The vast majority of posts on piracetam here appear to be from relatively new users who come here to share their experiences. Frankly, I find that the most of individuals on these forums who have used piracetam for any substantial amount of time have complained of tolerance to the point of not feeling it at all. To test the hypothesis, a poll! I did a search, and came up with no such poll, so I apologize in advance if this has already been asked.
So, is there anyone here for piracetam continued to work after 3+ months of continued use?
Please do not vote in this poll if you have not used Piracetam for more than 3 months.
I haven't voted in this poll yet because I've only been using Piracetam for about a month (among other nootropics). I have some frustration about the fact that the vast majority of people involved in the nootropic community seem to be "temporary users". From reading posts about tolerance and reading research on chemical and enzymatic changes in the brain caused by piracetam, I've drawn the inference that it's likely a problem with perception not effectiveness. After 3 months people don't feel them anymore because our metacognitive analysis of our intelligence is based on a fuzzy time frame. I suggest they don't feel like they're making us smarter because we feel just as smart as we've felt lately.
It's my hypothesis that if we had subjects participate in a year long experiment, taking piracetam daily, and performing an evaluation of their cognitive abilities (logic, facial recognition, dual-n-back, etc) say once per week, I believe the subjects would still be performing or improving at a greater level than a control group; even after 12 months, long outside the window of people reporting tolerance or that they don't feel it anymore. Unfortunately I can't see any way to test that hypothesis in the immediate future.
The reason I believe this because I haven't found any evidence that receptor modulation, neurotransmitter activity, and other mechanisms ever slow down or reverse at any point during treatment. Even in years long experiments, the biological and electrochemical changes are still present in animals so it makes sense to me that if the biological mechanisms are intact, the cognitive enhancements are likely still present even if the subject can't perceive the effects.