WHOA!!! that is alot of info. wow, you know your stuff. are you a neuro scientist??? i think then that Rhodiola would be a good nootropic to take with Ritalin since it also releases dopamine and serotonin. it should help in activating the alpha 2a receptor directly. i hope that is not overload with combining the two. these two should be also MAO-B inhibitors as well right.
i never tried DMAA, only when i used something to help my nose. it has been combine with caffeine to lose weight via stimulant but i avoided it. Isn't Strattera Atomoxetine? it is used for ADHD, is that more powerful than Ritalin? i bet pretty expensive as well without prescription.
TMG, L-Methionine, Choline, Vitamin B (1,6,9,12).....i want to get these from foods. which foods are best to eat to get these guys? SAMe, doesn't our body produce it with all the food that we eat?
what do you mean by Deprenyl being irreversable?
if hordenine sucks by itself what can be used to take with it to make good?
sorry for all the questions but you brought alot of stuff that now i am interested in. so i had no choice. ha!
I am no neuroscientist, haha, but I'm great at sounding smart.
Rhodiola is actually a MAO-A inhibitor, so it is more of mood enhancer than a focus enhancer, though it would do both. It increases dopamine, norepinephrine, and serotonin.
DMAA is a nasal decongestant that was originally found in geranium oil. Lilly patented it ages ago, but it became an orphan drug. It is a norepinephrine re-uptake inhibitor with a strange bell curve of effectiveness some claiming to have drowsiness if taken 100mg or more. I find I can take 50mg to 75mg without feeling sedated. It has a bit of a crash in some people and not in others. I notice a crash about 3 hours after taking 25mg, so I usually take 50mg and come down slower and take it 4x a day. It doesn't have a euphoria by itself, but combined with hordenine and coffee, you get pretty high. I wouldn't mess around with mixing it with stuff like those weight loss formulas do.
Yes, Strattera is Atomoxetine, and it is used to treat ADHD. It is quite expensive and comes with a variety of side effects for your body to choose from. It has very high affinity for NET (Ki of 5nM) and not so much for the other transporters (DAT being the 2nd highest at 77nM). It is a very powerful NET inhibitor - more so than Ritalin and Adderall at equivalent doses. Since it is generally considered non-addictive, both in pharmacology and in animal trials, so it is often prescribed as the first line of treatment for ADHD. However, the side effects are not desirable, and many discontinue use within the first week or two.
My Incredibly long list of food sources:
- Methionine is found in fish, dairy, meat, and whole grains.
- TMG is found in Quinoa, Spinach, Wheat bran, Lamb's quarters, and Beets.
- Choline is found in eggs, fish, beef, peanuts, and soy lecithin.
- Foods rich in B1 are whole wheat, yeast, oatmeal, flax and sunflower seeds, brown rice, whole grain rye, asparagus, kale, cauliflower, potatoes, oranges, liver (beef, pork, and chicken), and eggs.
- Foods rich in B6 are meats, whole grain products, vegetables, nuts and bananas.
- Foods rich in B9 are leafy vegetables such as spinach, asparagus, turnip greens; legumes such as dried or fresh beans, peas and lentils; egg yolks; baker's yeast; fortified grain products (pasta, cereal, bread); sunflower seeds; liver and liver products; kidney; moderate amounts: certain fruits (orange juice, canned pineapple juice, cantaloupe, honeydew melon, grapefruit juice, banana, raspberry, grapefruit and strawberry) and vegetables (beets, corn, tomato juice, vegetable juice, broccoli, brussels sprouts, romaine lettuce and bok choy), and beer..
- B12 comes from bacteria originally, but so it is mostly found in animals. Eggs, once thought to be a good source, are being researched further because they also have a compound that inhibits proper absorption of B12. Foods rich in B12 are clams, rainbow trout, salmon, haddock, yogurt, beef, tuna, milk, cheese, ham, and chicken.
SAMe is made from L-methionine and ATP via the enzyme Methionine Adenosyltransferase.
Deprenyl permanently inhibits MAO-B, meaning that it is not a reversible inhibitor (and not like a substrate). Your body takes 2 weeks to completely replace MAO-B.
To take full advantage of hordenine, you have to increase norepinephrine or dopamine in some other way using a CNS stimulant or another MAO inhibitor. Hordenine is therefore more to amplify the effects. I took it with DMAA and got a very instantaneous buzz just by swishing it around my mouth with water. Hordenine and DMAA don't have that effect alone. Coffee, Schizandrol A, probably DMAE to some extent, cocoa extract, ADHD meds, DMAA, Rhodiola, plants containing harmala alkaloids, tobacco, plain caffeine, sida cordifolia, plain ephedrine, pseudoephedrine, cocaine... I mean the list goes on. PEA (Phenethylamine) is often taken recreationally with hordenine, producing quite a jittery high from what I gather.
Yeah we totally hijacked this thread.

You might find this interesting:
http://www.ncbi.nlm..../pubmed/9003072 Looks like the D4 receptor is also activated by norepinephrine and epinephrine as well as dopamine. Norepinephrine, which also activated Alpha-2A, therefore has a double dose of effectiveness on ADHD.
Edited by devinthayer, 03 August 2011 - 06:41 PM.