Primer to Mental Supplements – Nootropic vs Cholinergic vs Racetams

Editors Note: This evidence-based exploration of mental supplements was set forth by Sol Orwell and Kurtis Frank. You can usually find them collating scientific research on supplements and nutrition over at Examine.com

Types of Mental Supplements

Nootropic – An umbrella term of importance 

The term Nootropic is used to refer to drugs/supplements/foods that have cognitive enhancing properties. It is derived from Noo- (the mind) and -tropic (towards), and is an umbrella phrase for any substance that could benefit your mind.

The researcher who originally coined the term nootropic (Corneliu Giurgea, inventor of Piracetam), proposed that anything considered a nootropic must be very safe and have no possibility of harming the body.

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This idea is a problematic ideal – it’s hard to provide proof that a substance has absolutely no harmful effects on your body. Even his own piracetam would not fit that fill; a study showed it to be thin blood as effectively as Aspirin, and would cause problems if taken with prescription blood thinner. So we will talk about safety, but don’t dive in head first.

The word nootropic is so broad and vast that we need to categorize them further. Nootropics can work in different ways, and the following categorizes how they work (they all work to benefit your memory and/or cognition).

  • Neurotransmitter Modulator: molecules which alter the concentrations of neurotransmitters in the body. These are either substrates for the neurotransmitters (L-Tyrosine and 5-HTP), enzyme inducers or inhibitors that modify neurotransmitter levels (MAOIs or Huperzine-A) and reuptake inhibitors that allow more neurotransmitters to stay in the synapse (SSRIs).
  • Neurotransmitter Mimetics: molecules which act on receptors themselves, rather than needing to modify levels of neurotransmitters. This includes compounds like nicotine or ephedrine, which directly activate receptors.
  • Transmission Modulators: These are things that, regardless of what happens at the synapse, alter the cellular effects and action potential of neuron. These either act at the receptor level (such as Honokiol or Aniracetam positively influencing GABA or AMPA receptors without directly acting on them) or on the axon (Levetiraetam and calcium channels)
  • Structural Modification: These are compounds that modify the structure of the neuron. Regardless of what the action potential decides to do or the synapse contains, these merely make the neuron itself more structurally robust. At the least, they repair the structure of a poor neuron. Piracetam, Bacopa Monnieri, and Phosphatidylserine all fall in this category
  • Therapeutic Compounds: These are characterized by having cognitive enhancing properties in persons with impaired cognition, but do not act in a unilateral manner. Instead, they only really benefit those with impaired cognition; the magnitude of benefit is lessened when used in an otherwise healthy person

These categories are not exclusive by any means. For example, yohimbine is an antagonist of alpha-adrenergic receptors (second bullet) and secondary to this it inhibits noradrenaline reuptake (first bullet). Piracetam is highly therapeutic (fifth bullet) possibly working via structural means (fourth bullet) although there is some evidence for it acting on calcium channels weakly (third bullet).

That being said, finding a nootropic compound that doesn’t fall into one of the above 5 categories is near impossible. This at least gives us a footing to begin wading through the vast world of nootropic compounds

Cholinergerics – An important class of molecules 

Cholinergic compounds are those that interact with acetylcholine or its receptors, and thus induce acetylcholine-like effects (cholinergic-like effects). Acetylcholine is a neurotransmitter highly involved in learning and memory formation, and tends to be one of the main focuses of many nootropic supplement regimens.

Cholinergic compounds can either be those that increase acetylcholine levels by supplying the substrate (choline or Alpha-GPC supplementation) or inhibiting its degradation (acetylcholinesterase inhibitors; Galantamine is the reference drug here, and Huperzine-A is also commonly touted).

Direct agonists of acetylcholine receptors exist, with the most commonly used direct agonist in usage (by lay persons) currently being nicotine.

Overall, the goal of any cholinergic is to induce more acetylcholine signalling to target neurons in the hope that it increases learning and memory formation.

Racetams – A heterogenous and popular category 

The term Racetam was born alongside the molecule piracetam, and refers to the common 2-pyrollidone structure in these molecules (If we look at the structures of levetiracetam, aniracetam, piracetam, nefiracetam, etc. we will always find a pentacyclic ring with a nitrogen in it and a double bonded oxygen one carbon away from it. This is the 2-pyrollidone group).

Racetams are actually categorized based on their physical structure, not what they do inside your body. It just so happens that when a molecule has this functional group, it tends to be highly  neuroactive.

For example, although piracetam has a variety of activities, the one that is pertinent here is rheological; binding to a cell membrane and improving fluidity (the fourth bullet).

Aniracetam is an AMPAkine, binding the the glutamate receptor subset known as AMPA and facilitating signalling through this receptor. Nefiracetam has been implicated in acting on another glutamate receptor, NMDA (which Aniracetam doesn’t do anything to).

Levetiracetam was synthesized off of Piracetam to enhance the inhibition of Calcium V2.2 channels (third bullet of altering signalling) and as such has a better role in epilepsy management.

So why are racetams popular? Racetams are akin to designer drugs for your mind, and it attracts a lot of people interested in neural benefits that do not care for “natural therapies.”

Although all known racetams are synthetic, there are some compounds borne from traditional medicines with similar (although not exact) structure to the pyrrolidone group on racetams; morus alba (white mulberries) and loganolactone (longan fruits) have a racetam-like structure that might be worth investigating.

So what can you eat? 

