No, I haven't stepped it up my dose yet - I've been side-tracked by other things. I'll report back when I do.Any update on this, @Scarecrow?
No, I haven't stepped it up my dose yet - I've been side-tracked by other things. I'll report back when I do.Any update on this, @Scarecrow?
It's no bother at all.Sorry to bother you, but I was wondering whether you had the chance to try this yet?
How much did you take? Closer to my level (2.4g) or Wayne's (0.08g)?Perhaps I started with too high a dose, not sure.
I took 4g (5 tabs @ 800mg). There's a theory that for maximum benefit as a nootropic, you start with an 'attack' dose. I was going to be conservative and only take two but then I thought what the heck and took another three. Five minutes later, I wished I hadn't because it scared the crap out of me. I could feel it slam into my brain and I was aware of the feeling diffusing across. I've never experienced anything like it . It was quickly gone, followed within about half an hour later by tremendous visual enhancement.What dose did you start off with @Scarecrow?
I took 4g (5 tabs @ 800mg). There's a theory that for maximum benefit as a nootropic, you start with an 'attack' dose. I was going to be conservative and only take two but then I thought what the heck and took another three. Five minutes later, I wished I hadn't because it scared the crap out of me. I could feel it slam into my brain and I was aware of the feeling diffusing across. I've never experienced anything like it . It was quickly gone, followed within about half an hour later by tremendous visual enhancement.
I've rated myself a 7 on the PR scale and Wayne is a 3. I have the sensitivity of an elephant with medication and supplements. 400mg for you may have been too much.
That reduction in pain is intriguing
@voner
It's very interesting that you have also experienced a reduction in muscle pain. I think that the reduction in pain that Sidereal noticed was different to mine. She had an immediate response, while for me it takes several days to kick in. How about you?
I notice that in your link examine.com refers to analgesic properties in response to inflammatory hyperalgesia. There is also a possibility that it reduces neuropathic pain - see this charming rat study.
Intuitively, I don't believe that either applies to me but .....I dunno.
Thanks for explaining. That exactly what I found. The pain wasn't making me quite as miserable but all the same it was never ending and I'm glad to be rid of it. It's also comforting somehow to know that someone else has noticed exactly the same thing.It takes several days for the effect to be noticeable for me. I stopped taking it for a week or two and then noticed how much more miserable life felt – myofascial pain wise. It took several days for me to notice the Lessing in my symptoms again.
Thanks for explaining. That exactly what I found. The pain wasn't making me quite as miserable but all the same it was never ending and I'm glad to be rid of it. It's also comforting somehow to know that someone else has noticed exactly the same thing.
I took the piracetam hoping for an improvement in my ability to learn. I didn't get that but eventually my recall of words was better and I was more fluent in my thinking. This is my experience with respect to the pain, which more exactly was a combination of an ache and tenderness:well, well..... that is intriguing. that's pretty much exactly how I would describe the effects. How did you get rid of it the unrelenting pain symptoms?
After a long mostly stable period of remission, but not complete recovery, I had relapsed early in 2011, to the extent that I was still able to work with difficulty but my social life, which was never embarrassingly busy, was totally hammered. Since April of that year, I developed a permanent muscle ache in the front of my thighs, occasionally also in my arms. The ache in my thighs never let up for a single second for the best part of two years.
A few days after starting the piracetam, I noticed the ache starting to fade to the extent that it had entirely disappeared within the next few days. I was thrilled, obviously! As you do, when things stop or start, you wonder what accounts for the difference and it was so close to happening after the piracetam that I stopped taking it......... reluctantly. Sure enough a few days later the aches returned. So I went back on the piracetam and the ache went away again. I won't labour the point but there are several times I've started and stopped and the effect has always been reproducible. What I have noticed is the lag between stopping and starting and the ache coming and going. Also when I have taken piracetam for months, it weeks going onto months before the ache returns and I can't help thinking that the lag effect is very significant.
Any way, if you have ever used piracetam and have also noticed a reduction or cessation of aches - or any unexpected effect for that matter - it would be interesting to hear from you.
L-Pyroglutamic Acid, the so-called forgotten amino acid, is the natural molecule behind the nootropic drugs, such as piracetam, oxiracetam, and pramiracetam: these drugs are chemically tweaked versions of L-Pyroglutamic Acid. No one quite understands how L-Pyroglutamic Acid or the nootropics work: they don't seem to significantly affect neurotransmitter levels, they don't bind to any known receptors, and their metabolism is extremely simple, nontoxic, and clean.
Very interesting. Thank you.The reason I was searching on this today is because of my interest in l-pyroglutamic acid.