serotonin 5-HT1A, 5-HT2A, 5-HT2C, 5-HT3, and 5-HT4 receptors. It is also known to bind with high affinity to other serotonin receptors, including the serotonin 5-HT1B, 5-HT1D, 5-HT1F, 5-HT6, and 5-HT7 receptors. Bufotenin has about 5- to 10-fold higher affinity for the serotonin 5-HT2A receptor than 5-MeO-DMT, about the same activational potency as 5-MeO-DMT at the receptor in vitro (EC50Tooltip half-maximal effective concentration = 3.49 nM and 3.87 nM, respectively), and about 3-fold higher in-vivo potency than 5-MeO-DMT when they are in the brain. In contrast to many other psychedelic tryptamines, bufotenin shows high affinity for the serotonin 5-HT3 receptors, similar to or higher than that of serotonin, and this receptor is strongly associated with production of nausea and vomiting. In addition to its serotonin receptor agonism, bufotenin is a potent serotonin releasing agent (SRA) with an EC50 value of 30.5 nM, whereas it is inactive as a releaser of dopamine or norepinephrine (EC50 > 10,000 nM).
Bufotenin is thought to have reduced capacity to cross the blood–brain barrier due to its relatively high hydrophilicity and hence to show significant peripheral selectivity. As a result, bufotenin has a greater ratio of peripheral activity to central effect. Bufotenin produces the head-twitch response, a behavioral proxy of psychedelic effects, in rodents. However, it requires doses about 10-fold higher than those of psilocybin to produce behavioral responses in rats. Studies have been mixed on the psychedelic effects of bufotenin in humans, with some finding a relative lack of psychedelic effects and pronounced toxic effects, while others have found psychedelic effects without major adverse effects. In any case, bufotenin has often been reported to produce pronounced peripheral serotonergic effects. These have included cardiovascular, gastrointestinal, and other effects, among them increased respiratory rate, chest heaviness, purpling of the head and neck skin (intense skin flushing), nausea, vomiting, and retching. It is possible that in addition to its limited central permeation, the peripheral effects of bufotenin have served to mask its central and hallucinogenic effects. The adverse effects of bufotenin may be more pronounced with intravenous injection compared to other routes such as insufflation.
In contrast to peripheral administration, intracerebroventricular injection of bufotenin in animals readily produces robust psychedelic-like behavioral effects similar to those of other serotonergic psychedelics like 5-MeO-DMT. In addition, 5-MeO-DMT, the O-methylated analogue of bufotenin, which has greater lipophilicity, is readily able to cross the blood–brain barrier and produce psychedelic effects. Bufotenin prodrug esters, with greater lipophilicity than bufotenin itself, like O-acetylbufotenin and O-pivalylbufotenin, have also shown robust psychedelic-like effects in animals.
= Pharmacokinetics
=Bufotenin has been reported to undergo a strong first-pass effect and to not be orally active. This is in contrast to its positional isomer psilocin, which is thought to form a pseudo-ring system that limits its susceptibility to metabolism by monoamine oxidase (MAO). However, bufotenin actually does show oral activity if sufficiently high doses are taken. About 10-fold higher doses of bufotenin seem to be required orally compared to parenterally for effects.
In rats, subcutaneously administered bufotenin (1–100 μg/kg) distributes mainly to the lungs, heart, and blood, and to a much lesser extent, the brain (hypothalamus, brain stem, striatum, and cerebral cortex), and liver. It reaches peak concentrations at one hour and is nearly eliminated within 8 hours. In humans, intravenous administration of bufotenin results in excretion of (70%) of injected drug in the form of 5-HIAA, an endogenous metabolite of serotonin, while roughly 4% is eliminated unmetabolized in the urine. Orally administered bufotenin undergoes extensive first-pass metabolism by the enzyme monoamine oxidase.
Psilocin (4-HO-DMT) is a positional isomer of bufotenin and might be expected to have similarly limited lipophilicity and blood–brain permeability. However, psilocin appears to form a tricyclic pseudo-ring system wherein its hydroxyl group and amine interact through hydrogen bonding. This in turn results in psilocin being much less polar, more lipophilic, and more able to cross the blood–brain barrier and exert central actions than it would be otherwise. In contrast, bufotenin is not able to achieve this pseudo-ring system. Accordingly, bufotenin is less lipophilic than psilocin in terms of partition coefficient. In any case, bufotenin does still appear to show significant central permeability and, like psilocybin, can produce robust hallucinogenic effects in humans.
Chemistry
Bufotenin, also known as 5-hydroxy-N,N-dimethyltryptamine (5-HO-DMT), is a substituted tryptamine and a derivative of dimethyltryptamine (DMT; N,N-dimethyltryptamine) and serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine; 5-HT). It is also closely related to psilocin (4-HO-DMT) and 5-MeO-DMT.
The predicted log P of bufotenin ranges from 0.89 to 2.04. For comparison, the predicted log P of DMT is 2.06 to 2.5, of serotonin is 0.2 to 0.56, of 5-MeO-DMT is 1.5 to 2.38. and of psilocin is -0.14 to 2.1.
= Analogues and derivatives
=Some analogues and derivatives of bufotenin (5-HO-DMT), aside from serotonin and DMT, include psilocin (4-HO-DMT) (a positional isomer), 5-MeO-DMT (O-methylbufotenin), O-acetylbufotenine, O-pivalylbufotenine, bufotenidine (N-methylbufotenin), 5-HO-DiPT, and α-methylserotonin, among others.
Society and culture
= Recreational use
=Bufotenin has been encountered as a recreational drug in forensic samples, for instance in New York City.
