para-Methoxyamphetamine
[2][3][4] Unlike other similar drugs of this family, PMA does not produce stimulant, euphoriant, or entactogen effects,[5] and behaves more like an antidepressant in comparison,[6] though it does have some psychedelic properties.At high doses unpleasant effects such as nausea and vomiting, severe hyperthermia and hallucinations may occur.[19] PMA acts as a selective serotonin releasing agent (SSRA) with weak effects on dopamine and norepinephrine transporters.[48] PMA evokes robust hyperthermia in rodents while producing only modest hyperactivity and serotonergic neurotoxicity, substantially lower than that caused by MDMA, and only at very high doses.[55][56] In July 2013, seven deaths in Scotland were linked to tablets containing PMA that had been mis-sold as ecstasy and which had the Rolex crown logo on them.[10] Several deaths in Northern Ireland, Particularly East Belfast were also linked to "Green Rolex" pills during that month.[11][58][59][60] The Red Ferarri pills are a new press of the Superman logo tablets that were reported to be found in Germany and Norway from 2016 to 2017.On 13 June 2012 Edith Schippers, Dutch Minister of Health, Welfare and Sport, revoked the legality of PMA in the Netherlands after five deaths were reported in that year.[3] 4-MTA, however, is even more dangerous than PMA and produces strong serotonergic effects and intense hyperthermia, but with little to no euphoria, and was implicated in several deaths in the late 1990s.