Mixed amphetamine salts: Difference between revisions
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| structure = Amphetamine-white.svg | | structure = Amphetamine-white.svg | ||
| classes = Psychostimulant, Amphetamine | | classes = Psychostimulant, Amphetamine | ||
| uses = <vote slug="inattention">Inattention</vote>, <vote slug="narcolepsy">Narcolepsy</vote> | | uses = <vote slug="inattention">Inattention</vote>, <vote slug="narcolepsy">Narcolepsy</vote>, <vote slug="hyperactivity">Hyperactivity</vote>, <vote slug="impulsivity">Impulsivity</vote>, <vote slug="irritability">Irritability</vote> | ||
| starting_dose = 2.5 mg IR, 5 mg XR, or 12.5mg Mydayis | | starting_dose = 2.5 mg IR, 5 mg XR, or 12.5mg Mydayis | ||
| preparations = IR tabs 5, 7.5, 10, 12.5, 15, 20, 30 mg; XR caps 5, 10, 15, 20, 25, 30 mg; Mydayis caps 12.5, 25, 37.5, 50 mg | | preparations = IR tabs 5, 7.5, 10, 12.5, 15, 20, 30 mg; XR caps 5, 10, 15, 20, 25, 30 mg; Mydayis caps 12.5, 25, 37.5, 50 mg | ||
| fda_max = XR = 40 or 60 mg/d; IR = 40 or 60 mg/d<ref name="carlat">S0</ref> | |||
| routes = Oral | | routes = Oral | ||
| onset = IR: 30–60 min; XR: 1–2 h to peak effect | | onset = IR: 30–60 min; XR: 1–2 h to peak effect | ||
| Line 14: | Line 15: | ||
| pregnancy = Category C | | pregnancy = Category C | ||
| legal = Schedule II | | legal = Schedule II | ||
| mechanism = TAAR1 agonism, VMAT2 substrate, DAT/NET reverse transport | | mechanism = TAAR1 agonism, VMAT2 substrate, DAT/NET reverse transport, net release of dopamine and norepinephrine | ||
| intro = '''Mixed amphetamine salts (MAS)''' | | intro = '''Mixed amphetamine salts (MAS)''', marketed primarily as '''Adderall''', is a 3:1 mixture of dextroamphetamine and levoamphetamine salts (dextroamphetamine sulfate, amphetamine sulfate, dextroamphetamine saccharate, and amphetamine aspartate). | ||
Amphetamine was first synthesized in 1887 by Lazăr Edeleanu, then developed as a | Amphetamine was first synthesized in 1887 by Lazăr Edeleanu, then developed as a med in the late 1920s. "Adderall" was approved by the FDA in 1996, and has since become one of the most popular meds in the United States. Adderall/MAS is FDA-approved for attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder and narcolepsy. It is listed in Schedule II of the Controlled Substances Act, and so is tightly regulated in the United States as well as many other countries around the world. | ||
| | | indications = <problem ref="adhd" author="MDElliottMD"/> | ||
<problem ref="narcolepsy" author="MDElliottMD"/> | |||
<problem ref="trd-augment" author="MDElliottMD"> | |||
Off-label. | |||
</problem> | |||
<problem ref="shift-work" author="MDElliottMD"> | |||
Off-label. | |||
</problem> | |||
<problem ref="chronic-illness-cog" author="MDElliottMD"> | |||
Off-label. | |||
</problem> | |||
<problem ref="impulsivity" author="MDElliottMD"/> | |||
<problem ref="distractibility" author="MDElliottMD"> | |||
Impoved sustained attention by decreasing distractibility | |||
</problem> | |||
| dosing = <titration slug="typical-adult" title="Typical Adult" author="MDElliottMD"> | | dosing = <titration slug="typical-adult" title="Typical Adult" author="MDElliottMD"> | ||
Start at 5 mg XR; may increase by 5 mg each day until the desired effect is reached, up to 30 mg XR to start, and up to 60 mg XR eventually if necessary, in 10 mg increments. | Start at 5 mg XR; may increase by 5 mg each day until the desired effect is reached, up to 30 mg XR to start, and up to 60 mg XR eventually if necessary, in 10 mg increments. | ||
