The Dangers of Methoxetamine

Redosing

Redosing Methoxetamine requires great care. This is because the effects of Methoxetamine take a long time to wear off. After the peak of the experience ends, it takes a long time to return to a baseline of zero effects. Redosing even after the peak ends can therefore have a much stronger effect than people sometimes expect at this point, because it will be added on to the previous dosage's effects which have not yet completely disappeared.



Consider this example. You insufflate 20mg of Methoxetamine at 00:00. The peak begins at 00:45, and ends at 1:30. At 2:30 you decide to re-dose 20mg, but even an hour after the peak ends your experience can still be at 50% of your original high. This brings you up to a total of 30mg by the time you come up from the re-dose, resulting in a peak 50% higher than your first. If unexpected and unwanted, this can cause a negative experience.



The best way to prevent redosing issues is stick to extremely small redoses, such as 25% of your original dose. Or you can just consider your overall dose to be an aggregate of all your dosages. Or you could just avoid redosing. Many people really do have an issue with this.

Physical Health Risks

Overdose

Death from overdose has not been reported, however Methoxetamine is a research chemical so not much is known about it.

Reported Deaths

"Somebody in Sweden injected 100 mg of methoxetamine and 400 mg of MDAI ... there were cardiac problems, and the person died."

Mental Health Risks





If someone is experiencing a bad trip on Methoxetamine, remind them that the effects are because of a drug, remind them that the experience will end & assure them that they have not permanently damaged themselves mentally. The best tactic is to try and relax while waiting for the effects to end. Overdose in the sense of taking so much that negative psychological effects occur can happen. Taking too much Methoxetamine can result in a bad trip involving anxiety, panic attack , paranoia, confusion & vomiting. This can range from being slightly uncomfortable to utterly terrifying and severely painful. To avoid this, increase your dosage of Methoxetamine slowly and steadily, making sure you are psychologically comfortable at a certain dosage before increasing.If someone is experiencing a bad trip on Methoxetamine, remind them that the effects are because of a drug, remind them that the experience will end & assure them that they have not permanently damaged themselves mentally. The best tactic is to try and relax while waiting for the effects to end.

Addiction

The arylcyclohexylamines light up too many of the reward systems in the brain, with the dopamine-reuptake inhibition, the NMDA antagonism, and the µ-opioid affinity. They lend themselves to abuse and escape to fantasy

Physical Addiction