Vinpocetine, the legal smart drug, also works in normal, healthy people. In 1985 psychologists at the University of Leeds published the results of a study which suggest that this is the case. It's on of the very few studies about the effect of vinpocetine on healthy people that we've managed to find.
Vinpocetine
Vinpocetine also goes by the name of ethyl-apovincaminate. It's a semi-synthetic analogue of vincamine, an alkaloid found in the plant Vinca minor. Vinpocetine has been available for years in preparations like Intelectol, which are supposed to improve brain functioning.
Much research has been done on vinpocetine, but most of the studies involve basic research. Nearly all the human studies we've managed to unearth involve people with calcified blood vessels in the brain or patients who are recovering from a stroke.
In these people vinpocetine boosts the supply of blood to the brains and improves memory functions. [Arzneimittelforschung. 1976;26(10a):1947-50.]
Study
The British psychologists did an experiment in the mid eighties, in which they gave healthy women aged between 25 and 40 a daily dose of 10, 20 or 40 mg vinpocetine or a placebo for two days.
The subjects took one dose at 8 o'clock in the morning and the other at 2 o'clock in the afternoon.
At the end of the two days the researchers tested the women's brain functioning by getting them to recognise combinations on a computer screen.
Results
The combinations were not difficult, and the women made hardly any errors. And the vinpocetine had no effect on the number of errors made. What it did do was to increase the speed with which the women were able to recognize a combination. After taking the 40 mg dose the women performed significantly better than after taking a placebo.
Conclusion
So vinpocetine helps the brains of healthy people to work faster. Information processing goes faster as a result of the alkaloid.
So how would team players, drivers or students taking exams react to vinpocetine? We don't know. We were unable to find studies that can tell us.
Source:
Eur J Clin Pharmacol. 1985;28(5):567-71.
Vinpocetine
Vinpocetine also goes by the name of ethyl-apovincaminate. It's a semi-synthetic analogue of vincamine, an alkaloid found in the plant Vinca minor. Vinpocetine has been available for years in preparations like Intelectol, which are supposed to improve brain functioning.
Much research has been done on vinpocetine, but most of the studies involve basic research. Nearly all the human studies we've managed to unearth involve people with calcified blood vessels in the brain or patients who are recovering from a stroke.
In these people vinpocetine boosts the supply of blood to the brains and improves memory functions. [Arzneimittelforschung. 1976;26(10a):1947-50.]
Study
The British psychologists did an experiment in the mid eighties, in which they gave healthy women aged between 25 and 40 a daily dose of 10, 20 or 40 mg vinpocetine or a placebo for two days.
The subjects took one dose at 8 o'clock in the morning and the other at 2 o'clock in the afternoon.
At the end of the two days the researchers tested the women's brain functioning by getting them to recognise combinations on a computer screen.
Results
The combinations were not difficult, and the women made hardly any errors. And the vinpocetine had no effect on the number of errors made. What it did do was to increase the speed with which the women were able to recognize a combination. After taking the 40 mg dose the women performed significantly better than after taking a placebo.
Conclusion
So vinpocetine helps the brains of healthy people to work faster. Information processing goes faster as a result of the alkaloid.
So how would team players, drivers or students taking exams react to vinpocetine? We don't know. We were unable to find studies that can tell us.
Source:
Eur J Clin Pharmacol. 1985;28(5):567-71.