Occasionally can go higher if no notable effects (good or bad) at 60 mg | Occasionally can go higher if no notable effects (good or bad) at 60 mg, proceed with caution. | ||
If not long enough acting: add a tail dose of Adderall IR at [XR dose]/2. | If not long enough acting: add a tail dose of Adderall IR at [XR dose]/2. | ||
| Line 42: | Line 44: | ||
</titration> | </titration> | ||
| effects = | | effects = | ||
* <effect ref="attention" author="MDElliottMD">Improved attention, | * <effect ref="attention" author="MDElliottMD">Improved sustained attention, particularly on uninteresting things.</effect> | ||
* <effect ref="reduced-impulsivity" author="MDElliottMD"/> | * <effect ref="reduced-impulsivity" author="MDElliottMD"/> | ||
* <effect ref="wakefulness" author="MDElliottMD"/> | * <effect ref="wakefulness" author="MDElliottMD"/> | ||
| Line 70: | Line 72: | ||
* <effect ref="hyperthermia" author="MDElliottMD">Risk in hot environments or with vigorous exercise.</effect> | * <effect ref="hyperthermia" author="MDElliottMD">Risk in hot environments or with vigorous exercise.</effect> | ||
* <effect ref="withdrawal" author="MDElliottMD">Low motivation, low mood, hypersomnia, increased appetite on abrupt discontinuation.</effect> | * <effect ref="withdrawal" author="MDElliottMD">Low motivation, low mood, hypersomnia, increased appetite on abrupt discontinuation.</effect> | ||
* <effect ref="urinary-retention" author="MDElliottMD">Difficult/slow urination</effect> | |||
<effect ref="focus-intensification"/> | |||
<effect ref=" | <effect ref="appetite-suppression"/> | ||
| | <effect ref="alertness"/> | ||
* | <effect ref="executive-functioning"/> | ||
* | | pk_absorption = Excellent oral bioavailability, sources report ">75%" to "~90%". Food does not significantly affect total absorption but can delay peak concentration. | ||
* | | pk_distribution = Volume of distribution ~4 L/kg; plasma protein binding less than 20%. Crosses the blood–brain barrier and placenta. | ||
* | | pk_metabolism = Amphetamine is oxidized to 4-hydroxyamphetamine, α-hydroxyamphetamine, or norephedrine. Norephedrine and 4-hydroxyamphetamine are active metabolites and are further metabolized to 4-hydroxy-norephedrine. Deamination of α-hydroxyamphetamine yields phenylacetone, which is metabolized to benzoic acid and conjugated to its glucuronide and hippuric acid. '''CYP2D6''' is crucial for amphetamine metabolism; genetic polymorphism causes significant inter-patient variability in clearance. Amphetamine itself inhibits monoamine oxidase (MAO), and both CYP1A2 and CYP3A4 contribute to its metabolism.<ref>S1</ref> | ||
* | | pk_elimination = Primarily renal, ~30–40% recovered as unchanged amphetamine, the rest as metabolites. Due to its pK<sub>a</sub> of 9.9, urinary elimination is highly pH-dependent: alkaline urine reduces ionization and decreases renal clearance, while acidic urine and high flow rates accelerate clearance via active tubular secretion. '''Half-life:''' D-enantiomer 9 h (children 6–12 y), 11 h (adolescents 13–17 y), 10 h (adults); L-enantiomer 11 h, 13–14 h, 13 h respectively. | ||
| pharmacodynamics = Amphetamine purportedly works via several converging mechanisms at monoaminergic terminals: | |||
* '''Trace amine-associated receptor 1 (TAAR1) agonism''', activates TAAR1 in monoaminergic neurons, triggering PKA/PKC signaling that phosphorylates the dopamine and norepinephrine transporters (DAT, NET), causing them to internalize and reverse direction. | |||
* '''VMAT2 substrate''', enters the presynaptic terminal, displaces dopamine and norepinephrine from vesicles into the cytoplasm. | |||
