Nefiracetam is thought to contribute to learning processes due to enhancing long term potentiation (LTP) via a PKC dependent pathway,[25] enhancing NMDA-dependent LTP at low concentrations and AMPA dependent LTP at higher concentrations.[25] Furthermore, increased acetylcholine release has been noted in vivo[38][39] and learning appears to be associated with acetylcholine signalling in the hippocamps[31][30] suggesting both stimulatory pathways (glutaminergic and cholinergic) are recruited.
Furthermore, immunohistological analysis has noted an increase in dentate polysialylated cell frequency following chronic ingestion of nefiracetam at 1-9mg/kg (as well as some other cognitive enhancers)[64] which is a phenotype similar to that seen with cognitive training.[65] This may be related to an observed augmentation of neuronal growth factor seen in vitro with max efficacy at 100nM (lower doses not tested)[66] and was confirmed with 9mg/kg (but not 3mg/kg) in rats over 40 days.[66]
Due to the enhancement of both glutaminergic and cholinergic pathways, nefiracetam is thought to possess cognitive enhancing properties
In otherwise healthy rats, administration of nefiracetam (3-30mg/kg) has been unable to significantly alter step down latency[27] and acute usage of 1-10mg/kg has failed to facilitate the acquisition process of avoidance response.[16][67] Elsewhere, 10mg/kg has failed to modify escape latency acutely in rats (healthy controls used in a study on cerebral ischemia[40]) and 10-30mg/kg has failed to alter performance in a water maze test after a single oral dose.[68]
Nefiracetam appears to increase the rate of acquisition on novel tastes in the 3-10mg/kg range, although with repeated testing it eventually performs similar to control; the authors suggested that nefiracetam aids in novel memory consolidation.[67] This same novel object task has been noted to be unaffected with 1mg/kg in mice elsewhere.[24]
Acute usage of nefiracetam for the purpose of cognitive enhancement, unlike pramiracetam, rarely if ever causes an increase in memory formation in research animals
For studies over a longer periods of time, 15mg/kg of nefiracetam for 38 days (postnatal day 41 to 79) has noted an increase in spatial memory formation.[64] This prolonged requirement of nefiracetam's nootropic potential has been noted in rabbits previously[31][30] and a previous study that noted a failure of nefiracetam to benefit avoidance acquisition at 3-10mg/kg acutely noted benefit with seven days of supplementation.[67]
Adding nefiracetam to cognitive training failed to outperform either in isolation.[64]
Nefiracetam appears to promote cognition in otherwise healthy and young animals when taken daily over a prolonged period of time (minimum of seven days it seems), although the one study to combine nefiracetam with cognitive training failed to find an additive effect
In rats given cerebral ischemia, 10mg/kg nefiracetam daily (preliminary study said it was more effective than 3mg/kg) is able to partially reverse the impairment of spatial memory seen with injury.[40]
In rats with cerebral injuries of sorts, nefiracetam appears to be neuroprotective and can restore memory function
The amnesia induced by protein synthesis inhibitors appears to be attenuated with nefiracetam either pretraining (3-30mg/kg) or posttraining (5-15mg/kg), with more protective effects from preloading and trended to be more protective than aniracetam.[27] This has been noted elsewhere[1] and anti-amnesiac effects have also been reported with nefiracetam on a variety of other drugs of cholinergic, GABAergic, or dopaminergic neurotransmission[27][69][68][70][71][29] including alcohol[70] and even extends to some endogenous compounds such as β-amyloid proteins[72] as well as carbon monoxide.[73]
Against scopolamine in particular (cholinergic amnesiac), the amnesiac effects have been noted to be reduced with nefiracetam at 1-30mg/kg with maximal effects (67% protection) at 10mg/kg, which outperformed aniracetam (33% peak efficacy in the range of 1-30mg/kg).[67] This has been noted in other studies[74] and species such as rabbits[30][75] and can be traced back to its influence on high-voltage calcium channels.[16]
In response to electroshocks, nefiracetam is able to reduce the subsequent amnesia in the dosage range of 1-3mg/kg with higher doses having no protective effect.[67] The same mechanisms are thought to underlie the ability of nefiracetam to attenuate seizures against various stressors[76][5][77] (possibly less potent than Levetiracetam[78]) and due to occurring at a lower range than other pharmaceutical goals they may be related to acting on sodium channels in an inhibitory manner (active in the 5-50nM range[5]).
Nefiracetam appears to possess anti-amnesiac properties, with slightly more efficacy than Aniracetam based on the animal evidence. The breadth of these anti-amnesiac effects appears to be quite large and affects most things that induce amnesia, and it can be traced back to the influence on calcium channels (opening them)