Quick Comparison

FasoracetamNAC
Half-Life1.5-2.5 hours5.6 hours
Typical DosageStandard: 20-100 mg sublingually or orally, 1-3 times daily. Many users find 20-40 mg effective. Clinical trials for ADHD used 100-400 mg twice daily.Standard: 600-1800 mg daily in 1-2 divided doses. Clinical (OCD/addiction): 1200-2400 mg daily. Take on an empty stomach for best absorption. Some practitioners combine with Vitamin C to enhance glutathione recycling.
AdministrationOral or sublingual. Sublingual may provide better absorption.Oral (capsules, powder). Take on an empty stomach. Unpleasant sulfur taste in powder form.
Research Papers5 papers10 papers
Categories

Mechanism of Action

Fasoracetam

Fasoracetam upregulates GABA-B receptor (GABA-B1/GABA-B2 heterodimer) expression and function, which is unique among racetams — this receptor upregulation is potentially beneficial for restoring GABAergic sensitivity after prolonged benzodiazepine or phenibut use. It enhances group II metabotropic glutamate receptor (mGluR2/mGluR3) signaling, which modulates presynaptic glutamate release and reduces excitotoxicity. Fasoracetam increases acetylcholine release in the cerebral cortex via modulation of choline acetyltransferase activity and vesicular acetylcholine transporter function. It may also modulate the glutamatergic system through mGluR5. The combination of GABAergic (GABA-B-mediated inhibition), glutamatergic (mGluR modulation), and cholinergic enhancement provides anxiolytic effects alongside cognitive enhancement. Clinical trials focus on ADHD patients with GRM (glutamate receptor) gene variants.

NAC

NAC is deacetylated to cysteine, the rate-limiting substrate for glutathione synthesis via gamma-glutamylcysteine synthetase and glutathione synthetase. Glutathione (GSH) is the primary intracellular antioxidant in neurons, neutralizing reactive oxygen species and maintaining redox balance. NAC also activates the cystine-glutamate antiporter (System Xc-, composed of SLC7A11 and SLC3A2 subunits), which exchanges extracellular cystine for intracellular glutamate in a 1:1 ratio. This non-vesicular mechanism modulates extrasynaptic glutamate levels, reducing NMDA receptor overactivation and excitotoxicity. The glutamate-modulating effect explains NAC's promise in OCD (reducing corticostriatal glutamate hyperactivity), addiction (normalizing nucleus accumbens glutamate after drug exposure), and neurodegenerative conditions involving glutamate dysregulation.

Risks & Safety

Fasoracetam

Common

Headache, fatigue, mild digestive discomfort.

Serious

Limited long-term human safety data.

Rare

Low mood, brain fog, loss of motivation at very high doses.

NAC

Common

Nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, foul-smelling breath.

Serious

May interact with blood thinners and nitroglycerin. Concern that antioxidants may reduce efficacy of chemotherapy (theoretical).

Rare

Bronchospasm (in people with asthma), anaphylactic-like reactions.

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