4-Acetoxy-DET
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
4-Acetoxy-DET (4-Acetoxy-N,N-diethyltryptamine), also known as ethacetin or ethylacybin, is a hallucinogenic tryptamine. It was first synthesized in 1958 by Albert Hofmann in the Sandoz lab. [1]
Within the body a percentage may be partially hydrolized into the free phenol 4-HO-DET. Human studies concerning the metabolic fate of this drug are however lacking.
[edit] Dosage
4-Acetoxy-DET is orally active, and dosages of 10-30mg are common. Effects last 4-6 hours. The free base is also active when smoked in a dose range of 7-14mg. Smoking 4-acetoxy-DET greatly speeds up the onset; peak effects are experienced within 10 minutes, and are usually over within 1 hour.
[edit] External links
- Erowid 4-Acetoxy-DET vault
- (Swedish) Classification document by the Swedish Institute of Health regarding 4-Acetoxy-DET
Tryptamines - edit |
---|
4-Acetoxy-DET | 4-Acetoxy-DIPT | 4-Acetoxy-DMT | 4-HO-DIPT | 5-MeO-α-ET | 5-MeO-α-MT | 5-MeO-DALT | 5-MeO-DET | 5-MeO-DIPT | 5-MeO-DMT | 5-MeO-DPT | 5-MeO-MIPT | α-ET | α-MT | Baeocystin | Bufotenin | DET | DIPT | DMT | DPT | Ethocybin | EIPT | Ethocin | Ibogaine | Iprocin | MET | MIPT | Miprocin | Melatonin | NMT | Norbaeocystin | Psilocin | Psilocybin | Rizatriptan | Serotonin | Sumatriptan | Tryptamine | Tryptophan |