Dextromethorphan produces 110 documented subjective effects across 7 categories.
Full Dextromethorphan profileThe onset of dextromethorphan varies with the formulation but typically begins thirty to sixty minutes after oral ingestion, arriving as a gradual warming sensation and a subtle shift in how the body occupies space. There is often mild nausea during the come-up, and the stomach may feel unsettled as the substance is metabolized. The first perceptual change is usually a slight sense of detachment, as though the distance between the self and the body has increased by a small but noticeable degree. Sounds may begin to take on an echoing or reverberant quality, and movements start to feel slightly robotic or mechanical.
At lower doses, often referred to as first and second plateau experiences, the effects resemble a dreamy, mildly intoxicated state with enhanced music appreciation and a pleasant sense of disconnection from worry. The body feels light and slightly numb, movement becomes fluid but imprecise, and there is a gentle euphoria that pairs well with music and introspective thought. Sounds become richly layered and seem to occupy physical space. Closed-eye imagery may appear as soft, flowing landscapes or abstract patterns. The mental state is characterized by a detached thoughtfulness, an ability to examine one's own thoughts and life from a comfortable remove.
At higher doses, the experience transforms into something qualitatively different. Dissociation deepens substantially, and the sense of inhabiting a physical body can weaken to the point where the body feels remote or foreign. Walking becomes difficult and ataxic, with a characteristic stumbling gait. Visual perception fragments and may take on a dark, maze-like quality. Music can become overwhelmingly immersive, almost architectural in its complexity. The mind enters strange, looping thought patterns that can feel profoundly meaningful or deeply confusing depending on the context. At the highest doses, full dissociation from the body and environment is possible, producing experiences that overlap with the dissociative anesthesia of ketamine, though with a distinctly different character that many describe as darker, heavier, and more disorienting.
The duration is long, typically spanning six to eight hours with residual effects lasting well into the following day. The comedown is often marked by lethargy, cognitive fogginess, and a flat emotional state. Some users experience an afterglow of reflective clarity, while others simply feel drained and disconnected. It is critically important that only products containing dextromethorphan as the sole active ingredient are used, as many cough preparations contain acetaminophen, guaifenesin, or antihistamines that become dangerously toxic at the doses required for psychoactive effects. Enzyme polymorphisms in CYP2D6 can cause some individuals to metabolize the substance far more slowly, making standard doses unexpectedly intense and potentially dangerous.
A distinct decrease in hunger and desire to eat, ranging from reduced interest in food to complete disinterest or even physical revulsion at the thought of eating. This effect can persist for many hours beyond the primary experience.
Bodily control enhancementBodily control enhancement is the subjective feeling of improved physical precision, coordination, and dexterity — a sense of heightened mastery over one's own body that can make movements feel fluid, deliberate, and effortless.
Body loadA diffuse, heavy physical discomfort involving tension, pressure, and malaise in the torso and limbs, commonly reported with tryptamines and phenethylamines.
Changes in felt bodily formChanges in felt bodily form is the experience of one's body feeling as though it has altered its physical shape, structure, or organization — such as stretching, folding, splitting, or gaining extra limbs — in ways that are felt rather than seen.
ConstipationA slowing or cessation of bowel movements resulting in difficulty passing stool, commonly caused by opioid receptor activation in the gastrointestinal tract and notoriously resistant to tolerance development.
Cough suppressionA decreased desire and need to cough, medically known as antitussive action, which can also allow inhalation of larger amounts of smoke without triggering the cough reflex.
Decreased libidoDecreased libido is a diminished interest in and desire for sexual activity, commonly caused by substances that suppress dopaminergic reward signaling, dampen emotional responsiveness, or induce sedation.
Difficulty urinatingDifficulty urinating, also known as urinary retention, is the experience of being unable to easily pass urine despite a full bladder, commonly caused by stimulant, opioid, and anticholinergic substances that affect bladder muscle control.
DizzinessA sensation of spinning, swaying, or lightheadedness that impairs balance and spatial orientation, often accompanied by nausea and difficulty standing or walking steadily.
Gait alterationGait alteration is a noticeable change in the way a person walks and moves through their environment, often producing a robotic, mechanical, or shuffling movement pattern that is unusual in appearance but does not necessarily indicate loss of motor control.
