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  • AADD Moderators: swilow | Vagabond696

Getting the best out of your Nootropics

Jug

Bluelighter
Joined
Aug 7, 2001
Messages
196
Is it best to take Pircitam / Anircitam on an empty or full stomach? & if on a full stomach what should you have eaten prior?

And Do you take your Lecithin / Choline before / with or after the Nootropill?
 
Also Im taking 3.6 grams of Lecithin a day that should produce a suficient source of choline yeah?

Im also taking Vitamin B, Omega 3 & 5HTP.
Any advice you guys could contribute to my current regiem would be MUCH appreciated.

Respect!
 
I think your going a little overboards with all these supplements. Do you need them or what?
 
I agree although I dont really know much about the supplements youre taking most of them cannot just be readily abosorbed and used by youre body. Most of them are water soluable so it is a good idea to drink water before and after you take them if you dont already. Im not sure what food will assist in the absorbtion but I found this on a website:

Interactions:
Interacts with : Combined effect:
Methotrexate: Reduces Choline absorption rates
Nicotinic Acid (Vitamin B-3) : Reduces choline efficacy
Phenobarbital : Reduces Choline absorption rates

Hope this helps.
 
OK Thanks people. Yes I do need them, I have had hardcore clinical depression for 10 years, been on every Anti-D's for the last 5 of them and none of them helped me much I hate the side effects to mainly Sweating and Weakness, I was about to do myself in but decided to try a nootropic first being very doubtfull after trying Selegeling +DLPA, but hey it worked and now after a couple of weeks I have enrolled in University, gone surfing bought a remote controll car.
Its mainly the Anircitam Im on at the moment thats helping but I like to think that Vitamin B omega 3 and 5htp would interact with my head nicely to.

Its just some drugs u take em on an empty stomach I think the acid in your stomach reuins theri efficiacy or something, but have stuff in yor stomach and it can aswell I dunno.

I do take the Multi Vitamin, & 5htp before bed, omega3 between meals and the Nootropic with choline 3 times a day before meals.
 
No its not, but it can be legally imported, I got quicker service from the US than I do for most Australian based businesses.
 
is this shit on prescription i'd really like to get prescribed some nootropics as iv tried every other kind of mood stabiliser and they are all shit
 
Besides the Selegiline all are completely legal to import and quite cheap.

However in my personal experience I don't really think they should be used as a mood stabiliser. In my experience all do the opposite, not to a significant effect - the worse offender was Aniracetam, with Piracetam the least.
 
If u don't know enough about it to talk a gp into perscribing selegiline then u don't deserve to have it cos they know NOTHING!
 
streetsurfer said:
If u don't know enough about it to talk a gp into perscribing selegiline then u don't deserve to have it cos they know NOTHING!


Yea gp's know nothing, that 8 years of schooling is a myth and why would a gp prescribe an antidepressant? It depends on the dr also, if she doesn't want to prescribe it she won't, no matter how many pubmed studies you lay on her.
 
When it comes to mental health, Most (but not all) GP's are massively ignorent. How many GP's do you think are aware of discontinuation sydrome let alone how to treat it?
 
streetsurfer said:
When it comes to mental health, Most (but not all) GP's are massively ignorent. How many GP's do you think are aware of discontinuation sydrome let alone how to treat it?



Morb said:
Yea gp's know nothing, that 8 years of schooling is a myth and why would a gp prescribe an antidepressant? It depends on the dr also, if she doesn't want to prescribe it she won't, no matter how many pubmed studies you lay on her.



My original point: Why go to a gp for psy meds when that is not his specialty? Step into the forest...
 
Do people go to cardiologists for antihypertensives?
Thorasic specialists for bronchodialaters?
Gastroenterologists for their losec?

Sometimes yes, most often, no.

Perscribing relatively benign (as in they won't kill you) drugs like SSRI's is supposed to be well within a GP's scope of practice. The fact that they are so blithely ignorent of their side effects borders on negligence in my opinion
 
They can write any scrip they want. If you ask a gastroenterologist for topical corticosteroids he may give them to you, if you ask a gp here for a psy med he will refer you to a psy. Why risk prescribing outside your field? Why would you want a doctor to do that anyway? I may have tons of studies to show a doctor but if the doctor has experience prescribing certain classes of meds he may actually know better.
 
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