nicotine

Nicotine

David Tomen
Author:
David Tomen
Jill Corleone, RD
Fact Checked:
Jill Corleone, RD
13 minute read
While nicotine suppresses appetite, it has also been shown to improve concentration, focus, mental clarity, motivation, memory, and reduce mood swings and anxiety

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Key Takeaways

  1. Nicotine has been used for thousands of years for its nootropic properties such as improving concentration, memory, motivation, and mood.
  2. As a nootropic, nicotine is typically dosed at 1 – 2 mg
  3. Despite the cognitive benefits of nicotine, it is not recommended to smoke tobacco due to the harmful effects.
  4. Nicotine can be addictive and cause side effects like increased heart rate, high blood pressure, gastrointestinal problems, and it may promote tumor growth, so its use requires caution.

 

Nicotine (3-(1-Methyl-2-pyrrolidinyl) pyridine) is an alkaloid found in tobacco leaves. And has been used by humans for its psychoactive (nootropic) properties for thousands of years.

But it is only in the last several decades that nicotine’s mechanism of action in the brain has been revealed.

Nicotine works primarily by upregulating nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChR) in the brain. Increasing neural signaling of neurotransmitters and boosting alertness, cognition and memory.

Studies have shown however that this upregulation of nAChR is dose dependent. And too much nicotine desensitizes these receptors.[i] So low doses of nicotine are key in using nicotine as a nootropic for cognitive benefit.

Since we’re investigating nicotine as a nootropic here, it’s important to point out that I am not encouraging smoking. Smoking tobacco has been shown to increase cognition.

But the harmful effects of tobacco have been proven extensively.[ii] Including this study that showed life-time smokers have less gray matter in the prefrontal cortex compared to non-smokers. Affecting the brain’s reward, impulse control and decision-making circuits.[iii]

Nicotine as a nootropic helps:

  • Memory. Nicotine improves short and long-term memory. Nicotine affects nicotinic receptors which increases the use of neurotransmitters that helps with memory formation. And induces long-term potentiation which helps encode long-term memories.
  • Neurotransmitters. Nicotine binds to nicotinic acetylcholine receptors in the brain. Boosting the release of acetylcholine (ACh), dopamine, serotonin, and glutamate. Affecting alertness[iv], attention, cognition, memory and mood.
  • Brain Optimization. Nicotine modulates the connectivity and structure of brain networks. And improves whole-brain communication efficiency. Boosting overall cognitive and brain function.[v]

Overview

Nicotine (3-(1-Methyl-2-pyrrolidinyl) pyridine) is an alkaloid found most famously in tobacco leaves. But nicotine is also present in very small amounts in plants from the Solanaceae or nightshade family including potatoes, tomatoes and eggplant.[vi]

nicotine as a nootropic improves whole-brain communication efficiency
Nicotine

 

Nicotine acts on acetylcholine (ACh) receptors in your brain. Stimulating and regulating the release of a host of neurotransmitters including serotonin, dopamine and norepinephrine.

New drugs derived from nicotine and the research on nicotinic receptors are in clinical trials for Alzheimer’s, ADHD, anger management, anxiety, depression, schizophrenia, Tourette Syndrome and wound healing.[vii]

As a nootropic, we’re talking about using a nicotine lozenge or gum for cognitive function enhancement. I am NOT talking about smoking tobacco.

Smoking is the cause of 5 – 6 million deaths per year. Affecting 18 different organs in your body. But it’s not the nicotine in tobacco that kills.

The biggest issue with using nicotine as a nootropic is that it can be addictive. But it’s not the nicotine that causes cancer. Nicotine however could be a “tumor promoter”.

Nicotine binds specifically to the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR) in your brain. And it deregulates essential processes like regulation of cell proliferation, apoptosis (programmed cell death), migration, invasion, angiogenesis, inflammation and cell-mediated immunity of stem cells, adult tissues and cancer cells.[viii]

As a nootropic, taking nicotine in smalls doses (i.e. 1-2 mg) and used occasionally helps when you need that cognitive boost. If you have cancer or a tendency to tumor growth you should avoid using nicotine.

nicotine improves mental clarity

How does Nicotine work in the Brain?

