Augmentation of Methylphenidate with Piracetam for Residual Executive Dysfunction and "Brain Fog": A Naturalistic Case Report

Read the full article See related articles

Discuss this preprint

Start a discussion What are Sciety discussions?

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

Adults with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder often continue to battle mental "fog," emotional lability and low drive even after guideline treatments have been optimised. Mounting evidence from mood-disorder research indicates that shifting glutamatergic traffic toward AMPA-receptor throughput can trigger rapid plastic changes, yet this principle has seldom been explored in ADHD.A 28-year-old woman who remained inattentive and anxious on atomoxetine was switched, in routine outpatient practice, to a low-dose extended-release methylphenidate formulation (18 mg) augmented with piracetam 1 200 mg daily. Within days she reported markedly sharper concentration, steadier mood and a new capacity to sustain purposeful activity without the late-day "flattening" she had experienced on stimulants alone. When piracetam was paused for three days the improvements evaporated, only to return on re-initiation, creating a clear temporal association.The observation supports the idea that a safe, inexpensive AMPA modulator can amplify the modest glutamate rise produced by methylphenidate and translate it into meaningful clinical gains. Although limited to a single case, the result invites systematic study of piracetam as an adjunct for adults whose ADHD symptoms have proven only partially responsive to standard pharmacotherapy.

Article activity feed