Informational only. Not medical advice.INFORMATIONAL PLATFORM ONLY — NOT MEDICAL ADVICE, DIAGNOSIS, OR TREATMENT
Head-to-head comparison of Lemairamin and Piracetam — mechanism, side effects, legal status, and pricing.
Lemairamin is a non-peptide small-molecule cinnamamide alkaloid (N-phenethyl cinnamide) natural product, not approved for human use in any jurisdiction. All available data are preclinical (rodent, zebrafish, C. elegans, in vitro, and computational). It is sold exclusively as an unregulated 'research chemical' explicitly labeled 'not for human consumption'; quality, purity, and identity are not independently verified by any regulatory body. No human clinical trials, pharmacokinetic studies, or safety data exist.
Piracetam is a non-peptide pyrrolidinone-derivative racetam, the prototypical member of the nootropic racetam class. It is approved in the EU/UK exclusively for adult cortical myoclonus as adjunctive therapy (marketed as Nootropil), but has NO FDA approval in any form in the United States. The FDA has rejected its New Dietary Ingredient notification and issued warning letters to US vendors marketing it as a supplement. Piracetam itself is not WADA-prohibited, though its derivative phenylpiracetam is a banned stimulant.
Lemairamin
Piracetam
Category
Legal Status
Mechanism
Side Effects
COA-verified vendors · trust score ≥70 required · single-vial price — bulk/bundle deals may be lower
Lemairamin
No pricing data yet.
Check Lemairamin prices →Piracetam
No pricing data yet.
Check Piracetam prices →COA corpus from Disclosed Labs — independently tested batches only.
Lemairamin
2
COAs
99.8%
Avg purity
2
Labs
Piracetam
1
COAs
99.8%
Avg purity
1
Labs
No human data exist. No completed or registered human clinical trials were located on ClinicalTrials.gov, and no PubMed-indexed human pharmacokinetic, safety, or efficacy studies exist. All available data are preclinical: In transgenic Alzheimer's mice, gx-50 disassembled Aβ oligomers, decreased cortical Aβ accumulation, inhibited Aβ-induced neuronal apoptosis and calcium toxicity, improved Morris water maze performance, and was reported to cross the blood-brain barrier (Tang et al. 2013). In mouse and rat pain models (formalin tonic, neuropathic, bone-cancer pain), subcutaneous and intrathecal lemairamin dose-dependently reduced pain hypersensitivity/mechanical allodynia without evident tolerance, linked to spinal α7 nAChR activation and downstream IL-10/β-endorphin release (Wang et al. 2020). Murine microglial cell cultures showed gx-50 activation of α7 nAChR engaged JAK2/STAT3 and PI3K/AKT signaling to suppress pro-inflammatory cytokine secretion (Shi et al. 2016). Zebrafish DSS-induced colitis models showed lemairamin attenuated intestinal inflammation via Akt signaling (2024). C. elegans studies reported WGX-50 promoted markers of healthy ageing (daf-16/skn-1 longevity genes, 2025).
Key references
Piracetam is an approved prescription drug in the EU/UK for adult cortical myoclonus (adjunctive therapy) and has been studied off-label in multiple placebo-controlled human trials for age-related cognitive decline, post-stroke aphasia, post-ECT cognitive deficit, and post-CABG cognitive decline, with mixed results. A Cochrane systematic review (2001) concluded that available evidence does not support piracetam's use for dementia or cognitive impairment beyond a global-impression measure. In rodent models, piracetam reduced focal ischemia infarct volume by ~35.8%, improved neurological/locomotor outcomes and survival, attenuated oxidative stress and excitatory amino acid release in oxygen-glucose deprivation, and showed anticonvulsant and neuroprotective effects in PTZ-induced epilepsy.
Lemairamin and Piracetam 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
Key references