This stuff? https://themikerothschild.com/2018/07/09/adrenochrome-qanon/
This stuff:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AdrenochromeOf course, with #pizzagate, #frazzledrip, and other interesting things banned from youtube and facebook, there will be shiny articles decrying this as another Q-anon conspiracy theory.
A better discussion of older research may be found here.
https://ia902900.us.archive.org/21/items/adrenochrome_Hoffer/adrenochrome_Hoffer.pdfAnd while it does not appear that this would be a particularly attractive substance to use, there may be other factors or even chemicals involved if the 'harvest' method often described is in use, not to mention cultish euphoria.
Dosages matter, and while a few micrograms of LSD have one effect, a few milligrams would produce something different (for instance). We have seen this in the so-called studies of Hydroxychloroquine and chloroquine where extreme doses for clinical purposes have produced severe or more common side effects, even lengthening of the Q-T interval to the point of cardiac arrest (in the halted Brazilian Chloroquine study, which administered a lethal dose, overestimating the clearance rate for the drug).
It is one thing to have subjects use a substance in a clinical setting, and may be quite another under differing social circumstances, as I have observed in people taking a variety of substances over the years. Altered perceptions often depend on what there is to perceive, as much (and perhaps sometimes more) as the degree of alteration. I would postulate that a surreal environment would produce a greater sense of altered perception than something ordinary, as a clinical environment would be to research subjects expecting a clinical environment and who are reasonably well versed in the protocols and methodology of the tests.