Nicotine boosts brain health and cognitive function in several ways. But two in particular stand out.

  1. Nicotine boosts memory. Nicotine binds to presynaptic nicotinic acetylcholine receptors in the brain. And boosts the release of acetylcholine (ACh), dopamine, serotonin, and glutamate.[ix] Neurotransmitters known to be involved in cognitive processes.

Problems with cholinergic signaling has been implicated in neurologic disorders including schizophrenia, ADHD and addiction. And much of the study of nicotine’s effects on cognition has been done looking for treatments for these disorders.[x]

The National Institute of Drug Abuse conducted a meta-analysis of 41 double-blind, placebo-controlled studies between 1994 and 2008. The analysis found significant positive effects of nicotine on fine motor performance, alertness, attention and accuracy, response time, short-term and working memory.[xi]

  1. Nicotine improves attention. Attention deficits are often associated with those dealing with ADHD. The inability to focus can cause all kinds of problems both in relationships, and on the job.

Nicotine has been shown to improve attentiveness in smokers. And helps alleviate attention deficits in Alzheimer’s Disease, schizophrenics and adults with ADHD.

A double-blind study conducted at Duke University Medical Center used nicotine patches to see if it would improve attentiveness in non-smoking adults without attention deficits. Subjects received 7 mg of nicotine per day using a transdermal patch for a 4 ½ hour morning session.

Nicotine significantly decreased the number of omission errors during testing. And in this study, decreased the variance in “hit reaction time” which is used a measure of attentiveness.

The study showed that nicotine reduced attention deficit, and even improved attentiveness in normal adult non-smokers.[xii]

How things go badNicotine as a nootropic improves memory

As we get older, our brain chemistry and energy metabolism changes.[xiii]

↓ Acetylcholine signaling in the brain declines

↓ Dopamine, norepinephrine, epinephrine and serotonin levels decline

↓ Alertness, attention and memory declines

↑ Anxiety, depression and stress increases

All of these age-related changes are contributing factors to the neurodegenerative diseases of aging, including Alzheimer’s and dementia.

Nicotine benefits

Nicotine boosts levels of dopamine, epinephrine (adrenaline), norepinephrine and serotonin. And human cell lines in test tube studies as well as animal studies show nicotine stimulates the growth of new blood vessels. Even increasing the number of red blood cells.Nicotine as a nootropic improves alertness

Nicotine rapidly crosses the blood-brain barrier. Within 20 seconds of putting a nicotine lozenge under your tongue. It has the fastest action of any nootropic I have reviewed here on Nootropics Expert.

Alpha brain waves increase with nicotine which provides a relaxed state associated with super-learning, flow states and joy.[xiv]

Nicotine stimulates electrical and neurotransmitter activity throughout your brain. Helping alertness, mood, motivation, selective attention, sustained attention, and decreases distraction.[xv]

Nicotine helps pre-attentional processing which is your ability to detect information. It brings you down when you’re up. And it brings you up when you’re down. And it helps you cope with stress and anxiety.

And nicotine improves short-, long-, and working memory processes.[xvi]

How does Nicotine feel?

Neurohackers report nicotine improves mental clarity and motivation. Mood swings are minimized and less anxiety.

Concentration and focus significantly get a boost with nicotine as a nootropic.

All forms of memory get a boost with nicotine. Short and long-term memory. And working memory. Nicotine induces long-term potentiation in the hippocampus which is the basis for the neuroplasticity that helps encode long-term memory.[xvii]

The key with nicotine is to use low doses. And only use it occasionally. Too much nicotine desensitizes the alpha-7 nicotinic acetylcholine receptor. So tolerance is an issue. But your receptors recover fairly quickly if you give them a break for a day.

nicotine as a nootropic boosts cognition

Nicotine Clinical Research

Much of the research conducted with nicotine was done with cigarette smokers. The studies were to determine the effects of abstinence (quitting smoking) on cognition. Or funded by tobacco companies out to prove smoking was good for you (i.e. improved cognition). Cigarette smoke is harmful.