Increased blood pressureIncreased blood pressure (hypertension) is an elevation of arterial pressure above the normal 120/80 mmHg baseline, commonly caused by stimulants, vasoconstrictors, and substances that activate the sympathetic nervous system, posing cardiovascular risks that increase with dose and pre-existing conditions.
Increased bodily temperatureIncreased bodily temperature (hyperthermia) is an elevation of core body temperature above the normal 37C (98.6F) baseline, caused by substances that increase metabolic rate, impair thermoregulation, or promote sustained physical activity, and representing one of the most dangerous physical effects when severe.
Increased heart rateA noticeable acceleration of heartbeat that can range from a subtle awareness of one's pulse to a forceful, rapid pounding felt throughout the chest, neck, and temples. This effect is among the most commonly reported physiological responses to psychoactive substances and often accompanies stimulation, anxiety, or physical exertion during intoxication.
Increased libidoA marked enhancement of sexual desire, arousal, and sensitivity to erotic stimuli that can range from a gentle heightening of romantic interest to an overwhelming, all-consuming preoccupation with sexual thoughts and physical intimacy. This effect often co-occurs with tactile enhancement and empathy, creating a distinctly sensual state of consciousness.
InsomniaA persistent inability to fall asleep or maintain sleep despite physical tiredness, often characterized by a racing mind, heightened alertness, and a frustrating disconnect between bodily fatigue and mental wakefulness. This effect can persist for hours beyond the primary duration of a substance, significantly extending the total experience timeline.
ItchinessA persistent, diffuse urge to scratch the skin that arises without any external irritant, most commonly caused by opioid-induced histamine release, ranging from a mild tingling to an intense, widespread crawling sensation across the body.
Motor control lossA distinct decrease in the ability to control one's physical body with precision, balance, and coordination, ranging from minor clumsiness to complete inability to walk.
Muscle relaxationThe experience of muscles throughout the body losing their rigidity and tension, becoming noticeably relaxed, loose, and comfortable.
Muscle twitchingMuscle twitching consists of small, involuntary, localized contractions or tremors within individual muscle groups — often visible as flickering movements under the skin — caused by heightened motor neuron excitability from stimulating substances.
NauseaAn uncomfortable sensation of queasiness and stomach discomfort that may or may not lead to vomiting, often occurring during the onset phase of many substances.
NystagmusRapid, involuntary oscillating movements of the eyes that cause vision to vibrate and blur, often making it difficult to focus on stationary objects.
Orgasm suppressionOrgasm suppression (anorgasmia) is the difficulty or complete inability to achieve orgasm despite adequate sexual stimulation, commonly caused by opioids, dissociatives, SSRIs, and stimulants through mechanisms including tactile suppression, serotonergic excess, and altered CNS signaling.
Pain reliefA suppression of negative physical sensations such as aches and pains, ranging from dulled awareness of discomfort to complete inability to perceive pain.
Perception of bodily lightnessPerception of bodily lightness is the subjective feeling that one's body has become dramatically lighter — sometimes nearly weightless — producing sensations of buoyancy, effortless movement, and a bouncy, energized physical state.
Physical autonomyPhysical autonomy is the experience of one's body performing actions — from simple tasks like walking to complex sequences like cleaning — in an automatic, self-directed manner that requires little to no conscious input or decision-making.
Physical disconnectionA perceptual distancing from one's own physical body that ranges from a subtle sense of numbness or detachment to a profound feeling of complete separation from the physical form. At its most intense, the body may feel like an external object, a vessel being observed from outside, or may seem to disappear from awareness entirely.
Physical euphoriaAn intensely pleasurable bodily sensation that can manifest as waves of warmth, tingling electricity, or a full-body orgasmic glow radiating outward from the core. This effect is often described as one of the most rewarding physical sensations available through psychoactive substances and is a primary driver of the recreational appeal of many substance classes.
Pupil dilationA visible enlargement of the pupil diameter (mydriasis) that can range from subtle widening to dramatic saucer-like expansion where the dark pupil dominates the iris. This effect is one of the most recognizable signs of psychedelic and stimulant intoxication and directly contributes to light sensitivity, enhanced color perception, and the characteristic "wide-eyed" appearance.
Respiratory depressionA dangerous slowing and shallowing of breathing that can progress from barely noticeable reductions in respiratory rate to life-threatening cessation of breathing. This is the primary mechanism of death in opioid overdoses and represents one of the most critical safety concerns across all of psychopharmacology.
