Party pills
In countries such as New Zealand where BZP and related piperazines have been recently made illegal, there is now increasing commercial interest in piperazine free "party pills" which are purported to produce similar effects with ingredients that will circumvent the ban. Common active ingredients (among many others) include caffeine, theobromine, other stimulant alkaloids, octopamine (a chemical which acts as a neurotransmitter with similar effects to dopamine), blue lotus extract (Nymphaea caerulea), natural sources of the LSD precursor and weak psychedelic agent lysergic acid amide (illegal in many countries), passionflower (sedative which contains monoamine oxidase inhibitors), Citrus aurantium (contains small amounts of the stimulant synephrine), glaucine (plant derived compound usually used as cough medicine), and geranamine (alkylamine compound found in geranium oil).
News and legality
Party pills and their legal status are often in the news. Matt Bowden, one of the original distributors of such pills[2](registration required) (subscription required) was interviewed when issues involving party pills arose in the media. A clinical trial by ClubStargate for a pill named Ease was suspended because it contained methylone, which was claimed by the Ministry of Health to fall under New Zealand controlled drug analogue laws (although this was never proven in court).
New Zealand has classified BZP-based party pills as a "Restricted Substance" by the Misuse of Drugs Act and restricted to those over 18 years. For more on the legal issues posed by party pills, see benzylpiperazine.
In late June 2007, BZP was classed as a Class D in New Zealand drug and its availability was banned by a law passed on 13 March 2008, with a six month amnesty period.[3] However it was not long before BZP-free alternatives appeared, offering the same effects without the illegal ingredient.[citation needed]
See also
- Benzylpiperazine
- Methylhexanamine
- TFMPP
- MeOPP
- pFPP
- Ecstasy (drug)
- Drug abuse
- Recreational drug use
- Designer drug
- Spice (drug)
References
- ↑ Retrieved from http://www.rsc.org/learn-chemistry/resource/rws00006904/synephrine?cmpid=CWS00006904 | http://www.getpartypills.com/legalecstasy.html
- ↑ "Mind-altering drugs: does legal mean safe?". Retrieved 2013-06-28.
- ↑ "Party pills banned". The New Zealand Herald. 13 March 2008.
- Stay on Power Capsules
- Harmonic Party Pill packaging, Evolvepills, Auckland, 2006
External links
Look up party pills in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. |