So keep an open mind when reviewing these studies. My intent is certainly not to encourage smoking. But to show the effects of nicotine regardless of the delivery system to the human brain.

Nicotine boosts IQ

Researchers in New Zealand conducted a trial with 10 women and 6 men ranging in age from 18 – 32 years. All participants were smokers and were instructed not to smoke during the 2-hour period prior to the experiment.

Each subject completed the even and odd numbers of the Raven’s Advanced Progressive Matrices (APM) test in two sessions. APM is a test to measure intelligence (IQ).

In each of 2 experimental sessions, subjects were given 20 minutes to complete the assigned half of the APM. Before beginning the test, subjects took 6 puffs of a medium (0.8 mg) cigarette every 20 seconds. After 10 minutes, subjects were prompted to take 2 additional puffs.

Results of the experiment showed that APM scores were significantly higher in the smoking session compared to the non-smoking session. Suggesting that nicotine acts to enhance intelligence.[xviii]

Another study at the University of Colorado may explain part of this boost in IQ. Nicotine was found to increase the efficiency of neural communication between areas of the brain involved in cognition. And even the rest of the brain.[xix]

Nicotine improves typing speed

Nicotine increases typing speedResearchers conducted 5 experiments to study the effects of using 2 mg of nicotine on keyboard typing speed. In study after study nicotine produced a reliably consistent increase in typing speed.[xx]

Nicotine will also improve and increase the speed of your handwriting. Scientists in Germany noted that nicotine has consistently been shown to improve psychomotor performance. So they recruited 38 smokers and 38 non-smokers to participate in a study.

Both groups received gum containing 0, 2 or 4 mg of nicotine. And their handwriting performance was assessed after they chewed the nicotine gum. Subjects were asked to perform a simple writing task. Movement time, velocity and acceleration of handwriting movements were measured.

Nicotine reduced movement times, increased writing velocity and more fluid handwriting movements were observed. The results suggested that nicotine can enhance psychomotor performance to a significant degree in a real-lie motor task.[xxi]

Nicotine boosts memory

Nicotine has been shown to improve short-term and working memory in several studies. In this study conducted in the UK, researchers recruited 60 smokers and 60 non-smokers in a double-blind procedure.

Half of the subjects chewed nicotine gum and the other half chewed a placebo prior to performing a memory task. Results showed that nicotine significantly improves short-term memory.[xxii]

Nicotine for the treatment of ADHD

Several studies have shown the benefits of nicotine in treating the symptoms of ADHD. Focusing and memory break down in those of us with ADHD and ADD. And treatment with Ritalin, Adderall or other stimulants often corrects this inattentiveness and memory impairment. But it does nothing for the accompanying depression and anxiety.

And this is the reason many Adult ADHD sufferers smoke. This study showed that using a nicotine patch not only helped decrease anxiety and depression symptoms of ADHD. It also helped smokers stop using tobacco products while taking care of their ADHD symptoms.[xxiii]

In this study, nicotine was compared to the effects Ritalin and or a placebo had in treating ADHD. Nicotine improved performance and reduced errors. It decreased depression, and decreased overall severity of ADHD symptoms.[xxiv]

Another double-blind, placebo-controlled trial worked with 6 smokers and 11 nonsmokers with Adult ADHD. Nicotine decreased ADHD symptoms, increased vigor, and improved reaction time.[xxv]

Nicotine Recommended Dosage

Nicotine as a nootropic is dosed at 1 – 2 mg on an as needed basis.

