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Head-to-head comparison of ISRIB and Pramiracetam — mechanism, dosing, side effects, legal status, and pricing.
ISRIB is a non-peptide small-molecule eIF2B activator (bis-chlorophenoxyacetamide-cyclohexane class) that antagonizes the integrated stress response (ISR) by stabilizing the eIF2B guanine-nucleotide exchange factor complex. It is not an approved drug and has no completed human clinical trials or validated human safety or efficacy data. Chemically distinct eIF2B-activator analogs (DNL343, ABBV-CLS-7262) have reached human trials, but DNL343 missed primary endpoints in a Phase 2/3 ALS trial (January 2025). ISRIB is sold by reagent suppliers for research use only.
Pramiracetam is a non-peptide synthetic racetam-class nootropic (2-oxopyrrolidone/pyrrolidinone acetamide derivative) with CAS 68497-62-1 and molecular formula C14H27N3O2. It was previously approved and marketed in Italy and some Eastern European countries under brand names Pramistar, Neupramir, and Remen for memory/attention deficits in aging-associated dementias; Italian authorization was revoked in 2020 at manufacturer request. It is not FDA-approved in the United States, where it is sold only as an unapproved gray-market research chemical. The related racetam phenylpiracetam is explicitly listed on the WADA Prohibited List as an S6 stimulant; pramiracetam itself is not explicitly named, leaving its status under WADA's 'similar structure/effect' catch-all unresolved.
ISRIB
Pramiracetam
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ISRIB
Pramiracetam
No pricing data yet.
Check Pramiracetam prices →COA corpus from Disclosed Labs — independently tested batches only.
ISRIB
1
COAs
99.8%
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1
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Pramiracetam
2
COAs
99.9%
Avg purity
2
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No completed or published human clinical trials of ISRIB itself exist; it has no validated human pharmacokinetic, safety, or efficacy data. In mice, systemic ISRIB enhanced spatial and fear-associated long-term memory in healthy animals, reversed hippocampus-dependent spatial-learning and working-memory deficits weeks after traumatic brain injury, and reset elevated ISR activity in aged (18–24 month) mice, reversing age-related spatial-memory decline with a brief 3-day dosing course. In prion-disease transgenic mice, ISRIB partially restored protein synthesis and prevented neurodegeneration without the pancreatic exocrine toxicity seen with PERK-inhibitor approaches. In vitro and in a patient-derived xenograft mouse model, ISRIB combined with imatinib attenuated RAS/RAF/MAPK and STAT5 signaling and eliminated therapy-resistant chronic myeloid leukemia cells.
Key references
Human data consist of a handful of small older trials (1985–1996): healthy-volunteer pharmacokinetic studies, a scopolamine-induced-amnesia challenge study, a placebo-controlled trial in young males with head-injury/anoxia-related memory deficits (400 mg TID improved delayed recall), and a small dose-finding trial in Alzheimer's disease that found no convincing benefit at doses up to 4,000 mg. A scopolamine-challenge study (600 mg BID × 10 days) showed partial mitigation of induced amnesia in healthy young and older male volunteers. No modern (post-2000) randomized controlled trials were located. Preclinical findings: in rats, 7.5 and 15 mg/kg/day × 7 weeks significantly improved reference (long-term) memory on a 16-arm radial maze but did not affect working memory; 300 mg/kg i.p. increased cortical nitric oxide synthase activity ~20% (synergistic ~40% increase with lithium pretreatment); moderate protection against hypobaric-hypoxia-induced deficits in immature rats.
ISRIB and Pramiracetam 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.
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