SedationA state of deep physical and mental calming that manifests as a progressive desire to remain still, lie down, and eventually drift toward sleep. Sedation ranges from a gentle drowsy relaxation to a heavy, irresistible pull into unconsciousness where maintaining wakefulness becomes a losing battle against the body's insistence on shutdown.
SeizureUncontrolled brain electrical activity causing convulsions and loss of consciousness -- a life-threatening medical emergency requiring immediate help.
Serotonin syndromeSerotonin syndrome is a potentially fatal medical emergency caused by excessive serotonergic activity in the central and peripheral nervous systems, typically resulting from combining multiple serotonin-elevating substances, and manifesting as a dangerous triad of neuromuscular hyperactivity, autonomic dysfunction, and altered mental status.
Spatial disorientationSpatial disorientation is the inability to accurately perceive one's position or orientation within the surrounding environment, sometimes causing the world or one's own body to feel rotated, flipped, or otherwise misaligned with physical reality.
StimulationA state of heightened physical and mental energy characterized by increased wakefulness, elevated motivation, and a subjective sense of vigor that pervades both body and mind. Users often report feeling electrically alive, with a buzzing readiness to move, talk, and engage that can range from a pleasant caffeine-like lift to an overwhelming, jittery compulsion to act.
Temperature regulation disruptionImpaired thermoregulation causing unpredictable fluctuations between feeling hot and cold, with risk of hyperthermia or hypothermia.
A visual phenomenon in which a faint, ghostly imprint of a previously viewed image persists in the visual field after the original stimulus has been removed or one has looked away. These lingering visual echoes are significantly more persistent, vivid, and detailed than normal physiological afterimages, often retaining color and form for several seconds or longer and overlaying themselves onto whatever one currently views.
Colour enhancementAn intensification of the brightness, vividness, and saturation of colors in the external environment, making the world appear dramatically more colorful. Reds seem redder, greens seem greener, and all hues appear richer and more distinct than during ordinary perception.
Depth perception distortionsAlterations in how the distance of objects within the visual field is perceived, causing layers of scenery to appear exaggerated, rearranged, flattened, or warped in spatial depth.
Double visionThe visual experience of seeing a single object as two separate, overlapping images, similar to crossing one's eyes, ranging from subtle ghosting to complete inability to perceive fine detail.
DriftingThe visual experience of perceiving stationary objects, textures, and surfaces as appearing to flow, breathe, melt, or shift in position. Drifting is one of the most fundamental and commonly reported visual distortions under the influence of psychedelic substances, serving as the perceptual foundation upon which many other visual effects are built. It manifests as a fluid, organic sense of motion embedded in otherwise static visual fields.
Environmental cubismA visual distortion in which the environment and objects within it appear fragmented into geometric, cube-like facets, as if reality has been refracted through a crystalline prism. The effect gives surfaces and three-dimensional space a distinctly angular, Cubist art-like quality reminiscent of Picasso or Braque paintings, where multiple perspectives of the same object are perceived simultaneously.
External hallucinationA visual hallucination that manifests within the external environment as though it were physically real, ranging from subtle distortions of existing objects to fully autonomous, detailed scenes and entities that appear indistinguishable from reality.
Frame rate suppressionPerception of visual motion as choppy discrete frames rather than smooth continuous flow, resembling low-FPS video, most common with dissociatives.
GeometryThe experience of perceiving complex, ever-shifting geometric patterns superimposed over the visual field or visible behind closed eyelids. Geometry is widely considered the hallmark visual effect of psychedelic substances, ranging from simple lattice patterns and honeycombs at low doses to infinitely complex, self-transforming fractal structures at high doses that can feel profoundly meaningful and awe-inspiring.
Internal hallucinationVivid, detailed visual experiences perceived within an imagined mental landscape that can only be seen with closed eyes, ranging from fleeting imagery and abstract scenes to fully immersive, dream-like environments with autonomous narratives and entities.
MagnificationA visual distortion in which objects appear larger or closer than they actually are, as though one's visual field has been zoomed in, making distant details seem within arm's reach and nearby objects appear oversized or looming.
Peripheral vision changesAlterations in side vision ranging from enhanced peripheral awareness to tunnel vision, with character varying by substance class.
Perspective distortionsDistortion of perceived depth, distance, and size of real objects, making things appear closer, further, larger, or smaller than they actually are.