Nicotine gum typically comes in 2 – 4 mg. You can cut a 4 mg piece of gum in half for a 2 mg dose. Gum releases the nicotine dose over the course of 20 – 30 minutes.Nicotine recommended dosage

The problem with nicotine gum is aspartame along with other unhealthy sweeteners.

Nicotine patches come in varying strengths and usually contain more nicotine than gum or lozenges. Neurohackers (contrary to package warnings) cut the patch to size depending on the dose they want to use.

My preferred method is nicotine lozenges. Mini-lozenges are best because they’re not full of toxic chemicals like larger lozenges. The 2 mg mini-lozenge cut in half provides cognitive benefits within 10 – 20 minutes.

Nicotine Addiction & Other Side Effects

Nicotine is addictive primarily because it boosts levels of dopamine in your brain.[xxvi] Not nearly as addictive as smoking tobacco or chewing tobacco but addictive nonetheless.

Nicotine can cause increased heart rate, high blood pressure, dizziness, cough, sneezing, sinus problems, upset stomach, constipation, and headaches.

Nicotine does not “cause” cancer. But may be a tumor promoter. So if you had or currently have cancer you should avoid nicotine.

If you are dealing with a gut infection of H pylori bacteria, you should not use nicotine until you get this problem under control.

Type of Nicotine to buy

Nicotine used as a nootropic comes in gum, inhalers, lozenges, and transdermal nicotine patches.

See “Nicotine Recommended Dosage” for specific dosing instructions.

Nicotine Gum & Lozenges

Mini-lozenges are the safest and best form for nootropic use. I have tried and recommend the nicotine lozenges or gum by Lucy Nicotine. Lucy uses pharmaceutical grade nicotine and natural ingredients only in their lozenges and gum. Check them out here: Lucy.co Nicotine.

Nicotine Spray

Nicotine spray is a newer option you may want to try. You get a 1 mg dose for each spray under your tongue (sublingually). Great for a quick cognitive boost and burst of energy. There’s about 100 sprays in each container.

Nicotine Vaping

Vaping is another option. But it can come with a host of potential issues if you’re not familiar with vaping. The safest option is rebuildable coils using stainless steel wire and organic cotton with vegetable glycerin as your nicotine base. And keeping the temperature low and power less than 4 volts.

Of course there is also cigarette smoking and chewing tobacco for your nicotine dose which I DO NOT recommend.

Nootropics Expert Recommendation

Nicotine 1 – 2 mg per dose

Nootropics Expert Tested and ApprovedI recommend using Nicotine as a nootropic supplement.

Your body does not make nicotine on its own. So if you are going to supplement with nicotine, you must take it as a supplement.

Nicotine is helpful for those dealing with short-, long-term and working memory problems, low energy, depression or anxiety.

Nicotine is especially helpful for dealing with the symptoms of Adult ADHD. Nicotine can help relieve many of the symptoms of ADHD. And is a good compliment to your existing ADHD meds.

While nicotine is a powerful cognitive enhancer, it is also addictive and can lead to tolerance and withdrawal symptoms in some people. So caution is advised. And if you’re prone to addiction please stay away from nicotine as it can lead to nicotine addiction.

As neurohackers, we have great acetylcholine agonists available to us if you don’t want to experiment with nicotine. Most of the racetams will boost acetylcholine use in the brain.

We suggest starting with a dose of ½ – 1 mg of nicotine in mini-lozenge or spray form. Nicotine will compliment nearly everything in your current nootropic stack.

There is no benefit to dosing more than 2 mg of nicotine for cognitive benefit. And too avoid addiction and tolerance we suggest only using nicotine occasionally.

Lucy.co for example sells nicotine 4mg lozenges. Use a pill splitter and cut them in half for a 2 mg nootropic dose.

As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. This post may also contain other affiliate links and I will be compensated if you make a purchase after clicking on my links.