In Part 2 we will go over the various popular nootropics, including cholinergics and racetams. In the meantime, eggs are a great source of choline (a cholinergic), and small fatty fish (sardines, mackeral, herring) are good sources of both fish oil as well as phosphatidylserine (two structural modifying nootropics). Additionally, as mentioned earlier, longan fruits and white mulberries could have possible cognitive enhancing properties. It might be prudent to start to train your taste buds to enjoy tea, as tea can also be phrased as ‘water soluble extraction’ and opens up an entire world of plants to sneak into your diet.

So there you have it – a quick primer. Nootropics are supposed to enhance brain function, and they do so in roughly five primary ways. Cholinergics specifically target acetylcholine in order to help with memory function, and racetams are designed-drugs that can function in a variety of ways.

16 Comments

  1. Best Nootropics on June 12, 2013 at 9:46 am

    I have tried Piracetam, Taken daily, the dose should be 2 to 6 grams. Reported side effects are rare, and mild.

  2. afromuscle on February 26, 2013 at 4:48 am

    I’ve become interested in nootropics due to my need to become increasingly productive so this was right up my street. One I’ve heard about a lot is modafinil. While the scientific terms in the article are inaccessible to most (myself included) without incessant Googling, I think this provides some vital information.

    A part of me simply refuses to accept that using these for a prolonged period is without it’s pitfalls. To have those benefits with little to no side effects sounds a little too good to be true.

    Still, while the jargon makes this piece a little difficult to read, I feel that anyone looking to take nootropics has to make the effort to learn more about them. It’s your brain afterall.

    Cheers,

    Dennis

    • Greg on February 26, 2013 at 11:26 am

      Good points!

      Yah, I have heard of modafinil. I’m more interested in natural options. I am looking into bacopa, a nootropic that greatly enhances memory. As well as vinpocetine and choline.

      • afromuscle on March 1, 2013 at 1:29 pm

        I’ll look into those too. But I wonder; if a nootropic enhances your memory, would you experience some kind of memory loss once you stop taking it?

        I’ve heard funny stories when people do certain things under the influence of drugs (i.e. hide some money) and can never remember what they did once the effects of the drugs have worn off. Yet once they take the drug again, it all comes back.

        I guess that’s more research for me to do :)

        Thanks again for shedding light on this topic!

        Cheers,

        Dennis

  3. Grady on February 24, 2013 at 6:37 am

    Hey Greg,

    I’m at 12% bodyfat and have been doing shake salad diet up to this point with great success. But for the past week my weight won’t budge. Do you know any solutions?

    • Greg on February 25, 2013 at 10:55 am

      By weight won’t budge do you mean that you’ve gone a week without dropping at-least a pound? It could be that the first few weeks you lose weight really fast due to water loss and reduced food in the stomach plus a higher metabolic rate. So now the rate of fat loss has dropped to 1-2 lbs per week.
      I’d probably recommend raising the calories. Somewhere around 12.5 cals per pound and aim for 1 lbs per week of fat loss.

  4. Max on February 23, 2013 at 6:37 am

    Hey Greg!
    If i add 2.2 lbs every workout for better strenght gains i have to use RPT training?
    You suggest to have 3 sets increasing 5 lbs on the first set and the next workout increase 5 lbs the other sets.
    But for 2.2 lbs increase?
    It’s better RPT training? (adding 2.2 every set every workout)

    • Greg on February 23, 2013 at 1:24 pm

      Either option can work. If you have access to smaller plates then I would increase all sets by 2.2 or 2.5 lbs.

  5. John on February 20, 2013 at 2:11 pm

    Interesting post, although technical I feel like I’ve been introduced into something interesting, keep up the good work!

  6. Marcus on February 19, 2013 at 12:20 am

    I agree with previous writer, really interesting stuff but due to the technical jargon it’s somewhat headache inducing :) Looking forward to pt. 2 though. Keep up the great work!

  7. David on February 16, 2013 at 5:35 am

    A very technical article which not many people will understand, it uses technical jargon wich confuses me. I do have to say that this is a very interesting article and not much is written about in on other fitness sites. Keep going guys, this is a very positive learning enviroment.

    • Greg on February 16, 2013 at 11:24 am

      Yes, David. I even had a hard time understanding it. I had to read through it a few times.

      Part two will be much more practical and there should be a lot more that you can take away from it.

  8. Henry on February 15, 2013 at 2:20 pm

    Hey Greg, I’ve never really understood by what you meant when you say 25% fat intake and the rest carbs.
    Do you mind clarifying?

    • Greg on February 16, 2013 at 11:16 am

      Okay let’s say that you are consuming 2000 calories for example and you weight 150 lbs.

      150g protein = 600 calories (4 cals per gram)
      25% fat = 2000 x 0.25 = 500 (calories from fat)

      500 / 9 (calories per gram of fat) = 55g from fat

      2000 cals – 600 (protein calories) -500 (fat calories) = 900 (carb calories

      900 / 4 (calories per gram) = 225g

      MACROS

      150g protein
      55g fat
      225g carbs

  9. Josh on February 15, 2013 at 8:57 am

    Hey greg, Great article!
    For building muscle how many carbs shoul i consume a day? Is 200- 300 to much? I don’t want to ruin my physique by gaining fat.
    Thanks, Josh

    • Greg on February 15, 2013 at 12:21 pm

      That’s actually an impossible question to answer. Some people might be able to consume 500g of carbs while lean bulking for others it might be 250g.
      I’d recommend determining your maintenance calorie intake. Then set a slight surplus, something along the lines of 300 over maintenance. Set 0.82-1g of protein per pound of bodyweight, 25% fat intake and the rest carbs. Depending on your weight and maintenance calories this could be 200-300+g of carbs. If you’re keeping the surplus small (300 cal surplus) then no matter how many carbs you’re consuming your body won’t be gaining much fat. That is provided you are training well to trigger muscle growth.

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