Quick Comparison

L-TheanineTianeptine
Half-Life2.5-4.5 hours2.5-3 hours (tianeptine), 7-8 hours (active metabolite MC5)
Typical DosageStandard: 100-200 mg daily. With caffeine: 100-200 mg L-Theanine per 50-100 mg caffeine (2:1 or 1:1 ratio). Can be taken up to 400 mg daily safely.Prescription dose: 12.5 mg three times daily (Stablon). Extended-release: 25 mg once daily (Tianeurax). Do not exceed prescribed doses — abuse potential at higher doses due to opioid activity.
AdministrationOral (capsules, powder, naturally in green tea). 100% bioavailable orally.Oral (tablets). Immediate-release (12.5 mg TID) or extended-release (25 mg QD).
Research Papers10 papers10 papers
Categories

Mechanism of Action

L-Theanine

L-Theanine (gamma-glutamylethylamide) crosses the blood-brain barrier via the large neutral amino acid transporter (LAT1/SLC7A5) and exerts anxiolytic effects through multiple pathways. It increases GABA synthesis by serving as a substrate for glutamate decarboxylase (GAD), elevating inhibitory tone without directly binding GABA-A receptors — avoiding sedation. It modulates serotonin by increasing tryptophan hydroxylase (TPH2) activity and raises dopamine levels in the prefrontal cortex via inhibition of dopamine reuptake. L-Theanine antagonizes glutamate binding at AMPA and kainate receptor subtypes (GluA1-4, GluK1-5), reducing excitatory neurotransmission and excitotoxicity risk. This glutamate antagonism, combined with increased GABA, drives the characteristic increase in alpha brain wave power (8-14 Hz) in the posterior parietal and occipital cortex — the EEG signature of relaxed alertness. When co-administered with caffeine, L-theanine attenuates caffeine-induced increases in blood pressure and anxiety by modulating sympathetic nervous system activation through alpha-2 adrenergic receptor pathways, while caffeine's dopaminergic and adenosine-blocking effects on focus and attention are preserved.

Tianeptine

Tianeptine is a full agonist at mu-opioid (MOR) and delta-opioid (DOR) receptors, mediating both its antidepressant/anxiolytic effects and abuse potential at high doses. Paradoxically, it enhances serotonin reuptake via SERT—opposite to SSRIs—yet still produces antidepressant effects, possibly through opioid-mediated mood regulation. Tianeptine modulates glutamatergic signaling by reversing stress-induced downregulation of AMPA receptor subunits (GluA1/GluA2) and restoring synaptic plasticity. In the hippocampus and amygdala, it prevents stress-induced dendritic atrophy, spine loss, and CA3 pyramidal cell damage—likely through opioid receptor activation and downstream HPA axis effects. It increases BDNF levels and promotes neurogenesis. The combination of opioid agonism, glutamate normalization, and neuroplasticity enhancement underlies its unique profile.

Risks & Safety

L-Theanine

Common

Very few side effects at standard doses. Mild drowsiness in some individuals.

Serious

None documented. Extremely safe with decades of human consumption data.

Rare

Headache, dizziness, gastrointestinal discomfort.

Tianeptine

Common

Nausea, constipation, abdominal pain, headache, dizziness, dry mouth.

Serious

Opioid-like effects at high doses (euphoria, dependence, respiratory depression). Withdrawal syndrome with abrupt cessation after chronic high-dose use. Abuse and overdose deaths reported.

Rare

Hepatotoxicity, skin reactions.

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