* '''Reverse transport via DAT/NET''', the elevated cytoplasmic monoamine pool is then ejected into the synaptic cleft via the now-reversed transporters. '''This is the primary mechanism of action, release, not reuptake inhibition.''' | |||
* '''Weak reuptake inhibition''' at DAT and NET (secondary to release). | |||
* '''MAO inhibition''' at higher concentrations, slowing presynaptic catabolism of monoamines. | |||
* '''Serotonergic effects''' at high or supratherapeutic doses (relevant to overdose and serotonin syndrome risk). | |||
The net result is a robust increase in synaptic dopamine and norepinephrine in prefrontal cortex, striatum, and nucleus accumbens, underlying both therapeutic (attention, executive function, wakefulness) and reinforcing (euphoria, abuse liability) effects. | |||
| interactions = Minimal in practice. Caution with other psychostimulants, including caffeine. metabolized by 2D6, so relevant caution applies. | | interactions = Minimal in practice. Caution with other psychostimulants, including caffeine. metabolized by 2D6, so relevant caution applies. | ||
| pregnancy_details = [https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK501307/ Category C]. Crosses the placenta. Prenatal amphetamine exposure has been associated with low birth weight, premature delivery, and neonatal withdrawal (agitation, dysphoria, lassitude). Long-term neurodevelopmental outcomes from prescribed therapeutic exposure are less clear and likely modest, but illicit-dose exposure is associated with significant developmental impact. Decision should be individualized; many patients defer ADHD treatment during pregnancy. Excreted in breast milk in clinically significant amounts | <pharmaInteractions/> | ||
| pregnancy_details = [https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK501307/ Category C]. Crosses the placenta. Prenatal amphetamine exposure has been associated with low birth weight, premature delivery, and neonatal withdrawal (agitation, dysphoria, lassitude). Long-term neurodevelopmental outcomes from prescribed therapeutic exposure are less clear and likely modest, but illicit-dose exposure is associated with significant developmental impact. Decision should be individualized; many patients defer ADHD treatment during pregnancy. Excreted in breast milk in clinically significant amounts, breastfeeding generally discouraged. | |||
| monitoring = * Baseline: cardiovascular history, weight/height, mental health history (especially for psychosis/bipolar/substance use risk), (optional) blood pressure, (optional) heart rate, | | monitoring = * Baseline: cardiovascular history, weight/height, mental health history (especially for psychosis/bipolar/substance use risk), (optional) blood pressure, (optional) heart rate, | ||
* At each visit: efficacy, side effects, general well-being | * At each visit: efficacy, side effects, general well-being | ||
* Periodically reassess continued need; consider | * Periodically reassess continued need; consider med holidays to assess ongoing benefit | ||
* Sleep quality (insomnia is dose-limiting) | * Sleep quality (insomnia is dose-limiting) | ||
| counseling = * Take first thing in the morning to minimize insomnia; avoid (late) afternoon dosing. | | counseling = * Take first thing in the morning to minimize insomnia; avoid (late) afternoon dosing. | ||
* '''Do not crush, chew, or split Adderall XR or Mydayis capsules''' | * '''Do not crush, chew, or split Adderall XR or Mydayis capsules''', disrupts the controlled-release mechanism. (Capsules may be opened and sprinkled on applesauce if needed.) | ||
