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LAMPA
Lysergic acid methylpropylamide (LAMPA, LAMP, or LMP), also known as LMP-55 or as N-methyl-N-propyllysergamide (MPLA), is a structural analogue of lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD) that has been studied as a potential treatment for alcoholism. In animal studies, LAMPA was found to be nearly equipotent to ECPLA and MIPLA for inducing a head-twitch response. LAMPA appears to be significantly less potent than LSD in humans, producing little to no noticeable effects at doses of 100 μg. It shows reduced-efficacy partial agonism of the serotonin 5-HT2A receptor relative to LSD, which may be responsible for its equivocal hallucinogenic effects.
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LAMPA
Lysergic acid methylpropylamide (LAMPA, LAMP, or LMP), also known as LMP-55 or as N-methyl-N-propyllysergamide (MPLA), is a structural analogue of lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD) that has been studied as a potential treatment for alcoholism. In animal studies, LAMPA was found to be nearly equipotent to ECPLA and MIPLA for inducing a head-twitch response. LAMPA appears to be significantly less potent than LSD in humans, producing little to no noticeable effects at doses of 100 μg. It shows reduced-efficacy partial agonism of the serotonin 5-HT2A receptor relative to LSD, which may be responsible for its equivocal hallucinogenic effects.