That's got nothing to do with ciltep specifically though right? It should affect everyone that way, assuming those results even generalize to humans in vivo.
So my theory is that the brain cells are growing their dendrites out because of CILTEP and they're hungry for amino acids to put all those proteins together so maybe the tyrptophan and tyrosine are entering the cell to support that more quickly because of uridine and then their levels outside the cell decline and that's what leads to the unpleasantness the next day.
I base this on two observations.
1. The uridine stack + CILTEP is *really* great while it's working. I've gotten some of my highest cambridgebrainsciences.com scores ever while taking it.
2. The crash is very serotoniny. It's not a choline overload which creates these very obvious feelings of dread, headaches, neckaches, etc. It is also quickly fixed by tryptophan.
Edited by abelard lindsay, 01 November 2013 - 07:53 AM.