No, You Should Not Lick Frogs: A Hallucinogenic Chemistry Lesson (2024)

The National Park Service issued a warning against licking the Sonoran desert toad - an act that most people would intuitively avoid. But the frog contains a powerful hallucinogen, which produces LSD-like effects that can dangerous. So if you’re traveling around the southwestern US better watch your tongue.

Like there aren't enough ways to get yourself high? Yet, that isn't stopping certainpeople who need a little extra kick–froglicking (no joke). Although itis not a new practice (1), for some reason or other,the National Forest Service just issuedan alerton its Facebook page warning people to knock it off because thisattractive little fellow on theleft, theSonoran desert toad (akaColorado river toad), has a rather profound defense system (2) that consists of a very powerful and potentially dangerous hallucinogen called 5-methoxy-N,N-dimethyltryptamine, aka 5-OMe-DMT.

Licking or swallowing can lead to numbness of the mouth and throat as well as severe and life-threatening effects on the heart as a result of the digoxin-like compounds and catecholamines...

US National Park Service

Disturbingly, accordingto the NPS, smoking the stuff has recently become popular amongcertain celebrities, including Mike Tyson, who apparently "can't get enough of it."(Just a thought -can there be a more frightening image than Mike Tysonin a hallucinogenic state?)

Let's just say that the NPA may be exaggerating a bit. The DEA 2010 Federal Register report classifying 5-OMeDMT as Schedule I (3) statesthat "there has been one death attributed to5-OMe-DMT." This is roughly equivalent to the number of people who die every year from a coconut falling on their head, something I wrote about in 2018.

No, You Should Not Lick Frogs: A Hallucinogenic Chemistry Lesson (1)

The appearance of theSonoran desert toad at different hours. It's night and day. Images: Px Here,National Forest Service.

If only by accident, frog lickers need to get some credit for their pharmacological andneurochemical acumen. 5-OMe DMTisn't licked for no reason; the drugrapidly makes its way to the brain (4), where it binds (primarily) to the5-HT2A subtype, one ofthe 15 knownserotonin receptors.As a serotonin, aka 5-HT,analog,it is not surprising that5-OMe DMT elicits a wide variety of physiologicalresponses, including depression, nausea, rapid heart rate, and hallucinations – the reason frog lickers do their thing. Whenwe look at the chemical structure of 5-OMe DMT and some of its chemical cousins, it becomes clear why the drug impacts the brain – its similarity to serotonin.

No, You Should Not Lick Frogs: A Hallucinogenic Chemistry Lesson (2)

Figure 1. Hallucinogenicserotonin analogs.Tryptamine is serotonin minus the hydroxyl group, but this changes its properties significantly, giving it (and many other tryptamine derivatives) hallucinogenic properties. DMT is tryptamine with two methyl groups added to nitrogen. 5-OMe-DMT is DMT with a methoxyl group added in the 5-position.Bufotenin (5-Hydroxy DMT) has a hydroxyl group in the 5-position, just like serotonin. All the tryptamines shown above have hallucinogenic properties. Even the untrained eye can see that these drugs are structurally related to serotonin; this (in part) explains their central nervous system effect. (Do not ask why the 5-position is called the 5-position, or I will be forced to answer.)

Without going into too much detail (and there is plenty), nature has provided an easy pathway for drugs of this type to be rapidly absorbed and bypass the blood-brain barrier, and this is no accident. These chemicals are all members of the enormous indole alkaloid family (~ 4,000 known compounds). They are biosynthesizedby plants and animals, primarily to ward off predators. If these compounds did not reach and impact the central nervous system, plants and animals wouldn't have evolved to biosynthesize them in the first place – a little reverse reasoning. (FYI - LSD is an indole alkaloid.)

Don't lick the wrong frog.

Licking theSonoran desert toad is a pretty bad idea, but you could do muchworse. The golden poison frogis considered the most dangerous frog in the world, perhaps even the most dangerous animal. TheSonoran desert toad is a Tootsie Pop compared to this thing.

No, You Should Not Lick Frogs: A Hallucinogenic Chemistry Lesson (3)

The golden poison frog, aka golden poisondart frog, is not to be licked. Image: Wikimedia Commons

I think that's enough about poison frogs for one lifetime article. I'm licked, so I think I'll hop over to a different topic.

NOTES:

(1) Frog licking is hardly new; it was used for its psychedelic propertiesin South America before Columbus made his trip. Andrumors suggest that hippies did this in the 1970s. True? Who cares?

(2) Potential predators in the wild "know" not to try to eat the frog, but the same cannot be said for pets:

"The Sonoran Desert toad, also known as the Colorado River toad, is highly toxic to dogs and cats.Neurotoxins containing 5-MeO-DMT and bufoteninseep from the toad’s pores and head, causing dogs and cats to foam at the mouth after licking the frog, suffer seizures, and experience high fever, dilated pupils, and a rapid heartbeat. It can also lead to death if not treated immediately." Source: Vet Med

(3) Schedule I drugs have no legitimate medical use and a high potential for addiction. They are illegal, with the possible exceptionof marijuana. It is legal in many states, but the insane DEA considers it a Schedule I drug. This makes NO sense.

(4) There are several ways, both biological and computational,to measure whether a drug will cross the blood-brain barrier.Tryptaminepasses with flying colors.

No, You Should Not Lick Frogs: A Hallucinogenic Chemistry Lesson (2024)

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