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What dose "aniracetam is 8x more potent than piracetam" mean?

aniracetam piracetam

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#1 lin

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Posted 07 December 2011 - 10:31 AM


Dose it mean that "2.4g piracetam = 0.3g aniracetam"?

Edited by lin, 07 December 2011 - 10:36 AM.


#2 JChief

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Posted 07 December 2011 - 12:36 PM

It just means less is needed to show a result. This should be taken with a huge grain of salt as I have found that no two racetams behave exactly the same. I would just use it to gauge how much more or less you would have to take. If one racetam is far more potent than another it just means that less is needed (but recommended doses for all of them are not hard to find) but that does not mean that the effects are exactly the same. In some cases far from it. It's just an indicator that less is needed. Piracetam is commonly taken in doses higher than 2g. Not nearly that amount is required for the racetams that have followed. But again, I stress, each has unique effects.

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#3 MangekyōPeter

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Posted 07 December 2011 - 02:07 PM

Haha, if racetams would scale like that then i wonder what happens to your body when taking attack 100mg+ doses of noopept :D although i know it's not a racetam in the sense of the word but yeah, these potentiation thingy's are rather useless as each racetam is different

#4 Googoltarian

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Posted 07 December 2011 - 05:09 PM

It means that in some test aniracetam scored same value as piracetam in 1/8 of piracetam dose [mg/kg body mass]. Probably as amnesia reversal drug in rats, as its common test for nootropics.
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#5 thedevinroy

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Posted 07 December 2011 - 10:58 PM

It means that in some test aniracetam scored same value as piracetam in 1/8 of piracetam dose [mg/kg body mass]. Probably as amnesia reversal drug in rats, as its common test for nootropics.


That's exactly right.

Typical dose for aniracetam is 800mg.





Also tagged with one or more of these keywords: aniracetam, piracetam

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