The Acute Effect in Rats of 3, 4‐Methylenedioxyethamphetamine (MDEA, “Eve”) on Body Temperature and Long Term Degeneration of 5‐HT Neurones in Brain: A Comparison with MDMA (“Ecstasy”)
Pharmacology & Toxicology June 1, 1999 María Isabel Colado, Raquel Ena María Granados, Esther O’shea et al. 26 citations
A single dose of the recreational drug MDEA ("eve") given to Dark Agouti rats caused an acute, dose-dependent rise in body temperature. The peak hyperthermia from 35 mg/kg of MDEA matched that from 15 mg/kg of MDMA ("ecstasy"). Seven days later, MDMA caused a 50% loss of serotonin and its metabolite in the cortex, hippocampus, and striatum, indicating neurotoxic damage to serotonin nerve endings. MDEA at the highest dose produced only a 20% loss in cortex and hippocampus and no loss in striatum, with weak dose dependence. Neither drug altered striatal dopamine. MDEA had about half the potency of MDMA for hyperthermia and one-quarter the potency for serotonin neuron degeneration.