Skip to content

A direct comparison of the behavioral and physiological effects of methamphetamine and 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA) in humans

M. Kirkpatrick, Erik W. Gunderson, Audrey Y. Perez, M. Haney, R. Foltin, C. Hart

Psychopharmacology June 30, 2011 DOI: 10.1007/s00213-011-2383-4 via Semantic Scholar

Summary

Methamphetamine and MDMA, despite chemical similarities, produce both overlapping and distinct effects in the same individuals. In a residential study with 11 adult volunteers, both drugs acutely increased cardiovascular measures and positive subjective effects while decreasing food intake. Participants had difficulty distinguishing between the drugs. Methamphetamine improved cognitive performance and disrupted sleep, whereas MDMA increased negative subjective-effect ratings. Few residual effects were noted for either drug. These differences may help explain the drugs' differing public perception and abuse potential, though recreational route of administration could also account for many attributed effects.

Study at a glance

Characteristics Within-subject design Peer reviewed
Sample size 11
Population Adult volunteers
Keywords Medicine Psychology
Citations 119
Key finding Methamphetamine and MDMA produce overlapping acute cardiovascular and positive subjective effects, but methamphetamine improves performance and disrupts sleep while MDMA increases negative subjective effects.

Abstract

Despite their chemical similarities, methamphetamine and 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA) produce differing neurochemical and behavioral responses in animals. In humans, individual studies of methamphetamine and MDMA indicate that the drugs engender overlapping and divergent effects; there are only limited data comparing the two drugs in the same individuals. This study examined the effects of methamphetamine and MDMA using a within-subject design. Eleven adult volunteers completed this 13-day residential laboratory study, which consisted of four 3-day blocks of sessions. On the first day of each block, participants received oral methamphetamine (20, 40 mg), MDMA (100 mg), or placebo. Drug plasma concentrations, cardiovascular, subjective, and cognitive/psychomotor performance effects were assessed before drug administration and after. Food intake and sleep were also assessed. On subsequent days of each block, placebo was administered and residual effects were assessed. Acutely, both drugs increased cardiovascular measures and “positive” subjective effects and decreased food intake. In addition, when asked to identify each drug, participants had difficulty distinguishing between the amphetamines. The drugs also produced divergent effects: methamphetamine improved performance and disrupted sleep, while MDMA increased “negative” subjective-effect ratings. Few residual drug effects were noted for either drug. It is possible that the differences observed could explain the differential public perception and abuse potential associated with these amphetamines. Alternatively, the route of administration by which the drugs are used recreationally might account for the many of the effects attributed to these drugs (i.e., MDMA is primarily used orally, whereas methamphetamine is used by routes associated with higher abuse potential).

Comments

No comments yet.

Log in to comment