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Head-to-head comparison of CDP-Choline (Citicoline) and Phenylpiracetam hydrazide — mechanism, side effects, legal status, and pricing.
CDP-choline (citicoline) is a non-peptide cytidine nucleotide-choline conjugate that serves as an intermediate in phosphatidylcholine biosynthesis. It is approved as a prescription drug for stroke and cognitive disorders in Japan and parts of Europe but sold only as a dietary supplement ingredient in the United States, where it is not FDA-approved as a drug. Human evidence is mixed and indication-dependent: small trials report modest memory improvements in healthy/older adults, but the largest phase 3 RCT (COBRIT, n=1,213 traumatic brain injury patients) found no benefit over placebo.
Phenylpiracetam hydrazide is a non-peptide racetam-class small molecule — specifically a pyrrolidinone acetohydrazide in which the terminal carboxamide of phenylpiracetam (fonturacetam) is replaced by a carbohydrazide group. First synthesized in 1980 by a Russian medicinal-chemistry group screening 4-phenyl-2-pyrrolidinone derivatives for anticonvulsant activity, it has never been approved as a drug in any jurisdiction and has no human clinical trial data. The parent compound phenylpiracetam is explicitly listed on the WADA Prohibited List under S6.A (Non-Specified Stimulants); the hydrazide analog's own it is not on the WADA Prohibited List (only beta-2 agonists are prohibited, Category S3). It is sold by gray-market research-chemical vendors labeled 'not for human consumption.'
CDP-Choline (Citicoline)
Phenylpiracetam hydrazide
Category
Legal Status
Mechanism
Side Effects
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CDP-Choline (Citicoline)
No pricing data yet.
Check CDP-Choline (Citicoline) prices →Phenylpiracetam hydrazide
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Check Phenylpiracetam hydrazide prices →COA corpus from Disclosed Labs — independently tested batches only.
CDP-Choline (Citicoline)
No COA data yet.
Submit testing data →Phenylpiracetam hydrazide
2
COAs
99.4%
Avg purity
2
Labs
Human evidence is mixed and indication-dependent. Small-to-moderate placebo-controlled RCTs in healthy/older adults and age-associated memory impairment report modest verbal/episodic memory improvements at ~500–1,000 mg/day over weeks to months. However, the largest trial to date—COBRIT, a phase 3 double-blind placebo-controlled RCT in 1,213 traumatic brain injury patients—found no benefit over placebo on functional or cognitive outcomes (GOS-E favorable outcome 35.4% citicoline vs 35.6% placebo; global OR 0.98, 95% CI 0.83–1.15). Evidence for Alzheimer's disease and MCI is described in reviews as insufficient and inconsistent. In preclinical models, aged rats with hippocampal damage showed reduced long-term memory impairment with dietary CDP-choline supplementation, and mice subjected to ischemic stroke showed SIRT1-dependent reduction in cerebral infarct volume.
Key references
No human clinical trials have been conducted; no ClinicalTrials.gov record or DrugBank entry exists. The sole preclinical finding is from the 1980 Glozman et al. synthesis paper: an ED<sub>50</sub> of approximately 310 mg/kg for seizure protection in a rodent electroshock assay (species, strain, sex, and route not fully recoverable from accessed sources). No published human toxicology, LD<sub>50</sub>, pharmacokinetics, or adverse-event data were located for this compound.
CDP-Choline (Citicoline) and Phenylpiracetam hydrazide are both in the Cognitive category and may have overlapping mechanisms. Researchers should review both profiles carefully, understand the mechanisms of action, and monitor the relevant biomarkers when combining compounds in the same class. As always, consult a licensed healthcare provider before making any decisions about combining research compounds.
This platform provides informational tools only, not medical advice. This comparison is for educational purposes only. Consult a licensed provider.
Contraindications
Lab Testing