Perspective hallucinationA hallucinatory phenomenon in which the observer's visual perspective shifts from the normal first-person viewpoint to alternative vantage points — including third-person (seeing oneself from outside), bird's-eye, or omniscient perspectives — during both internal and external hallucinations.
Scenery slicingThe visual field fractures into distinct, cleanly cut sections that slowly drift apart from their original positions before resetting, as if reality has been sliced by an invisible blade into geometric pieces that briefly separate and rearrange.
Settings, sceneries, and landscapesThe perceived environment in which hallucinatory experiences take place, ranging from recognizable locations drawn from memory to entirely novel alien landscapes, ancient civilizations, cosmic vistas, and impossible architectural spaces.
TracersMoving objects leave visible trails of varying length and opacity behind them, similar to long-exposure photography. Trails may match the object color or appear in other hues.
Visual acuity suppressionVision becomes blurred, indistinct, and out of focus, as though looking through a smudged lens. Fine details degrade and edges lose their definition and sharpness.
Visual disconnectionA dissociative visual effect involving a progressive detachment from visual perception, ranging from minor suppression and blurring at lower levels to a complete perceptual blackout and immersion in a dark hallucinatory void at higher levels.
Visual hazeA translucent fog or haze overlays the visual field, softening the environment and reducing clarity. May appear colorless or tinted, giving surroundings a dreamlike atmosphere.
Visual stretchingA visual distortion in which the perceived visual field is elongated or compressed along one axis, stretching horizontally or vertically until the environment may appear as a thin strip of visual data flanked by empty space or geometry.
A complete or partial inability to form new memories or recall existing ones during and after substance use, ranging from minor gaps in recollection to total blackouts encompassing hours of experience.
Analysis suppressionAnalysis suppression is a cognitive impairment in which the capacity for logical reasoning, critical evaluation, and systematic problem-solving is significantly diminished — leaving the person unable to effectively break down, examine, or draw conclusions about even relatively simple ideas or situations.
AnxietyIntense feelings of apprehension, worry, and dread that can range from a subtle background unease to overwhelming panic attacks with a sense of impending doom, often amplified by the substance's intensification of one's existing mental state.
Anxiety suppressionA partial to complete suppression of anxiety and general unease, producing a calm, relaxed mental state free from worry. This can range from subtle tension relief to a profound sense of inner peace and emotional security.
Cognitive disconnectionCognitive disconnection is the experience of feeling profoundly detached from one's own thoughts, sense of identity, and mental processes — as though awareness has been severed from the cognitive systems that normally generate the feeling of being a coherent, thinking self.
Cognitive dysphoriaA cognitive and emotional state of intense dissatisfaction, discomfort, and malaise encompassing feelings of depression, irritability, existential unease, and a pervasive sense that something is fundamentally wrong. This is the mental counterpart to physical dysphoria.
Cognitive euphoriaA cognitive and emotional state of intense well-being, elation, happiness, and joy that manifests as a profound mental contentment and positive outlook. This ranges from gentle feelings of optimism and warmth to overwhelming bliss that pervades all thoughts and perceptions.
Cognitive fatigueMental exhaustion and difficulty sustaining thought after intense cognitive experiences, common during substance comedowns.
Conceptual thinkingA shift in the nature of thought from verbal, linear sentence structures to intuitive, non-linguistic concepts that are felt and understood rather than spoken by an internal narrator.
ConfusionAn impairment of abstract thinking marked by a persistent inability to grasp or comprehend concepts and situations that would normally be perfectly understandable during sobriety.
Creativity enhancementAn increase in the ability to imagine new ideas, overcome creative blocks, think about existing concepts in novel ways, and produce artistic or intellectual work with greater fluency and inspiration.
Deja vuIntense, often prolonged sensation of having already experienced the current moment, common with psychedelics and dissociatives.
DeliriumDelirium is a serious and potentially dangerous state of acute mental confusion involving disorientation, incoherent thought, impaired attention, and frequently vivid hallucinations that the person cannot distinguish from reality. It represents one of the most medically concerning cognitive effects of substance use.
DelusionA delusion is a fixed, false belief that is held with unshakeable certainty and is impervious to contradicting evidence or rational argument — often involving grandiose, persecutory, or bizarre themes that are clearly at odds with observable reality.
