Description
NOTE: This item can ship to all EU countries.
Brand name: Modalert or Modvigil - depending on availability Active substance: Modafinil Packaging: alu sheet 50 x 200mg tablets Shipped from: EU
Modafinil ('Provigil', 'Alertec', 'Modatek', 'Modalert', etc) is a
memory-improving and mood-brightening psychostimulant. It enhances
wakefulness and vigilance, but its pharmacological profile is notably
different from the amphetamines, methylphenidate (Ritalin) or cocaine.
Modafinil is less likely to cause jitteriness, anxiety, or excess
locomotor activity - or lead to a hypersomnolent 'rebound effect' -
than traditional stimulants. Subjectively, it feels smoother and
cleaner than the amphetamines too. The normal elimination half-life of
modafinil in humans is between 12 - 15 hours. So it's worth fine-tuning
one's dosage schedule accordingly. Current research suggests modafinil,
like its older and better-tested analogue adrafinil, is a safe,
effective and well-tolerated agent. It is long-acting and doesn't tend
to cause peripheral sympathetic stimulation.
Experimentally, modafinil is also used in the treatment of
Alzheimer's disease, depression, attention-deficit disorder, myotonic
dystrophy, multiple sclerosis-induced fatigue, post-anaesthesia
grogginess, cognitive impairment in schizophrenia, spasticity
associated with cerebral palsy, age-related memory decline, idiopathic
hypersomnia, jet-lag, and everyday cat-napping. Depressives who feel
sleepy and fatigued on SSRIs can augment their regimen with modafinil.
In September 2003, an advisory panel to the FDA endorsed its use for
treating shift work sleep disorder and obstructive sleep apnea.
Current research suggests modafinil, like its older and
better-tested analogue adrafinil, is a safe, effective and
well-tolerated agent. It is long-acting and doesn't tend to cause
peripheral sympathetic stimulation. Yet its CNS action isn't fully
understood. Modafinil induces wakefulness in part by its action in the
anterior hypothalamus. Its dopamine-releasing action in the nucleus
accumbens is weak and dose-dependent; the likelihood of a euphoric
response ('abuse potential'), dose-escalation and tolerance is thus
apparently small. Modafinil has central alpha 1-adrenergic agonist
effects i.e. it directly stimulates the receptors. Modafinil inhibits
the reuptake of noradrenaline by the noradrenergic terminals on
sleep-promoting neurons of ventrolateral preoptic nucleus (VLPO). More
significant, perhaps, is its ability to increase excitatory
glutamatergic transmission. This reduces local GABAergic transmission,
thereby diminishing GABA(A) receptor signalling on the mesolimbic
dopamine terminals.
Modafinil is proving clinically useful in the treatment of
narcolepsy, a neurological disorder marked by uncontrollable attacks of
daytime sleepiness. Narcolepsy is caused by dysfunction of a family of
wakefulness-promoting and sleep-suppressing peptides, the orexins.
Orexin neurons are activated by modafinil. Orexinergic neurons are
found exclusively in the lateral hypothalamic area. Their activation is
associated with enhanced pleasure-seeking and motivation as well as
arousal. Orexinergic fibers project to the entire central nervous
system. Genetically modified orexin-knockout animals offer a model of
human narcolepsy. Narcoleptics suffer profound disturbances in normal
sleeping patterns and variable degrees of depression. These symptoms
can be reversed with modafinil. Selective orexin receptor agonists of
the future may prove useful both to narcoleptics and the population at
large.
Before taking any prescription medicine, it is important that you consult your doctor!
|