So now you know it IS real. Who do you think discovered it? Are not those who use it to be considered sympathetic to and colluding with those who curate it?
Perhaps a little digging will help you along your way...
So now you know it IS real. Who do you think discovered it? Are not those who use it to be considered sympathetic to and colluding with those who curate it?
Perhaps a little digging will help you along your way...
Yes it’s real. You can buy it from Fisher Scientific. Comes in a tiny ampul. CAS number 54-06-8 and costs about $1k for 1gram. You can even download the SDS.
3M sells it too, but normally the real thing is better than the synthetic version
Do you know why this the case? I always assumed that they are structural isomers.
But I had this discussion with a someone else with more chemistry knowledge and they said that the synthetic version is the same as the one found in nature?
The molecule is too simple. Good thought/intuition.
Examine "chromaffin"s or "regions of the body that have an affinity for chromium".
These regions aggregate adrenaline-derivatives and other hormones (which are excreted under high stress). There are biological extractions (from rats) for these regions, which involve terrorizing the subject. These regions rapidly decay, if they are not treated with very specific washes.
It's like cuisine to them I believe, for example you can get imitation crab sure, and it tastes more or less the same. But real crab, the various types of crab and their unique flavors could never be adequately synthetically replicated as compared to the real thing. Genetics as well, I'm sure, are a factor.
The synthetic adrenochrome I propose is counter to their human trafficking network being disrupted. And there's a high demand. A multi-billion-dollar trading enterprise.
I have an alternative hypothesis.
Allegedly, an Erowid user took synthetic adrenachrome. He documented heart palpitations and anxiety, which are not effects that drug users want.
Instead, I looked into "adrenachrome" as an abbreviation. I found it. "Adrenal chromaffins" or "regions of the body that have great affinity for Chromium." These are regions of the endocrine system that aggregate hormones and other homeostatic regulating molecules. When I discovered the biological procedure for extracting those regions from "terrified mice," then I knew what I had discovered.
The laws of chemistry in a lab are the same laws in nature. Here's a guy making NaCl aka table salt from the elements of sodium and chlorine.
https://www.youtube.com/shorts/7fUzQnoEQ0k
So adrenochrome is made in a lab and pretty cheap. As pointed out you can buy it from a medical supply store. And it's the same stuff. I believe it's used to prevent hemorrhages.
25 mg of the stuff is like 60 bucks. And that's several hundred times more than would exist is a human body. Wait, I got that wrong. Oh boy did I get that wrong.
OK, it's way, way, way than exists in a human body.
Adrenochrome in a human body exists in NANOgrams per liter
One gram contains a thousand milligrams. One gram contains a billion NANOgrams.
Supposedly a human body under stress has 500ng/L
An EpiPen is an epinephrine injection device for folks who have severe allergic reactions. It contains like a third of of a milligram of adrenaline aka epinephrine. Way, way, way more than exists in the human body
https://www.epipen.ca/profiles/pfepipen_profile/themes/pfepipen_theme/build/images/epipen-device-with-labels-mob.jpg
When adrenaline is exposed to air it oxidizes and becomes adrenochrome. It turns pink. The first name for adrenochrome was pink adrenaline. They have been able to make adrenaline in a lab for probably a hundred years.
So you can buy an epipen for like $200 and make adrenochrome.....way more than exists in a body. So I don't understand these stories.
If you wait too long, it becomes brownish not pinkish and that is melanin. It's not very stable, light, moisture, oxygen
Excellent description of my objections to adrenachrome.
I posted above about "Adrenal Chromaffins," bodily regions where Chromium aggregates. I think that's a region worth digging into:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chromaffin_cell