| Systematic (IUPAC) name | |
|---|---|
| (2-(2-methyl-1H-indol-3-yl)-1-methyl-ethyl)dimethylamine | |
| Clinical data | |
| Pregnancy cat. | ? |
| Legal status | ? |
| Identifiers | |
| CAS number | 1080-95-1 |
| ATC code | ? |
| Chemical data | |
| Formula | C13H18N2 |
| Mol. mass | 202.30 g/mol |
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2,N,N-Trimethyltryptamine, 2,N,N-TMT, or 2-Me-DMT is a tryptamine derivative that is a hallucinogenic drug. It was invented by Alexander Shulgin and reported in his book TiHKAL (#34).[1] It is claimed to show psychoactive effects at a dosage of 50–100 mg orally, but these are relatively mild compared to other similar drugs, suggesting that while the 2-methyl group has blocked the binding of metabolic enzymes, it is also interfering with binding to the 5HT2A receptor target that mediates the hallucinogenic effects of these drugs.
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