I find a relatively obscure abstract about the effects of methylphenidate (translation: Ritalin).
My translation: the first time you drive like the gods, the second time you make mistakes, but in a very fast way.Methylphenidate had significant effects on performance of the tests of spatial working memory and planning but not on the attentional and fluency tests. When the drug was taken on the first test session, performance on the spatial tests was enhanced by the drug compared to placebo. However, when the drug was taken second, performance accuracy was impaired whereas response latencies were decreased.
Provigil and Inderal, another beta blocker were used (with Ritalin) by 20% of Nature magazine readers. They allege that
Yeah, sure...... just as one would hardly propose that a strong cup of coffee could be the secret of academic achievement or faster career advancement, the use of such drugs does not necessarily entail cheating
http://www.webmd.com/brain/news/2008040 ... ting-drugs
Wired magazine ran its own poll after that Nature poll and added Focalin to the list of "focus enhancing drugs" used by their readers.
The "regimes" proposed add Propanolol, Concerta, Ibuprofen/Acetaminofen (?) and DMAE, Vinpocetine and Pramiracetam (called "nooropics" by one of Wired readers).At the end of this article, we detail 15 drug regimens from among the scientists, college students and business owners who wrote to us.
http://www.wired.com/medtech/drugs/news ... ntPage=all
Then I jumped into nootropics (mispelt by the reader of Wired) and I find that they're
... drugs that are used to enhance mental performance in healthy individuals.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Nootropics
Wow.
That disqualifies me: I'm not very healthy, I think.
I jumped for a while among drugs with names like "Ampakine Farampator" (I swear I'm not making this up, just wiki it) until I find that
All right, let's read about CX-717. Oh, yeah.More recently developed ampakine compounds are much more potent and selective for the AMPA receptor target, and while none of the newer selective ampakine compounds have yet come onto the market, one compound CX-717 is currently in Phase II clinical trials as of 2008.
My translation: the monkeys were geniuses for a while before they became radioactive and exploded.The submitted data package provides clear evidence that the specific histopathological changes seen in animal toxicology studies, which previously caused the FDA to put CX717 on clinical hold, is a postmortem fixation artifact and is not found in the tissue of the animal when it is still living.
Anyway, do you use this kind of drugs, even for legal motives? Do they really help you to drive, or the side effects overwhelm the advantages? I don't know why I think they will become popular in the near future.
After all, a third of professional drivers in transportation that were fatally injured in an accident (truck drivers) used drugs (NTSB, 1990):
"... 33 percent of the drivers tested positive for one or more drugs of abuse."
The most prevalent drugs found were:
- alcohol and marijuana (13 percent each)
- cocaine (9 percent)
- methamphetamines/amphetamines (7 percent)
- other stimulants (8 percent)
- other drugs at less than 1 percent.
Forty one percent of those drivers that tested positive were multiple drug users. Almost 11 percent were positive for three or more drugs of abuse (sorry for the old statistics, it's the only CD on Safety Statistics that I have at hand).
Besides, most NASCAR fans here should have read about Aaron Fike, painkiller and heroin adict professional driver last April.
Fike said he believes his ability to race while under the influence of illegal drugs is proof that NASCAR's longtime "reasonable suspicion" drug policy doesn't work. Since 2000, seven NASCAR drivers have been suspended indefinitely for substance abuse problems, four after either failing or missing tests administered under reasonable suspicion. The other three, including Fike, were caught by police.
http://sports.espn.go.com/rpm/nascar/tr ... id=3336865
NASCAR claims they administer random tests, but Filke was caught injecting himself in a parking lot in Ohio by police, not by NASCAR. So, I wonder, besides junkies like Fike, are there any drivers that have become more sophisticated about drugs than James Hunt? (not a very hard thing to accomplish... ).