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A resealable white pouch labeled “Bromantane 1 g, Batch No. 002, 24-06-2025” stands upright on a beige background.
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Bromantane 1g

€30,00 EUR
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                                           NOT FOR HUMAN CONSUMPTION

Bromantane is an adamantane-derived actoprotector developed in Russia and marketed there as Ladasten® for asthenic syndrome. Pharmacologically it behaves as a pro-dopaminergic, anxiolytic psychostimulant with adaptogenic and immunomodulatory signals. Unlike classic stimulants, it up-regulates catecholamine synthesis(rather than driving acute release), with reported increases in tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) and aromatic L-amino acid decarboxylase (AADC) expression, plus mild GABAergic and serotonergic modulation. It is not approved in the US/EU and is prohibited in sport (stimulants class).


Additional Benefits of Bromantane Now Under Investigation

Benefit Key take-aways
1 Anti-fatigue & performance under stress In asthenia and military/occupational studies, bromantane improved vigilance, psychomotor speed, and time-on-task during heat, sleep restriction, or high workload—without classic stimulant rebound. <br/><em>Human Physiology; Neuroscience & Behavioral Physiology</em>
2 Anxiolysis with activation Clinical cohorts with neurasthenia/asthenic anxiety report reduced anxiety, apathy, and asthenic symptoms while energy and initiative rise—an uncommon “calm activation” profile. <br/><em>Zhurnal Nevrologii i Psikhiatrii; CNS Drugs</em>
3 Cognitive efficiency Signals for working memory, processing speed, and attention improvements in fatigued subjects; effects in healthy, rested volunteers are smaller and variable. <br/><em>Human Psychopharmacology; Psychopharmacology</em>
4 Recovery and overtraining Actoprotector literature notes faster recovery of heart-rate variability and lower perceived exertion post-load; high-quality athlete RCTs are sparse. <br/><em>Sports Medicine; Human Physiology</em>
5 Immunomodulation Reports of enhanced interferon response, ↑ secretory IgA, and ↑ NK activity in stressed individuals—magnitude and durability remain uncertain. <br/><em>International Immunopharmacology; Bulletin of Experimental Biology and Medicine</em>
6 Antihypoxic/thermoregulatory resilience Animal data show protection against heat load and hypoxia with better mitochondrial enzyme activity and oxidative-stress markers. <br/><em>Pathophysiology; Biochemistry (Moscow)</em>
7 Mood/drive in post-infection fatigue Small open studies suggest improved motivation and physical activity in post-viral asthenia; controlled trials needed. <br/><em>Clinical Pharmacology & Therapeutics (regional); Journal of Affective Disorders</em>
8 Autonomic stabilization Trends toward lower sympathetic overdrive at rest with more robust task-evoked response, consistent with central set-point effects. <br/><em>Autonomic Neuroscience; Psychophysiology</em>
9 Low abuse potential (relative) Lacks strong euphoria/reinforcement typical of amphetamines; discontinuation symptoms uncommon—though misuse in sport led to WADA prohibition. <br/><em>Addiction Biology; Drug Testing & Analysis</em>

2. Molecular Mechanism of Action

2.1 Receptor/enzymatic pharmacodynamics

  • Dopaminergic: Up-regulates TH (rate-limiting for DA) and AADC, increasing de novo dopamine synthesis and mesolimbic/striatal DA tone without vesicular dump; may elevate BDNF transcripts in cortex/hippocampus.

  • GABA/5-HT modulation: Mild GABA-ergic normalization and 5-HT turnover changes reported (contributing to anxiolysis).

  • Mitochondrial/actoprotector: ↑ activity of succinate dehydrogenase, cytochrome oxidase, and antioxidant systems under load.

2.2 Down-stream biology

Pathway Functional outcome Context
TH/AADC induction → DA ↑ Drive/motivation ↑, fatigue ↓ Striatum/mesolimbic
GABA normalization Anxiety ↓, smoother arousal Limbic/cortical
Mitochondrial enzymes/antioxidants Stress resilience, recovery ↑ Muscle/CNS
Immune signaling (IFN, sIgA) Mucosal defense ↑ (stress) Immunity

3. Pharmacokinetics

  • Route: Oral tablets/capsules.

  • Onset: Days for anxiolytic/activation profile; anti-fatigue often within 1–2 weeks.

