View Full Version : New alertness drug undergoing trials


Cyclone
05-05-2005, 11:12
I thought this was really interesting

A new class of drug may increase alertness without any of the jitteriness of over-stimulation, suggest the results of a small clinical trial released this week.

A compound dubbed CX717, a member of the new class called ampakines, significantly improved performance on tests of memory, attention, alertness, reaction time and problem solving in healthy men deprived of sleep.

The study was carried out by Julia Boyle at the Sleep Research Centre at the University of Surrey, UK, and her colleagues on behalf of Cortex Pharmaceuticals Inc., based in Irvine, California, US.

During the trial, 16 healthy young males were randomly assigned to take either 100 milligrams, 300 mg or 1000 mg of the drug, or given a placebo. By the end of the experiment, each volunteer had been assigned to all of the experimental groups, thus producing his own control scores.

The volunteers were hooked up to EEGs to measure brain wave activity and were put through a battery of tests. The first round of each session was after a good night’s sleep. Thereafter, they were tested every few hours throughout a sleepless night and into the next morning, during a total of 27 hours without rest.

The researchers found that the drug significantly improved performance on tests. And taking more of the drug improved performance for longer.

Short half-life
Ampakines work by binding to particular receptors in the brain, called AMPA-type glutamate receptors. This boosts the activity of glutamate, a neurotransmitter, and makes it easier to encode memory and to learn. And because of their short half-life - hours in this case - ampakines have few side effects.

The drug, which will have to undergo further clinical trials before being approved, is being considered as a possible treatment for narcolepsy, jet lag, attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and even Alzheimer’s disease.

But it clearly has effects in the healthy population as well. “It generates a state of cortical wakefulness without stimulation,” says Gary Lynch at the University of California at Irvine, who invented ampakines.

Arthur Caplan, a bioethicist at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia, US, sees no particular problem with people using such a drug to combat age-related memory loss. “Stimulating your brain with a reminder on a handheld digital device doesn’t seem that different to me from stimulating your brain with a drug,” he says.


my emphasis in bold
What do people think, we could all be popping exam/jetlag/mental performance pills on a regular basis if this hits the market.

JonJParr
05-05-2005, 11:20
I don't really like popping pills so I think I'll just sticcckkkkkk wwwwiittthhh myyy essssppreeessoo (apologies caffeine jitters).

Phanerothyme
05-05-2005, 11:41
Originally posted by Cyclone

What do people think, we could all be popping exam/jetlag/mental performance pills on a regular basis if this hits the market.

Well we already are.

Better Living Through Chemistry (http://www.neuropharmacology.com/)

This stuff seems to be the opposite of GHB.

Cyclone
05-05-2005, 11:42
Originally posted by Phanerothyme
Well we already are.

Better Living Through Chemistry (http://www.neuropharmacology.com/)

This stuff seems to be the opposite of GHB.

interesting website, i suspect this drug will make it to the market for bltc manage to rewrite the human genome.

Phanerothyme
05-05-2005, 11:47
Originally posted by Cyclone
interesting website, i suspect this drug will make it to the market for bltc manage to rewrite the human genome.
interesting? try www.bltc.org - they're utterly stone bonker - the lot of them.

Some nice points though
BLTC RESEARCH was founded in 1995 to promote paradise-engineering. We are dedicated to an ambitious global technology project. BLTC seek to abolish the biological substrates of suffering. Not just in humans, but in all sentient life.

Absurdly fanciful? No. The blueprint for a Post-Darwinian Transition is conceptually simple, technically feasible and morally urgent.

At present, life on earth is controlled by self-replicating DNA. Selfish genes ensure that cruelty, pain, malaise are endemic to the living world.

Yet all traditional religions, all social and economic ideologies, and all political parties, are alike in one respect. They ignore the biochemical roots of our ill-being. So the noisy trivia of party-politics distract us from what needs to be done.

Fortunately, the old Darwinian order, driven by blind natural selection acting on random genetic mutations, is destined to pass into evolutionary history.

For third-millennium bioscience allows us to:

* rewrite the vertebrate genome
* redesign the global ecosystem
* deliver genetically pre-programmed well-being

Biotechnology can make us smarter, happier - and nicer. Post-Darwinian superminds can abolish "physical" and "mental" pain altogether.

The ethical importance of the decisions we take can scarcely be exaggerated. For soon we'll be forced to choose how much suffering in the living world we want to conserve and create. Or whether instead we wish to abolish pain completely.

Life on earth can be animated by gradients of ecstatic well-being beyond the bounds of normal human experience.

In the end, the greatest obstacles to superhealth and a cruelty-free world may prove ideological, not technical. BLTC RESEARCH campaign to promote paradise-engineering as a rigorous academic discipline and a mature applied science.

Lea1979
05-05-2005, 11:56
Its a really interesting article. How long did it manage to sustain this kind of wakefulness? Is there anywhere it discusses the long term affects ?

Also, am i right in thinking this is the same/similar drug that was being discussed a while back in order to produce 24 hour soldiers?

Phanerothyme
05-05-2005, 12:03
No, I think that was modafinil.

Cyclone
05-05-2005, 12:08
Originally posted by Lee1979
Its a really interesting article. How long did it manage to sustain this kind of wakefulness? Is there anywhere it discusses the long term affects ?

Also, am i right in thinking this is the same/similar drug that was being discussed a while back in order to produce 24 hour soldiers?
it doesn't say where the study was published but you could try calling the university of surrey and asking. Or google it to see if any more info pops up.