[i] Gentry C.L., Lukas R.J. “Regulation of nicotinic acetylcholine receptor numbers and function by chronic nicotine exposure.” Current Drug Targets: CNS and Neurological Disorders. 2002 Aug;1(4):359-85. (source)

[ii] Wu W.K.K., Cho C.H. “The Pharmacological Actions of Nicotine on the Gastrointestinal Tract” Journal of Pharmacological Sciences 94, 348 – 358 (2004) (source)

[iii] Kühn S., Schubert F., Gallinat J. “Reduced thickness of medial orbitofrontal cortex in smokers.” Biological Psychiatry. 2010 Dec 1;68(11):1061-5. (source)

[iv] Parrott A.C., Winder G. “Nicotine chewing gum (2 mg, 4 mg) and cigarette smoking: comparative effects upon vigilance and heart rate.” Psychopharmacology (Berlin). 1989;97(2):257-61. (source)

[v] Wylie K.P., Rojas D.C., Tanabe J., Martin L.F., Tregellas J.R. “Nicotine increases brain functional network efficiency.” Neuroimage. 2012 Oct 15;63(1):73-80 (source)

[vi] “The Nicotine Content of Common Vegetables” The New England Journal of Medicine 1993; 329:437August 5, 1993 (source)

[vii] Graham M. “Researchers light up for Nicotine, the wonder drug” Wired Magazine June 20, 2007 wired.com (source)

[viii] Cardinale A., Nastrucci C., Cesario A., Russo P. “Nicotine: specific role in angiogenesis, proliferation and apoptosis.” Critical Reviews in Toxicology. 2012 Jan;42(1):68-89 (source)

[ix] Di Matteo V., Pierucci M., Di Giovanni G., Benigno A., Esposito E. “The neurobiological bases for the pharmacotherapy of nicotine addiction.” Current Pharmaceutical Design. 2007;13(12):1269-84. (source)

[x] Mansvelder H.D., van Aerde K.I., Couey J.J., Brussaard A.B. “Nicotinic modulation of neuronal networks: from receptors to cognition.” Psychopharmacology (Berlin). 2006 Mar;184(3-4):292-305. (source)

[xi] Heishman S.J., Kleykamp B.A., Singleton E.G. “Meta-analysis of the acute effects of nicotine and smoking on human performance.” Psychopharmacology (Berlin). 2010 Jul;210(4):453-69. (source)

 

[xii] Levin E.D., Conners C.K., Silva D., Hinton S.C., Meck W.H., March J., Rose J.E. “Transdermal nicotine effects on attention.” Psychopharmacology (Berlin). 1998 Nov;140(2):135-41. (source)

[xiii] Costell M., O’Connor J.E., Grisolía S. “Age-dependent decrease of carnitine content in muscle of mice and humans.” Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications 1989 Jun 30;161(3):1135-43. (source)

[xiv] Domino E.F., Ni L., Thompson M., Zhang H., Shikata H., Fukai H., Sakaki T., Ohya I. “Tobacco smoking produces widespread dominant brain wave alpha frequency increases.” International Journal of Psychophysiology. 2009 Dec;74(3):192-8 (source)

[xv] Lawrence N.S., Ross T.J., Stein E.A. “Cognitive mechanisms of nicotine on visual attention.” Neuron. 2002 Oct 24;36(3):539-48. (source)

[xvi] Heishman S.J., Kleykamp B.A., Singleton E.G. “Meta-analysis of the acute effects of nicotine and smoking on human performance” Psychopharmacology (Berlin). 2010 Jul; 210(4): 453–469. (source)

[xvii] Fujii S., Ji Z., Morita N., Sumikawa K. “Acute and chronic nicotine exposure differentially facilitate the induction of LTP.” Brain Research. 1999 Oct 30;846(1):137-43. (source)

[xviii] Stough C., Mangan G., Bates T., Pellett O. “Smoking and Raven IQ.” Psychopharmacology (Berl). 1994 Nov;116(3):382-4. (source)

[xix] Wylie K.P., Rojas D.C., Tanabe J., Martin L.F., Tregellas J.R. “Nicotine increases brain functional network efficiency” NeuroImage 63 (2012) 73–80 (source)