= Legal status
=Australia
Bufotenin is classified as a Schedule I controlled substance according to the Criminal Code Regulations of the Government of the Commonwealth of Australia. It is also listed as a Schedule 9 substance under the Poisons Standard (October 2015). A schedule 9 drug is outlined in the Poisons Act 1964 as "Substances which may be abused or misused, the manufacture, possession, sale or use of which should be prohibited by law except when required for medical or scientific research, or for analytical, teaching or training purposes with approval of the CEO."
Under the Misuse of Drugs Act 1981 6.0 grams (0.21 oz) is determined to be enough for court of trial and 2.0 grams (0.071 oz) is considered intent to sell and supply.
United Kingdom
In the United Kingdom, bufotenin is a Class A drug under the 1971 Misuse of Drugs Act.
United States
Bufotenin (DEA Drug Code 7403) is regulated as a Schedule I drug by the Drug Enforcement Administration at the federal level in the United States and is therefore illegal to buy, possess, and sell.
Sweden
Sweden's public health agency suggested classifying Bufotenin as a hazardous substance, on May 15, 2019.
See also
List of entheogens
Cane toad
References
External links
Erowid's Bufotenin Vault
TiHKAL entry on Bufotenin
Bufotenin (5-HO-DMT) entry in TiHKAL • info
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Erowid Chemicals Vaults : Molecules : bufotenin_3d
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Erowid Chemicals Vaults : Images : bufotenin
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Bufotenin - wikidoc
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Bufotenin Photos and Premium High Res Pictures - Getty Images
Bufotenin Illustrations, Royalty-Free Vector Graphics & Clip Art - iStock
Bufotenin Illustrations, Royalty-Free Vector Graphics & Clip Art - iStock
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10+ Bufotenin Stock Photos, Pictures & Royalty-Free Images - iStock
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Bufotenin Photos and Premium High Res Pictures - Getty Images
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Bufotenin; Dimethylserotonin; Mappine
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Bufotenin; Dimethylserotonin; Mappine
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Bufotenin molecule, illustration - Stock Image - F030/5068 - Science ...
File:Bufotenin.svg - PsychonautWiki
bufotenin
Daftar Isi
Bufotenin - Wikipedia
Bufotenin, also known as dimethylserotonin or as 5-hydroxy-N,N-dimethyltryptamine (5-HO-DMT), is a serotonergic psychedelic of the tryptamine family. It is a derivative of the psychedelic dimethyltryptamine (DMT) and of the neurotransmitter serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine; 5-HT).
Bufotenine | Definition, Uses, Effects, & Facts | Britannica
bufotenine, weak hallucinogenic agent active by intravenous injection, isolated from several natural sources or prepared by chemical synthesis. Bufotenine is a constituent of toad poison, the poisonous, milky secretion of glands found in the skin on the back of the animal. It was first isolated in 1934.
Bufotenin - PsychonautWiki
Bufotenin (5-HO-DMT, N,N-dimethylserotonin, bufotenine) is a naturally occurring substituted tryptamine alkaloid and a serotonergic psychedelic drug. Bufotenin is a structural derivative of tryptamine and serotonin.
Bufotenine: Uses, Interactions, Mechanism of Action - DrugBank …
Jul 31, 2007 · A hallucinogenic serotonin analog found in frog or toad skins, mushrooms, higher plants, and mammals, especially in the brains, plasma, and urine of schizophrenics. Bufotenin has been used as a tool in CNS studies and misused as a psychedelic. Type Small Molecule Groups Experimental, Illicit Structure
Bufotenin - Psychedelic Science Review
Bufotenin is a toxin discovered in the secretions of the toad Bufo vulgaris. 1 Also, bufotenin is found in other organisms like frogs, plants, mammals, and mushrooms. Although the compounds have similar names, bufotenin should not be confused with bufotenidine, another toxin.
Bufotenin | C12H16N2O | CID 10257 - PubChem
Jun 28, 2009 · Bufotenin is a tryptamine related to the neurotransmitter serotonin. Drugs capable of inducing illusions, hallucinations, delusions, paranoid ideations, and other alterations of mood and thinking.
Bufotenin - American Chemical Society
Sep 2, 2024 · Bufotenin (also spelled bufotenine) is a psychoactive alkaloid found in a variety of organisms, including certain toads, mushrooms, and plants. It is related to tryptamine 1 (as N, N -dimethyl-5-hydroxytryptamine) and serotonin 2 (as N, N -dimethylserotonin).
Bufotenin - an overview | ScienceDirect Topics
Bufotenin is an entheogen, an analogue of DMT and 5-MeO-DMT, an isomer of psilocin, and a serotonin derivative. It is an agonist to 5-HT2A and 5-HT 2C receptors (Egan et al., 2000; McBride, 2000). Bufotenin is used as a recreational aphrodisiac street drug like toad venom (Lyttle et al., 1996; Rodrigues, 2000).
Bufotenine: Effects, Dosage, How To Take It & More - TrippyWiki
Bufotenine (5-HO-DMT) is a psychedelic substance of the tryptamine class. It can be found in a variety of plants and several species of psychoactive toads. The 3 best-known sources of Bufotenine are Yopo, Vilca, and the Bufo Alvarius toad. Why choose Bufotenine over other psychedelics? Bufotenine…
Bufotenine: toward an understanding of possible psychoactive
A review of the neuropharmacology of the alleged hallucinogen bufotenine is presented, including recent experimental results showing activity similar to LSD and other known hallucinogens (psilocin and 5-MeO-DMT) at the purported hallucinogenic serotonin (5-HT) receptors, 5 …