* Take with or without food; high-acid beverages (orange juice, vitamin C) may reduce absorption. | * Take with or without food; high-acid beverages (orange juice, vitamin C) may reduce absorption. | ||
* Stay well-hydrated, especially in heat or during exercise. | * Stay well-hydrated, especially in heat or during exercise. | ||
* Eat regular meals despite appetite suppression. | * Eat regular meals despite appetite suppression. | ||
* Report any chest pain, palpitations, severe agitation, hallucinations, or signs of poor circulation in extremities. | * Report any chest pain, palpitations, severe agitation, hallucinations, or signs of poor circulation in extremities. | ||
* Sudden discontinuation can cause a fatigue/depression "crash" | * Sudden discontinuation can cause a fatigue/depression "crash", plan for it. | ||
* Take caution: make increase bowel motility and increase risk of expelled fecal content. | * Take caution: make increase bowel motility and increase risk of expelled fecal content. | ||
| anecdotes = | | anecdotes = | ||
| Line 101: | Line 113: | ||
| references = | | references = | ||
}} | }} | ||
[[Category:Psychostimulants]] | |||
[[Category:Amphetamines]] | |||
Latest revision as of 03:16, 19 May 2026
Psychostimulant, Amphetamine
Mixed amphetamine salts
Adderall, Adderall XR, Mydayis
Mixed amphetamine salts (MAS), marketed primarily as Adderall, is a 3:1 mixture of dextroamphetamine and levoamphetamine salts (dextroamphetamine sulfate, amphetamine sulfate, dextroamphetamine saccharate, and amphetamine aspartate).
Amphetamine was first synthesized in 1887 by Lazăr Edeleanu, then developed as a med in the late 1920s. "Adderall" was approved by the FDA in 1996, and has since become one of the most popular meds in the United States. Adderall/MAS is FDA-approved for attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder and narcolepsy. It is listed in Schedule II of the Controlled Substances Act, and so is tightly regulated in the United States as well as many other countries around the world.
+ Add a problem
Category C. Crosses the placenta. Prenatal amphetamine exposure has been associated with low birth weight, premature delivery, and neonatal withdrawal (agitation, dysphoria, lassitude). Long-term neurodevelopmental outcomes from prescribed therapeutic exposure are less clear and likely modest, but illicit-dose exposure is associated with significant developmental impact. Decision should be individualized; many patients defer ADHD treatment during pregnancy. Excreted in breast milk in clinically significant amounts, breastfeeding generally discouraged.
Dextroamphetamine, Lisdexamfetamine, Methylphenidate, Dexmethylphenidate, Modafinil, Atomoxetine, Methamphetamine
Experience
2 personal reports · avg efficacy 90.0/100 · avg side-effect burden 30.0/100 · median use 8 months · median dose 17.5 mg/day · 100% still taking it
No clinical reports yet
Log in to add your own experience.
Problems
Narcolepsy4.0n=1
Off-label.
Off-label.
Off-label.
Impulsivity3.0n=1
Distractibility4.0n=1
Impoved sustained attention by decreasing distractibility
Titration strategies
Typical Adult+1
Start at 5 mg XR; may increase by 5 mg each day until the desired effect is reached, up to 30 mg XR to start, and up to 60 mg XR eventually if necessary, in 10 mg increments.
Occasionally can go higher if no notable effects (good or bad) at 60 mg, proceed with caution.
If not long enough acting: add a tail dose of Adderall IR at [XR dose]/2.