  • Half-life: Reported in the hours-to low teens (compound and metabolite-dependent); once-daily dosing typical in Russian practice.

  • Metabolism: Hepatic (oxidation/hydroxylation of adamantane/phenyl moieties) with renal/biliary excretion; minimal CYP interaction data published.


4. Clinical Evidence (high-level)

  • Asthenic/neurasthenic syndromes: Randomized and open-label Russian trials show clinician-rated and patient-reported improvements vs baseline and some actives/placebo on asthenia and anxiety scales, with good tolerability.

  • Operational stress studies: Controlled field studies (military/industrial) report better vigilance and psychomotor output in heat/sleep restriction vs comparators.

  • Cognition: Mixed results—benefit most evident under fatigue or stress load; limited effect in well-rested healthyvolunteers.

Evidence quality note: Many trials are regional, with varying blinding/reporting standards; replication in multicenter, modern RCTs is limited. Extrapolation to unrelated conditions should be conservative.


5. Emerging Clinical Interests

Field Rationale Status
Post-viral/post-infectious fatigue Dopamine/mitochondrial + anxiolysis Pilot/open-label
Chronic fatigue syndromes (ME/CFS-like) Central drive + stress tolerance Hypothesis-generating
Occupational safety Vigilance without agitation Small operational trials
Adjunct in depression with fatigue Energy/initiative augmentation Case series
Rehab/overtraining Recovery facilitation Sports science (limited RCTs)

6. Safety and Tolerability

  • Common (usually mild): Dry mouth, insomnia (early weeks), headache, nausea, restlessness, sweating; often resolve with dose-timing (morning) or brief dose reduction.

  • Less common: Tachycardia, BP drift, tremor, irritability; rare rash or dyspepsia.

  • Neuropsychiatric: Generally anxiolytic, but activation can unmask anxiety in some—monitor if panic-prone. Mania/psychosis is rare; caution with bipolar history.

  • Dependence/withdrawal: Low relative to amphetamines; no classic rebound when tapered.

  • Hepatic/renal: Routine labs typically stable; avoid with significant hepatic disease until more data.

  • Drug interactions: Limited data; be cautious with MAOIs, strong dopaminergics, and CNS stimulants (additive activation).

  • Pregnancy/lactation: Insufficient data—avoid.

  • Sport/anti-doping: Banned by WADA (stimulants). Detection persists days after dosing.

Comparative matrix

Feature Bromantane Modafinil Methylphenidate
Primary action DA synthesis ↑, actoprotector, anxiolytic Wake-promoter (DA/NE transport) DA/NE reuptake block
Anxiety Often ↓ Neutral/slight ↑ Can ↑
Abuse potential Lower Moderate Higher
WADA status Prohibited Prohibited (in-competition) Prohibited

7. Regulatory Landscape

  • Approved use: Russia/CIS (asthenic syndrome).

  • US/EU: Not approved; available only as research chemical/import (quality variable).

  • Sport: Prohibited substance (stimulants). High-profile positives drove early bans.


8. Practical Use & Dosing (where legal)

  • Typical ranges: 50–100 mg once daily (morning) for 2–4 weeks, extend to 8–12 weeks if needed; some protocols use 100–200 mg/day in divided doses under supervision.

  • Titration tips: Start 50 mg qAM, advance after 3–7 days if insomnia or jitteriness absent. Pair with sleep hygiene, hydration, electrolytes, and protein during heavy training/work.

  • When to avoid/stop: Persistent insomnia, tachyarrhythmia, marked anxiety, or BP >140/90 despite timing/dose changes.


Selected References

  • Neuroscience & Behavioral Physiology; Human Physiology — Actoprotector concept, performance under heat/sleep restriction; mitochondrial and antioxidant markers.

  • Zhurnal Nevrologii i Psikhiatrii; CNS Drugs — Clinical studies in asthenia/neurasthenia: anxiolysis with activation, clinician-rated outcomes.

  • Biochemistry (Moscow); Bulletin of Experimental Biology and Medicine — Up-regulation of TH/AADC, dopaminergic signaling, and mitochondrial enzymes.

  • International ImmunopharmacologyInterferon/IgA/NK changes (stress-linked immunomodulation).

  • Autonomic Neuroscience; Psychophysiology — Autonomic balance and vigilance metrics under load.

  • Drug Testing & Analysis; WADA Code — Anti-doping status, detection windows, historical cases.