Also known as 3-(2-Diethylaminoethyl)indole, N,N-Diethyl-2-(1H-indol-3-yl)ethanamine, Diethyltryptamine
Diethyltryptamine (DET), also known as '''N,N-diethyltryptamine or T-9''', is a psychedelic drug of the tryptamine family closely related to dimethyltryptamine (DMT). It is taken orally, but can also be used by parenteral routes.
Diethyltryptamine (DET), also known as '''N,N-diethyltryptamine or T-9', is a psychedelic drug of the tryptamine family closely related to dimethyltryptamine (DMT). It is taken orally, but can also be used by parenteral routes.
The drug acts as a non-selective serotonin receptor agonist, including of the serotonin 5-HT2A receptor among others. It has not been found to occur endogenously. DMT is a close structural homologue of DMT and dipropyltryptamine (DPT). Other analogues of DET include 4-HO-DET (ethocin), ethocybin (4-PO-DET), and 5-MeO-DET.
via Wikidata sitelinks · CC0
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).