DepersonalizationA detachment from one's own sense of self, body, or mental processes, as if observing oneself from outside or feeling that one's actions, thoughts, and identity are automatic and unreal.
DepressionA persistent state of low mood, emotional numbness, hopelessness, and diminished interest or pleasure in activities, often occurring during comedowns, withdrawal, or as a prolonged after-effect of substance use.
DerealizationA perceptual disturbance in which the external world feels profoundly unreal, dreamlike, or artificially constructed, as though experienced through a veil, screen, or foggy barrier separating the observer from reality.
DisinhibitionA marked reduction in social inhibitions, self-consciousness, and behavioral restraint that manifests as increased openness, talkativeness, and willingness to engage in activities one would normally avoid. Users often describe feeling as though an invisible social barrier has been lifted, allowing thoughts and impulses to flow directly into action without the usual filtering process.
Dream potentiationEnhanced dream vividness, complexity, and recall, often occurring as REM rebound after discontinuing REM-suppressing substances.
Ego inflationGrandiose overconfidence and inflated self-importance, opposite of ego death, commonly produced by stimulants and associated with reckless behavior.
Focus suppressionFocus suppression is a diminished capacity to direct and sustain attention on a chosen target — a task, a thought, a conversation — while successfully ignoring competing stimuli, resulting in persistent distractibility and difficulty completing even simple cognitive activities.
Immersion enhancementA heightened capacity to become fully absorbed and engrossed in external media such as music, films, video games, and art, with an amplified suspension of disbelief and a deepened emotional connection to the content being experienced.
Increased sense of humorA general amplification of one's sensitivity to finding things humorous and amusing, often causing previously unremarkable stimuli to become inexplicably hilarious, with laughter triggered by observations and connections that seem profound or absurd in the altered state.
IntrospectionAn enhanced state of self-reflective awareness in which one feels drawn to examine their own thoughts, emotions, behaviors, and life patterns with unusual depth, clarity, and emotional honesty, often yielding insights that feel therapeutically significant.
Language suppressionA diminished ability to formulate, comprehend, or articulate language, ranging from difficulty finding the right words to a near-complete inability to construct coherent sentences or understand speech, despite remaining otherwise conscious.
ManiaAbnormally elevated mood, energy, and activity with impulsive behavior and grandiosity, associated with stimulant use and certain drug interactions.
Memory suppressionA dose-dependent inhibition of one's ability to access and utilize short-term and long-term memory, ranging from mild forgetfulness to a profound inability to recall personal identity, biographical information, or the context of the current experience.
Motivation suppressionMotivation suppression is a state of diminished drive and willingness to engage in goal-directed behavior — from everyday tasks like cleaning and working to activities that would normally be experienced as rewarding or enjoyable — sometimes described as a profound and enveloping 'why bother?' feeling.
Music appreciation enhancementA profound enhancement of one's enjoyment and emotional connection to music, making songs feel deeply meaningful and revealing hidden layers of complexity.
Novelty enhancementA feeling of increased fascination, awe, and childlike wonder attributed to everyday concepts, objects, and experiences, as if perceiving the world for the first time.
Panic attackA panic attack is a discrete episode of acute, overwhelming fear or terror that arises suddenly and peaks within minutes, accompanied by distressing physical symptoms including rapid heartbeat, shortness of breath, chest tightness, trembling, dizziness, and a profound sense that one is dying, going insane, or losing control.
ParanoiaIrrational suspicion and belief that others are watching, plotting against, or intending harm toward oneself, ranging from mild unease to overwhelming terror.
Personal bias suppressionA decrease in the personal, cultural, and cognitive biases through which one normally filters their perception, enabling more objective self-examination and worldview analysis.
Personal meaning enhancementPersonal meaning enhancement is a state in which everyday events, coincidences, song lyrics, environmental details, and social interactions seem to carry profound and specific personal significance — as if the universe is communicating directly with the experiencer through symbolism and synchronicity.
PsychosisPsychosis is a serious psychiatric state involving a fundamental break from consensus reality — characterized by firmly held false beliefs (delusions), perception of things that are not there (hallucinations), disorganized thought and speech, and a loss of the ability to distinguish internal mental events from external reality.
