As most of you know piracetam and aniracetam create different effects with the same goal in mine: cognitive enhancement. Based off of anecdotal report the difference in the effects seem to coincide with activation/enhancement of each hemisphere of the brain. Aniracetam would activate/enhance the right brain while the piracetem (and many of the other racetams) would enhance/activate the left brain. Both racetams exhibit modulation of different neurons; aniracetam modulates AMPA and NMDA and on the contrary piracetam mainly modulats NMDA. After stumbling upon this article http://www.scienceda...81117192918.htm and reading this portion:
They investigated the electron microscopic structure of synapses in left and right hippocampus, and found synapses made by terminals from the right hippocampus are large, complex in shape, and rich in the GluR1 subunit of AMPA-type glutamate receptors. In contrast, synapses receiving input from the left hippocampus are small and rich in the NR2B subunit of NMDA receptors. That means, both synaptic structure and synaptic molecules differ between synapses with left and right inputs.
One could easily deduct that this could be considered evidence of Aniracetams right brain effects and Piracetams left brain effects. What do you guys think?
Edited by Plasticperson, 22 January 2013 - 02:51 AM.