Pyr-T, also known as '''N,N-tetramethylenetryptamine or as 3-(2-pyrrolidinoethyl)indole', is a lesser-known serotonin receptor modulator of the tryptamine and pyrrolidinylethylindole families. It is the cyclized derivative of diethyltryptamine (DET) in which the N,N''-diethyl groups have been fused into a pyrrolidine ring.
Pyr-T, also known as '''N,N-tetramethylenetryptamine or as 3-(2-pyrrolidinoethyl)indole', is a lesser-known serotonin receptor modulator of the tryptamine and pyrrolidinylethylindole families. It is the cyclized derivative of diethyltryptamine (DET) in which the N,N-diethyl groups have been fused into a pyrrolidine ring.
==Use and effects== In his 1997 book TiHKAL (Tryptamines I Have Known and Loved), Alexander Shulgin reported neither the dose range nor the duration of the drug. However, individual experiments employed 25 to 50mg orally and 70mg smoked. Pyr-T produced effects including malaise, feeling sick, unpleasantness, salivation, muscle and joint pains, dizziness, feeling high, and uncomfortableness. Hallucinogenic effects, for instance visuals, were either absent or minor.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).