RejuvenationA renewed sense of physical vitality, mental freshness, and emotional restoration that can emerge during or after a substance experience. The individual feels as though accumulated fatigue, stress, and mental fog have been cleared away, leaving behind a state of refreshment and renewed energy that is often compared to waking from deep, restorative sleep or returning from a revitalizing vacation.
SleepinessA progressive onset of drowsiness, heaviness, and the desire to sleep that pulls the individual toward rest with increasing insistence. The eyelids feel weighted, the body sinks into whatever surface supports it, cognitive activity winds down into a pleasant fog, and the transition from waking consciousness toward sleep begins to feel not only appealing but inevitable.
Thought decelerationThe experience of thoughts occurring at a markedly reduced pace, as if the mind has been placed into slow motion. Internal dialogue becomes sparse and sluggish, with each idea taking longer to form and process, producing a sense of mental heaviness or cognitive inertia.
Time distortionSubjective perception of time becomes dramatically altered — minutes may feel like hours, or hours pass in moments. Can manifest as either dilation or compression.
WakefulnessAn increased ability to stay awake and alert without the desire to sleep. Distinct from stimulation in that it does not elevate energy above a naturally rested baseline.
Auditory distortion is the experience of sounds becoming warped, pitch-shifted, flanged, or otherwise altered in their perceived qualities without any change to the actual sound source. Familiar sounds may seem alien, stretched in time, or layered with unusual resonances, creating a surreal and sometimes unsettling soundscape that departs significantly from sober auditory perception.
Auditory enhancementAuditory enhancement is a heightened sensitivity and appreciation of sound in which music, voices, and ambient noise become richer, more detailed, and more emotionally resonant. Subtle sonic details that would normally go unnoticed — the texture of a guitar string, the breath between a singer's words, the layered harmonics of a chord — become vivid and captivating.
Auditory hallucinationAuditory hallucination is the perception of sounds that have no external source — hearing music, voices, environmental noises, or abstract sonic phenomena that exist entirely within the mind. These range from faint, ambiguous whispers at the edge of perception to fully formed, complex musical compositions or conversational speech that can feel completely real and externally sourced.
Auditory misinterpretationAuditory misinterpretation is the brief, spontaneous misidentification of real sounds as entirely different sounds — ambient noise interpreted as voices, mechanical hums perceived as music, or random environmental sounds heard as words or familiar patterns.
Auditory suppressionA dampening of auditory perception in which sounds become muffled, distant, and reduced in both volume and clarity, as though hearing through thick walls or underwater. This creates a cocoon-like sense of auditory isolation.
Gustatory hallucinations are phantom taste experiences in which distinct flavors manifest in the mouth without any corresponding food, drink, or chemical stimulus. They range from common metallic or chemical tastes to complex, sometimes entirely alien flavor profiles.
Memory replaysMemory replays are vivid, multisensory re-experiences of past events that go far beyond normal recall — the person doesn't just remember an event but relives it as an immersive hallucination, complete with sights, sounds, emotions, and physical sensations from the original experience.
Scenarios and plotsScenarios and plots are the narrative structures that emerge within hallucinatory states — coherent or surreal storylines involving autonomous characters, unfolding events, and immersive settings that can feel as real and consequential as waking life.
SynaesthesiaStimulation of one sense triggers involuntary experiences in another — seeing sounds as colors, tasting textures, or hearing visual patterns. A blending of sensory channels.
A profound dissolution of the sense of self in which personal identity, memories, and the boundary between self and world completely vanish, leaving only pure undifferentiated awareness.
Existential self-realizationA sudden, visceral realization of the profound significance and improbability of one's own existence as a conscious being within the universe, often accompanied by overwhelming awe and a fundamental shift in perspective about life and reality.
Spirituality enhancementA profound intensification of spiritual feelings, mystical awareness, and a sense of sacred connection to something greater than oneself. This can range from a subtle sense of cosmic significance to full-blown mystical experiences indistinguishable from those described in religious traditions.
Unity and interconnectednessA profound sense that identity extends beyond the self to encompass other people, nature, or all of existence. Boundaries between self and other dissolve into felt oneness.
Dextromethorphan can produce 36 physical effects including tactile suppression, motor control loss, cough suppression, physical disconnection, and 32 more.
Yes. Dextromethorphan can produce 21 visual effects including geometry, visual haze, double vision, internal hallucination, and 17 more.
Dextromethorphan produces 40 cognitive effects including language suppression, confusion, depersonalization, derealization, and 36 more.