[xx] West R.J., Jarvis M.J. “Effects of nicotine on finger tapping rate in non-smokers.” Pharmacology, Biochemistry and Behavior. 1986 Oct;25(4):727-31. (source)

[xxi] Tucha O., Lange K.W. “Effects of nicotine chewing gum on a real-life motor task: a kinematic analysis of handwriting movements in smokers and non-smokers.” Psychopharmacology (Berlin). 2004 Apr;173(1-2):49-56 (source)

[xxii] Phillips S., Fox P. “An investigation into the effects of nicotine gum on short-term memory.” Psychopharmacology (Berlin). 1998 Dec;140(4):429-33. (source)

[xxiii] Cocores J.A. “Transdermal Nicotine in Adult ADHD With Depression and Anxiety” The Primary Care Companion 2008; 10(3): 253–254. (source)

[xxiv] Levin E.D., Conners C.K., Silva D., Canu W., March J. “Effects of chronic nicotine and methylphenidate in adults with attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder.” Experimental and Clinical Psychopharmacology. 2001 Feb;9(1):83-90. (source)

[xxv] Levin E.D., Conners C.K., Sparrow E., Hinton S.C., Erhardt D., Meck W.H., Rose J.E., March J. “Nicotine effects on adults with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder.” Psychopharmacology (Berlin). 1996 Jan;123(1):55-63. (source)

[xxvi] Jasinska A.J., Zorick T., Brody A.L., Stein E.A. “Dual role of nicotine in addiction and cognition: a review of neuroimaging studies in humans.” Neuropharmacology. 2014 Sep;84:111-22. (source)

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Join The Discussion - 113 comments

Si Fisher
February 16, 2020

Hi, I have a nicotine USP in a little bottle with a dropper mixed with propylene glycol, and have been taking it orally. Dosage on the bottle says 1.125 – 2.5 mg per drop. First, is this a reasonable method to be consuming nicotine as a nootropic? Second, would 2-3 drops very infrequently be too much using this method?

    David Tomen
    February 18, 2020

    Si, nicotine is an addictive substance. So it could be argued there is no safe way to consume nicotine. And propylene glycol is certainly not safe for human consumption. I realize this is likely vape juice and not intended to be used sublingually. But either way your body does not like it when you consume the same stuff that’s used as antifreeze in cars.

    That said, 2 drops of this would be 5 mg which is the max. someone should do at a time. But I’d highly suggest restricting this to 2 or 3 doses per day. Even at that dose you’ll experience cravings if you stop suddenly.

Rob
October 20, 2019

Hey David,

I been experimenting with nicotine lozenges and every time I take them, I get this head rush – I feel dizzy and sleepy. Making it very difficult to concentrate and study – which is the whole point of taking it in the first place.

Any thoughts or reasons why? or what I can do?

Thanks!

    David Tomen
    October 21, 2019

    Rob, sounds like the dose is too high. Try cutting the lozenge down to the equivalent of .5 mg and see how that works.

Henry
September 26, 2019

Hi David, may you suggest where I may find a nicotine sublingual spray. I live in the USA. Thank you.

    David Tomen
    September 27, 2019

    Henry, Nicorette makes a spray but I don’t think it’s available in the USA. You may be able to order from Walmart in Canada.

Denis
September 3, 2019

Hi David!

I’m interested in nicotine as an irregular brain booster, but I found some troubling information. You see, so far I thought that nicotine is not a carcinogen, but just a tumor promoter, but then I found this study done at Virginia Tech, by Jasmin Bavarva who is a geneticist. He claims that nicotine on its own is a carcinogen responsible for cell’s DNA mutation which is a know precursor to cancer.

