03 Mar 2013
Up-to-Date Information on AMT
AMT is the common abbreviation for alpha-methyltryptamine, an illegal hallucinogen chemically related to other hallucinogens such as lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD) and psilocybin. In certain respects, the drug produces effects similar to MDMA (Ecstasy), and illicit drug manufacturers sometimes use AMT as an MDMA substitute. AMT is not very widely distributed, according to the US Drug Enforcement Administration; however, its position as a potential MDMA substitute makes it a prominent target for ongoing monitoring. Many people who use AMT combine it with a second hallucinogen, commonly known by the street name Foxy Methoxy.
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01 Mar 2013
Up-to-Date Information on Foxy Methoxy
Foxy Methoxy is a common slang term for the chemical 5-methoxy-N, N-diisopropyltryptamine (5-MeO-DiPT), an illegal hallucinogenic drug that belongs to a group of substances called tryptamines. According to the US Drug Enforcement Agency’s Office of Diversion Control, it currently outranks LSD and psilocybin as the most widely available tryptamine in America. This is true, in part, because illicit drug manufacturers often use Foxy Methoxy as a convenient substitute for the club drug Ecstasy (known chemically as MDMA). Foxy Methoxy users run the risk of developing a number of unpleasant side effects, getting involved in accidents, or dying from the effects of a drug overdose.