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- <text id=92TT1246>
- <title>
- June 08, 1992: Ultra Think Fast
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- June 08, 1992 The Balkans
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- HEALTH, Page 80
- Ultra Think Fast
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Smart drugs and think drinks promise to brighten your
- personality, boost your brain and jump-start your sex drive, but
- truly smart consumers will be wary
- </p>
- <p>By ANDREW PURVIS
- </p>
- <p> As a salesman of high-tech communications equipment, Bill
- Willoughby needs to be mentally sharp at all times.
- Unfortunately, his 15-hour shuttles to Europe or Asia often
- leave him feeling more like he left his brain in San Francisco.
- "In this business," he says, "no matter how tired you are, if
- you start talking and sound dumb, it's no deal."
- </p>
- <p> A few months ago, he got hold of some mysterious pills
- called L-phenylalanine and melatonin, sold in health-food
- stores, that he claims have changed his life. "It's amazing.
- It's like tuning up your car, only it's your mind. You take the
- drugs, and you're firing on all eight cylinders again. Sometimes
- you're firing on nine."
- </p>
- <p> Welcome to the wide-eyed world of "smart drugs." Over the
- past two years, a growing number of IQ-hungry Americans -- from
- high school students to octogenarians -- have taken to chemical
- means of "cognitive enhancement," downing a variety of food
- supplements and prescription drugs to prepare for tests, prime
- themselves for business meetings or just burn a little brighter
- at parties.
- </p>
- <p> Several dozen "smart bars" have opened around the country,
- replacing beer and margaritas with Memory Fuel, Fast Blast and
- Mind Mix -- amino-acid cocktails that, as one user sees it,
- "help restore the power edge that people lose as they get
- older." Smart stuff is also the drug of choice at "raves" --
- '60s-style happenings now popular on the West Coast. But despite
- the mounting enthusiasm, many scientists say the only thing
- smart about these substances is the way they've been marketed.
- "Smart drugs," asserts Dr. James McGaugh, director of the center
- for the neurobiology of learning and memory at the University
- of California at Irvine, "are a Hula-Hoop for the mind."
- </p>
- <p> The smart-pill movement blossomed in 1990 with the
- publication of a little book called Smart Drugs and Nutrients:
- How to Improve Your Memory and Increase Your Intelligence Using
- the Latest Discoveries in Neuroscience, by gerontologist Ward
- Dean and science writer John Morgenthaler. It lists three dozen
- steroids for the brain, or, to the cognoscenti, "nootropics"
- (from the greek noos, for mind). The authors claim that these
- substances resuscitate memory, jump-start the intellect, fuel
- sex drive and even reverse the mental aging process. Some, like
- the drugs Hydergine and piracetam, are prescription medications
- that have been tested as potential treatments for degenerative
- illnesses like Alzheimer's. Smart drinks are generally mixed
- from nonprescription food supplements like amino acids, the
- building blocks of proteins.
- </p>
- <p> Steven Fowkes, editor of the recently launched newsletter
- Smart Drugs News, describes popping a couple of Hydergines
- before drawing up plans for a house renovation: "I walked in and
- was able to visualize all four levels of the structure at once
- -- where all the plumbing was, the electrical outlets --
- without once referring to the blueprints." Another user recalls
- instantly becoming "witty and logical" after taking the amino
- acid pyroglutamate, while a third says that on Hydergine he
- suddenly could remember ordinary events that had occurred more
- than 20 years before.
- </p>
- <p> Salesmen of smartness have embraced an impressive
- vocabulary to explain how the drugs work: one amino acid, said
- a pumped-up advocate, "inhibits an enzyme that breaks down the
- endorphins and enkephalins localized in the brain." Another
- "causes an increase in a particular neurotransmitter involved
- in mental alertness. Your arousal index is much higher."
- </p>
- <p> Despite such techno talk, none of these drugs has been
- proved effective in properly designed, double-blind trials. "I
- think they are silly," says the University of California's
- McGaugh, who dismisses the elaborate explanations of how the
- drugs work as "scientific mumbo jumbo." If such substances were
- indeed effective -- and safe -- he points out, drug companies,
- which stand to gain hundreds of millions of dollars from their
- sale, would have marketed them years ago.
- </p>
- <p> Doctors warn about the risks of taking prescription drugs
- or even food supplements without medical supervision. One smart
- bar in San Francisco started serving drinks laced with a potion
- called DMAE, for dimethylaminoethanol, that has induced severe
- cramps, diarrhea and chills in some users. Prescription
- medicines like vasopressin, normally used to prevent dehydration
- in patients with a rare form of diabetes, can trigger heart
- attacks in people suffering from coronary-artery disease. Even
- some of the seemingly harmless amino acids, when given to
- animals in large doses, have proved dangerous and sometimes
- deadly.
- </p>
- <p> In January the Food and Drug Administration began
- intercepting commercial shipments of prescription medicines from
- Europe and Mexico that were intended to be sold as smart drugs.
- Smaller supplies for personal use can still get through,
- however, thanks to a loophole in the law designed to help AIDS
- patients and others who want to try experimental therapies from
- overseas. The agency is considering tighter restrictions on
- nonprescription food supplements, like amino acids, which are
- being used for everything from muscle building to battling
- insomnia.
- </p>
- <p> It is likely that in years ahead, researchers will come up
- with drugs that can restore lost memory, especially for people
- suffering from Alzheimer's and other degenerative illnesses.
- Until such medications have been proved safe and effective,
- however, leaving smart pills alone may be the smartest move of
- all.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
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