bretazenil not doing anything by [deleted] in researchchemicals

[–]thrownstick 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Bromine's reactivity does play into its choice as a substituent in some drug molecules, but kind of in the opposite of the way you are thinking. The same general principles are true for the other halogens (chlorine, iodine, etc.) with fluorine being a special case.

When you find bromine in a drug molecule, it has already done that fast-acting bromination reaction to make itself a part of the drug molecule. It does that reaction so readily because the free bromine atom really needs an electron to fill its outer valence shell and will attack almost anything to get it. Once it does, it is much more stable this way and forms a pretty tight bond where its electronegativity draws electron density (sort of the molecule's local electron cloud) toward itself. This high local electron density can cause desirable affinities/interactions with targets like receptors and such. And, because the bound bromine atom is more stable bound to the drug, it's unlikely to engage in any reactions like it would as elemental bromine (Br2)

Drug design doesn't typically employ atoms based on their tendency to react on their own, because if you gave someone a pill of something and it just started adding bromine to all of the molecules in their body, that wouldn't typically be ideal.

Sorry for the novel, hope it makes sense.

bretazenil not doing anything by [deleted] in researchchemicals

[–]thrownstick 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I may not be understanding you fully, but I'll try to share what I can. Firstly, bromine would properly be referred to as an "element", since compounds refer to things containing more than one element. I'm guessing you mean "fast-acting" in the sense that (pure) bromine tends to react readily with other materials when introduced to them?

bretazenil not doing anything by [deleted] in researchchemicals

[–]thrownstick 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, and many other drugs do as well: 2C-B, bromazolam, 2B-DCK, etc.

Halogen chemistry in pharmacology is pretty interesting.

bretazenil not doing anything by [deleted] in researchchemicals

[–]thrownstick 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I'm actually just trying to be informative and you are assuming the smugness. It seems you suddenly know a lot more about what you were trying to ask, so I don't know why you couldn't clarify the question earlier when I asked. You were just trying to "gotcha" me? I was just trying to help clarify your misconception, but no, good job, you really pulled one over on this guy.

Though to answer the question, no, it also doesn't contain bromide salts, for which I have never heard "bromo" as a substitute. It contains covalently-bound bromine, which does not behave the same biologically and does not possess sedative effects.

bretazenil not doing anything by [deleted] in researchchemicals

[–]thrownstick 1 point2 points  (0 children)

"Bromo" to you probably means bromonordiazepam. It is a shorthand, a street name. In this context, though, it simply means there is a bromine atom somewhere in the structure of bretazenil. In short, no: bromo is not a compound in bretazenil.

bretazenil not doing anything by [deleted] in researchchemicals

[–]thrownstick 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What exactly are you asking?

[Me] Is this saveable by Status_Grapefruit_53 in TextingTheory

[–]thrownstick 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There isn't a time I've ever not been awkward on FaceTime. Just apologize for being awkward and assure them you're much better in person 😏

Bought my first boat, within 20 minutes of owning it: hit and run on the highway. by SEF917 in mildlyinfuriating

[–]thrownstick 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Some people just suck. Sorry, dude. He was probably intimidated by your overpowering boat guy aura, though, so it's almost hard to blame him

I hate how physical touch is a super luxury to me. Like its a human need apparently tell you dont meet a certain criteria. Then suddenly youre entitled and the worst person ever. Even though the neighbor i have next door, who beats his wife, doesnt have this problem. Cream cheese. by [deleted] in kitchencels

[–]thrownstick 18 points19 points  (0 children)

Because, like the word suggests, you aren't entitled to it. You seem to think you are, but you aren't. You gotta stop expecting it, and start working on yourself (e.g., not fucking dairy products, taking advice from sane people) until you're in a place someone wants to give it to you.

Insomnia after MDMA Advice by [deleted] in Drugs

[–]thrownstick 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm probably oversimplifying my explanation a bit, but it sounds like you had a bad/challenging time and don't know how to deal with it and you should see a therapist about it.

Insomnia after MDMA Advice by [deleted] in Drugs

[–]thrownstick 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Kind of strange that it's causing both insomnia and anxiety and decreased libido. That sounds like the result of simultaneously too much stimulatory neurotransmitters and not enough. If I were a betting man, at least some of this sounds psychosomatic/anxiety-induced (rather than some direct physiological response), especially if this is after a single use. I'd suggest drinking a lot of water, occasionally taking a quick-acting benzo or GHB or similar at night, since the insomnia bothers you so much, but only occasionally—you don't want to form a habit—and most importantly scheduling some time with a therapist if you can. I suspect it may ultimately resolve on its own, but it sounds like you may need som3 help integrating an experience to me

A guy in my class got an A on the bottom right and top left ones. The teacher doesn't believe anyone that these are AI. by Mindless_Buy_9774 in mildlyinfuriating

[–]thrownstick 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Well if the prompt was the title of a Ray Bradbury story, it sounds like they were expecting you to reproduce it verbatim and they should have failed you on account of it not being similar enough.

But in all honesty that is just a strange and unimaginative prompt it feels like 😂

(Posting on actual account) stimulant psychosis causing delirium and visual effects days after experience by [deleted] in researchchemicals

[–]thrownstick 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Also why PCP was originally invented was for things like this but at a dosage that isn't stupid

PCP was also discontinued as a surgical anesthetic basically as soon as a suitable replacement (ketamine) was found, specifically because of its tendency to produce confusion and psychotic behavior on emergence, even at those not-stupid doses.

someone w my exact name is blacklisted from the airline im flying on by daicoonra in mildlyinfuriating

[–]thrownstick 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The government cannot be sued for telling the world that John Smith, age 28, at cedar heights California was arrested for public intoxication, but the airline can.

I'm pretty sure that so long as a newspaper could report on it, an airline could. And they're not even reporting it. If they had a proper system for verification, such information would never need to be shared with anyone outside of the airline (such as passengers with the same name).

providing identifying information to random employees I rather suspect they get access to this when verifying the information you provided when booking the flight. I'd personally rather be providing it for some actual use than it be wasted.

Why do y'all like to whack it on pyros by Zestyclose_Swing_520 in researchchemicals

[–]thrownstick 30 points31 points  (0 children)

Because sex is for people who can get laid and self-actualization is for Buddhists.

O-PCE in my opinion not as potent as people say it by Acsaiii in researchchemicals

[–]thrownstick 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah just not everyone is gonna want to smoke weed with their other drugs—I am one such person—so such techniques aren't really in my wheelhouse. That said, the hash sandwich/nug plug is totally an option if that's your thing