N,N-Dimethylpentylone (also known as Dipentylone or simply Dimethylpentylone) is a substituted cathinone derivative with stimulant effects,[1] which has been sold as a designer drug,[2][3] first detected in Sweden in 2014.[4]
Dimethylpentylone was first identified in toxicology samples in the US in late 2021 and has been tracked by the Center for Forensic Science Research and Education (CFSRE) through its NPS Discovery program as an increasingly common drug mismarketed as MDMA where Eutylone was previously commonly mismarketed as MDMA.[5]
On June 26, 2023, the United States Customs and Border Protection seized 32.2 kilograms of dimethylpentylone, sent from China labeled as "beauty products" mailed to an address in Washington, D.C.[6][7]
On July 10, 2023, Jacksonville DEA Assistant Special Agent in Charge Mike Dubet gave an interview to WJXT (news4jax) reporting that dimethylpentylone has been found in possession by people attending nightclubs and bars in the Jacksonville, Florida area.[8]
Legal Status
Dimethylpentylone is not specifically listed in the United States Controlled Substance Act but would be considered Schedule I as a positional isomer of the Schedule I substance N-Ethylpentylone in the United States, defined as "all isomers" within that definition.[9][10]
^Celma A, Sancho JV, Salgueiro-González N, Castiglioni S, Zuccato E, Hernández F, Bijlsma L (September 2019). "Simultaneous determination of new psychoactive substances and illicit drugs in sewage: Potential of micro-liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry in wastewater-based epidemiology". Journal of Chromatography A. 1602: 300–309. doi:10.1016/j.chroma.2019.05.051. hdl:10234/182680. PMID31171357. S2CID174814822.