If too long acting (e.g. disrupting sleep): switch to IR entirely (again at half the XR dose).Effects
- Attention and focus 100% +83.5 (n=2) ~80% +100.0 (n=1)Improved sustained attention, particularly on uninteresting things.Did you experience this?How often have you seen this?How was it? (-100 worst, +100 best)How was it? (-100 worst, +100 best)
- Reduced impulsivity and hyperactivity 100% +33.0 (n=2) ~50% +67.0 (n=1)Did you experience this?How often have you seen this?How was it? (-100 worst, +100 best)How was it? (-100 worst, +100 best)
- Wakefulness 100% +83.5 (n=2) ~80% +100.0 (n=1)Did you experience this?How often have you seen this?How was it? (-100 worst, +100 best)How was it? (-100 worst, +100 best)
- Motivation and drive 100% +66.5 (n=2) ~66% +100.0 (n=1)Did you experience this?How often have you seen this?How was it? (-100 worst, +100 best)How was it? (-100 worst, +100 best)
- Mild euphoria 50% +100.0 (n=2) ~66% +100.0 (n=1)Did you experience this?How often have you seen this?How was it? (-100 worst, +100 best)How was it? (-100 worst, +100 best)
- Decreased appetite/Anorexia 100% +50.0 (n=2) ~50% +33.0 (n=1)Did you experience this?How often have you seen this?How was it? (-100 worst, +100 best)How was it? (-100 worst, +100 best)
- Dry mouth 50% -33.0 (n=2) ~66% -33.0 (n=1)Did you experience this?How often have you seen this?How was it? (-100 worst, +100 best)How was it? (-100 worst, +100 best)
- Elevated heart rate / blood pressure 50% +0.0 (n=2) ~50% -33.0 (n=1)Did you experience this?How often have you seen this?How was it? (-100 worst, +100 best)How was it? (-100 worst, +100 best)
- Jaw clenching / bruxism 50% -33.0 (n=2) ~33% -33.0 (n=1)Did you experience this?How often have you seen this?How was it? (-100 worst, +100 best)How was it? (-100 worst, +100 best)
- Insomnia 0% — (n=2) ~5% -67.0 (n=1)(with proper am dosing)Did you experience this?How often have you seen this?How was it? (-100 worst, +100 best)How was it? (-100 worst, +100 best)
- Irritability 50% -33.0 (n=2) ~20% -67.0 (n=1)Did you experience this?How often have you seen this?How was it? (-100 worst, +100 best)How was it? (-100 worst, +100 best)
- Anxiety 0% — (n=2) ~20% -67.0 (n=1)Did you experience this?How often have you seen this?How was it? (-100 worst, +100 best)How was it? (-100 worst, +100 best)
- Headache 0% — (n=2) ~5% -67.0 (n=1)Did you experience this?How often have you seen this?How was it? (-100 worst, +100 best)How was it? (-100 worst, +100 best)
- Weight loss 0% — (n=2) ~20% +67.0 (n=1)Did you experience this?How often have you seen this?How was it? (-100 worst, +100 best)How was it? (-100 worst, +100 best)
- Palpitations 0% — (n=2) ~20% -67.0 (n=1)Did you experience this?How often have you seen this?How was it? (-100 worst, +100 best)How was it? (-100 worst, +100 best)
- Stereotyped behaviors 50% -67.0 (n=2) ~5% -67.0 (n=1)Repetitive movements, e.g. skin picking, muscle twitches, ticsDid you experience this?How often have you seen this?How was it? (-100 worst, +100 best)How was it? (-100 worst, +100 best)
- Serious cardiac event 0% — (n=2) ~0% -100.0 (n=1)Did you experience this?How often have you seen this?How was it? (-100 worst, +100 best)How was it? (-100 worst, +100 best)
- Agitation 0% — (n=2) ~5% -67.0 (n=1)Did you experience this?How often have you seen this?How was it? (-100 worst, +100 best)How was it? (-100 worst, +100 best)
- Psychosis 0% — (n=2) ~5% -100.0 (n=1)Did you experience this?How often have you seen this?How was it? (-100 worst, +100 best)How was it? (-100 worst, +100 best)
- Mania 0% — (n=2) ~5% -100.0 (n=1)Did you experience this?How often have you seen this?How was it? (-100 worst, +100 best)How was it? (-100 worst, +100 best)
- Dependence / misuse 0% — (n=2) ~5% -67.0 (n=1)Did you experience this?How often have you seen this?How was it? (-100 worst, +100 best)How was it? (-100 worst, +100 best)
- Tolerance 50% -33.0 (n=2) ~5% -33.0 (n=1)Did you experience this?How often have you seen this?How was it? (-100 worst, +100 best)How was it? (-100 worst, +100 best)
