Posted by tecwrg on 11/22/2017 1:23:00 PM (view original):
Posted by bad_luck on 11/22/2017 1:15:00 PM (view original):
Posted by MikeT23 on 11/22/2017 12:55:00 PM (view original):
Posted by bad_luck on 11/22/2017 12:18:00 PM (view original):
Posted by MikeT23 on 11/22/2017 12:16:00 PM (view original):
Yeah, me too. Pretty much the same effect. But I certainly did not use amphetamines to the point of addiction. Unless you have, you've gone full retard this morning. If you want me to change my statement, I will.
Pretty much the same effect unless you're a ******* addict from California. Better?
You’re just flat out wrong here. Caffeine and amphetamines do not have “pretty much the same effect.”
Yeah, they actually do. I know you want us to believe you have some insight that no one else has but, sadly, you do not.
It’s not insight that no one else has. It’s insight everyone but you, apparently, has. I don’t have any sort of moral hold up when it comes to drugs, but it’s a plain fact that the effects of amphetamines are different from the effects of caffeine.
Not an opinion. This isn’t a situation where I’m ******* with tec and claiming it’s a fact that Catfish Hunter sucked. It’s an actual medical fact that caffeine interacts with your brain in a completely different way than amphetamines.
They are both stimulants. That’s where the similarity ends.
With respect to the impact on performance on the baseball field, please explain for the group the difference between the two.
Studies have shown that high dose caffeine (>500mg) actually impair psychomotor performance. Amphetamines enhance it.
From the American College of Clinical Pharmacology:
“[U]nfavorable subjective and somatic effects, as well as performance disruption, from high doses of caffeine may intrinsically limit the doses of caffeine used in the general population.”
”The amphetamines, in general, improved various aspects of attention (Digit Vigilance, Digit Symbol Substitution Test and Movement Estimation Performance) with some evidence to suggest possible enhancement in psychomotor functioning (Tracking ability) and perceptual speed.”