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BNC210: anxiolytic outperforming Lorazepam without any effect on cognition, sedation, addictio potential,

anxiolytic anxiety ptsd

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#1 Painkillerrr

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Posted 04 June 2018 - 03:35 PM


Hi, i think this is the real game changer for anxiolytic, i have not understand why on one ever tried it in this communty.

"BNC210 is a novel small molecule, orally-administered drug candidate being developed for anxiety and trauma- and stressor-related disorders, that we believe has similar efficacy but improved tolerability compared to currently available drugs such as benzodiazepines, selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, or SSRIs, and serotonin-norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors, or SNRIs. BNC210 is a first-in-class highly-selective negative allosteric modulator of the alpha-7 nicotinic acetylcholine (alpha-7) receptor. Acetylcholine and the alpha-7 receptor are increasingly being implicated in the symptoms of anxiety and depression. Furthermore, the alpha- 7 receptor is highly expressed in the amygdala, which forms part of the emotional centre of the brain. To date, BNC210 has been evaluated in seven completed clinical trials in over 200 subjects. Recruitment has just been completed in a Phase 2 PTSD trial."

"The results of the study show that BNC210 induced statistically significant changes in cerebral perfusion (300mg BNC210, p<0.05) and also significantly reduced amygdala activation in response to fearful faces during the EFT (300mg BNC210, p<0.05). In comparison, lorazepam exerted a modest suppressive effect on amygdala activation during performance of the EFT (1.5mg lorazepam, p=0.069).

Extensive evidence indicates that the amygdala plays a major role in fear and anxiety reactions. The data from this study indicates that BNC210 may exert anti-anxiety effects in patients via suppression of amygdala activation."


There is not much else to say about it: as strong as benzo without any of their known side effect (impaired cognition, addiction ecc), possibly could prevent panic attack.



http://www.bionomics...ial Results.pdf
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#2 kimlie

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Posted 06 June 2018 - 12:58 AM

Very interesting.
Would love to hear more about this.

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#3 Mind_Paralysis

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Posted 06 June 2018 - 02:06 PM

Whoah! Now THIS is interesting!! : D I had a look into various compounds that could affect the Alpha-7-nicotinic acetylcholine receptor last year, when I was pouring so much time into emotional control, and the potential mechanisms behind BORDERLINE - this drug could be a MIRACLE for that!

 

Really cool stuff - going to have a better look at this once I'm in more of a reading mind - meanwhile, I hope our friends John250 and GamesGuru has seen this - could definitively be something for them to look into!

 

I think we should probably be a little bit vary of discontinuation symptoms and addiction regarding this drug though - I know it seems incredibly UNlikely - but, another beneficial drug which was theorized to replace Benzo's when it comes to sleep-promotion, ak a the Orexin-antagonist Suvorexant (belsomra) actually turned out to have addictive properties.

That was an example of a completely new drug class which was not in any way, shape or form theorized to be addictive - but lo' and behold... there's some unknown mechanism at work that makes it addictive - how it gets people high and makes them crave more is at the moment completely unknown - complete shock, since Suvorexant actually SUPPRESSES catecholamines to an extent!

 

Well, so much for the dopamine-theory of addiction.



#4 Daniel Cooper

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Posted 06 June 2018 - 06:55 PM

Given the body's strong tendency to homeostasis, I question if there is any drug that actually works that isn't addictive/tolerance building.

 

 

 


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#5 Junipersun

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Posted 13 June 2018 - 11:48 AM

As far as I know, not a single novel anxiolytic drug has been bought in a group buy so far. There isn't that much interest it seems... 



#6 BlueCloud

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Posted 25 June 2018 - 04:07 PM

I would very much be interested in this.


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#7 brasscupcakes

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Posted 13 February 2020 - 06:57 PM

It's been fast tracked by the FDA should be available relatively soon. It didn't work for PTSD (company announcement: https://www.biospace...-ptsd-symptoms/
They completed an Australian anxiety study with elderly participants in April 2019 but haven't announced results yet.
guess those results were better if it has been fast tracked?

#8 Daniel Cooper

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Posted 20 February 2020 - 08:19 PM

So what does fast tracked mean in terms of availability?  Assuming no hitches, what's the earliest likely that a doctor could write a prescription for this?

 

 



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#9 2 Duckets

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Posted 01 March 2020 - 01:18 AM

Any herbs that do this?





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