- Growth suppression 0% — (n=2) ~0% -67.0 (n=1)(well documented effect with chronic use in children)Did you experience this?How often have you seen this?How was it? (-100 worst, +100 best)How was it? (-100 worst, +100 best)
- Serotonin syndrome 0% — (n=2) ~0% -100.0 (n=1)Especially in combination with MAOIsDid you experience this?How often have you seen this?How was it? (-100 worst, +100 best)How was it? (-100 worst, +100 best)
- Peripheral vasculopathy 0% — (n=2) ~5% -33.0 (n=1)Raynaud-like phenomenon, rare digital ischemia.Did you experience this?How often have you seen this?How was it? (-100 worst, +100 best)How was it? (-100 worst, +100 best)
- Seizure/Epileptic fit 0% — (n=2) ~0% -100.0 (n=1)Did you experience this?How often have you seen this?How was it? (-100 worst, +100 best)How was it? (-100 worst, +100 best)
- Hyperthermia 0% — (n=2) ~0% -67.0 (n=1)Risk in hot environments or with vigorous exercise.Did you experience this?How often have you seen this?How was it? (-100 worst, +100 best)How was it? (-100 worst, +100 best)
- Withdrawal/Discontinuation Syndrome 50% -33.0 (n=2) ~50% -67.0 (n=1)Low motivation, low mood, hypersomnia, increased appetite on abrupt discontinuation.Did you experience this?How often have you seen this?How was it? (-100 worst, +100 best)How was it? (-100 worst, +100 best)
- Urinary Retention 50% -33.0 (n=2) ~33% -33.0 (n=1)Difficult/slow urinationDid you experience this?How often have you seen this?How was it? (-100 worst, +100 best)How was it? (-100 worst, +100 best)
Focus intensification 100% +67.0 (n=1) no reports yet
Did you experience this?
How often have you seen this?
How was it? (-100 worst, +100 best)How was it? (-100 worst, +100 best)
Appetite Suppression 100% +33.0 (n=1) no reports yet
Did you experience this?
How often have you seen this?
How was it? (-100 worst, +100 best)How was it? (-100 worst, +100 best)
Alertness 100% +33.0 (n=1) no reports yet
Did you experience this?
How often have you seen this?
How was it? (-100 worst, +100 best)How was it? (-100 worst, +100 best)
Executive Functioning 100% +67.0 (n=1) no reports yet
Did you experience this?
How often have you seen this?
How was it? (-100 worst, +100 best)How was it? (-100 worst, +100 best)
Pharmacokinetics
Absorption
Excellent oral bioavailability, sources report ">75%" to "~90%". Food does not significantly affect total absorption but can delay peak concentration.Distribution
Volume of distribution ~4 L/kg; plasma protein binding less than 20%. Crosses the blood–brain barrier and placenta.Metabolism
Amphetamine is oxidized to 4-hydroxyamphetamine, α-hydroxyamphetamine, or norephedrine. Norephedrine and 4-hydroxyamphetamine are active metabolites and are further metabolized to 4-hydroxy-norephedrine. Deamination of α-hydroxyamphetamine yields phenylacetone, which is metabolized to benzoic acid and conjugated to its glucuronide and hippuric acid. CYP2D6 is crucial for amphetamine metabolism; genetic polymorphism causes significant inter-patient variability in clearance. Amphetamine itself inhibits monoamine oxidase (MAO), and both CYP1A2 and CYP3A4 contribute to its metabolism.[2]Elimination
Primarily renal, ~30–40% recovered as unchanged amphetamine, the rest as metabolites. Due to its pKa of 9.9, urinary elimination is highly pH-dependent: alkaline urine reduces ionization and decreases renal clearance, while acidic urine and high flow rates accelerate clearance via active tubular secretion. Half-life: D-enantiomer 9 h (children 6–12 y), 11 h (adolescents 13–17 y), 10 h (adults); L-enantiomer 11 h, 13–14 h, 13 h respectively.Pharmacodynamics
Amphetamine purportedly works via several converging mechanisms at monoaminergic terminals:
- Trace amine-associated receptor 1 (TAAR1) agonism, activates TAAR1 in monoaminergic neurons, triggering PKA/PKC signaling that phosphorylates the dopamine and norepinephrine transporters (DAT, NET), causing them to internalize and reverse direction.
