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3-Chloromethamphetamine (3-CMA, MCMA) is a substituted amphetamine derivative invented in the 1960s. In animal studies it was deemed to be a "hallucinogen" rather than a stimulant, though the assays used at the time did not distinguish between the compounds now termed psychedelics and those now termed empathogens.[1][2][3]

See also

References

  1. ^ Knoll J, Vizi ES, Ecseri Z (February 1966). "Psychomimetic methylamphetamine derivatives". Archives Internationales de Pharmacodynamie et de Therapie. 159 (2): 442–51. PMID 5916746.
  2. ^ Brimblecombe RW, Pinder RM (1975). Hallucinogenic agents. Wright-Scientechnica. pp. 71–74. ISBN 978-0-85608-011-1.
  3. ^ Segawa H, T Iwata Y, Yamamuro T, Kuwayama K, Tsujikawa K, Kanamori T, Inoue H (March 2017). "Differentiation of ring-substituted regioisomers of amphetamine and methamphetamine by supercritical fluid chromatography". Drug Testing and Analysis. 9 (3): 389–398. doi:10.1002/dta.2040. PMID 27383263.
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