R3 = hydrogen, any alkyl group, or incorporation in a cyclic structure
R4 = hydrogen, any alkyl group, or incorporation in a cyclic structure
The following table displays notable derivatives that have been reported:
Legality
On 2 April 2010, the Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs in the UK announced that a broad structure-based ban of this entire class of compounds would be instituted, following extensive publicity around grey-market sales and recreational use of mephedrone, a common member of the family. This ban covers compounds with the aforementioned general structure, with 28 compounds specifically named. This text was added as an amendment to the Misuse of Drugs Act 1971, to come into force on 16 April 2010. Note that four of the above compounds were already illegal in the UK at the time the ACMD report was issued. Two compounds were specifically excluded from the ban, these being bupropion because of its common use in medicine and relative lack of abuse potential, and naphyrone because its structure falls outside the generic definition and not enough evidence was yet available to justify a ban. Naphyrone analogues were subsequently banned in July 2010 following a further review by the ACMD, along with a further broad based structure ban even more expansive than the last. The substitutions in the general structure for naphyrone analogues subject to the ban may be described as follows:
Cyc = any monocyclic, or fused-polycyclic ring system, including analogues where the ring system is substituted to any extent with alkyl, alkoxy, haloalkyl or halide substituents, whether or not further substituted in the ring system by one or more other univalent substituents
R1 = hydrogen or any alkyl group
R2 = hydrogen, any alkyl group, or incorporation in a cyclic structure
R3 = hydrogen, any alkyl group, or incorporation in a cyclic structure
More new derivatives have however continued to appear, with the UK reporting more novel cathinone derivatives detected in 2010 than any other country in Europe, with most of them first identified after the generic ban had gone into effect and thus already being illegal despite never having been previously reported. In the United States, substituted cathinones are the psychoactive ingredients in "bath salts" which as of July 2011 were banned by at least 28 states, but not by the federal government.