- VMAT2 substrate, enters the presynaptic terminal, displaces dopamine and norepinephrine from vesicles into the cytoplasm.
- Reverse transport via DAT/NET, the elevated cytoplasmic monoamine pool is then ejected into the synaptic cleft via the now-reversed transporters. This is the primary mechanism of action, release, not reuptake inhibition.
- Weak reuptake inhibition at DAT and NET (secondary to release).
- MAO inhibition at higher concentrations, slowing presynaptic catabolism of monoamines.
- Serotonergic effects at high or supratherapeutic doses (relevant to overdose and serotonin syndrome risk).
Interactions
Minimal in practice. Caution with other psychostimulants, including caffeine. metabolized by 2D6, so relevant caution applies.
No interactions reported yet.
Pregnancy and lactation
Monitoring
- Baseline: cardiovascular history, weight/height, mental health history (especially for psychosis/bipolar/substance use risk), (optional) blood pressure, (optional) heart rate,
- At each visit: efficacy, side effects, general well-being
- Periodically reassess continued need; consider med holidays to assess ongoing benefit
- Sleep quality (insomnia is dose-limiting)
Patient counseling
- Take first thing in the morning to minimize insomnia; avoid (late) afternoon dosing.
- Do not crush, chew, or split Adderall XR or Mydayis capsules, disrupts the controlled-release mechanism. (Capsules may be opened and sprinkled on applesauce if needed.)
- Take with or without food; high-acid beverages (orange juice, vitamin C) may reduce absorption.
- Stay well-hydrated, especially in heat or during exercise.
- Eat regular meals despite appetite suppression.
- Report any chest pain, palpitations, severe agitation, hallucinations, or signs of poor circulation in extremities.
- Sudden discontinuation can cause a fatigue/depression "crash", plan for it.
- Take caution: make increase bowel motility and increase risk of expelled fecal content.
Relevant anecdote
No anecdotes yet. Share a relevant one.
Relevant Literature
No literature entries yet.
Log in to submit relevant literature.
See also
Summary
Classes
Psychostimulant, Amphetamine
Common uses
- Distractibility4.0n=1
- Excessive daytime sleepiness in shift-work disorder4.0n=1
- Impaired persistent attention4.0n=2
- Cognitive symptoms in chronic illness3.0n=1
- Impulsivity3.0n=1
Pharmacy
Starting dose
2.5 mg IR, 5 mg XR, or 12.5mg Mydayis
Preparations
IR tabs 5, 7.5, 10, 12.5, 15, 20, 30 mg; XR caps 5, 10, 15, 20, 25, 30 mg; Mydayis caps 12.5, 25, 37.5, 50 mg
US FDA Max
XR = 40 or 60 mg/d; IR = 40 or 60 mg/d[1]
Pharmacology
Routes
Oral
Onset
IR: 30–60 min; XR: 1–2 h to peak effect
Duration
IR 4–6 h; XR 10–12 h; Mydayis 14–16 h
Half-life
D-amphetamine ~10 h; L-amphetamine ~13 h (adults)
Bioavailability
~75–90% (oral)
Pregnancy
Category C
Legal status
Schedule II
Purported mechanism
TAAR1 agonism, VMAT2 substrate, DAT/NET reverse transport, net release of dopamine and norepinephrine