Now, my idea was to take nicotine via Nicorette spray on weekends only. (2-3mg per day, Saturday and Sunday only) That’s what I wanted to do, but now I’m not so sure. Could you please take a look at this study, and tell me what you think, this is serious.

https://vtnews.vt.edu/articles/2014/06/061214-vbi-nicotine.html

    David Tomen
    September 4, 2019

    Denis, these are studies done in the lab on individual cells. The two referenced in that post were both done at Virginia Tech in 2013 and 2014. But I’ve seen nothing since by anyone else or studies done in humans. If it makes you nervous then please don’t use nicotine.

      Denis
      October 4, 2019

      David,

      Nicotine does make me nervous because I stopped smoking a little more than a year ago, and I was a heavy smoker. Nicotine on its own is possibly not safe, but it gave me better mental clarity, focus, alertness, memory and speed of processing, as if someone turned on the lights in my head, that’s how it felt. I’d like to find safer alternative, but here in Croatia (and EU in general) most of the really effective nootropics are unregulated/illegal/prescription only, and it is so frustrating and it makes me angry.

      Why are safer substances like Racetams or Phenibut banned but tobacco and alcohol are legal? In Britain, according to their own law about “psychoactive substances” they should outlaw alcohol and tobacco, but those remain legal while things that would really help people and are safer, are treated as if *they* were killing people and not these legal drugs.

      I’m sorry, it just makes me so angry, it feels like we live in a Third Reich when it comes to freedom to use Nootropics.

        David Tomen
        October 5, 2019

        Denis, it comes down to money and politics in every country. The tobacco and pharmaceutical companies support the politicians who write the laws. It’s just the way life is unless you decide to get into politics and change things.

Daniel
August 7, 2019

With Bodybuilding, and getting into a very low body fat percentage could nicotine help with appetite and relaxation?
also would it have any detriment to muscle mass

    David Tomen
    August 7, 2019

    Daniel, nicotine on its own affects neurotransmitters that should help calm you. Not sure about appetite however. And as long as there are no “other ingredients” I don’t see how it could affect muscle mass.

      Daniel
      August 7, 2019

      okay great, would you reccomend after training having stimulants such as caffeine and tyrosine before training and taking, taurine, and nicotine after ?

        David Tomen
        August 8, 2019

        Daniel, nicotine may be a good option before training as well. But I don’t claim to be a fitness expert by any stretch.

Cris
May 18, 2019

Thats great information thank you.

I am chewing gum for first time now…

I wonder about stacking this with thc or psyllocybin, both combining them and sequencing them during the week

Like in a microdose regime twice a week for shroom or thc, could you safely add nicotine for a third day cognitive boost?

Like in a weekly schedule, alternating nootropics during the week, also maybe considering caffeine and other stuff like modafinil and creatine, at least those are the ones at my disposal

Thanks, Im discovering your page, seems really nice

    David Tomen
    May 20, 2019

    Cris, I haven’t done any indepth research on THC or psylocybin but see no safety issue here.

Jeffrey
March 23, 2019

David, one thing not mentioned is how often a say 2 mg dose would be ideal for nootropic benefit for a typical 180 lb man.

    David Tomen
    March 24, 2019

    Jeffrey, nicotine dosage is ‘as needed’ because it can be addictive. Use it when you’re in a situation where fluid thinking is paramount.

      Aaron
      August 27, 2020

      What would you recommend as the upper limit for a single day? I’ve been doing 2mg, 3-6x per day as needed to help with my business changes as a result of Covid. Been a big help, but not sure if this is dangerous or not? I try to take at least 1 day off per week.

        David Tomen
        August 29, 2020

        Aaron, the biggest “danger” is getting addicted to nicotine. If that is not a concern for you then you are within a safe limit.

Lasse
March 12, 2019

Hi David,

I was wondering if you have heard about the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor agonist Cytisine and whether you have any thoughts about its use as a nootropic?

Best regards
Lasse

    David Tomen
    March 13, 2019

    Lasse, cytisine is a partial agonist of nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs) and is used for smoking cessation in Eastern Europe as far as I know. But is not known in the USA. It’s possible that it would provide a nootropic effect similar to nicotine.

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