Apr 30, 2018
In this video you'll discover the nootropic benefits of Vitamin B5 (Pantothenic Acid). Including why we use Vitamin B5 as a nootropic, recommended dosage, side effects and clinical research.
Vitamin B5 (Pantothenic Acid) is one of eight B-Vitamins. B5 is water-soluble and found in every single cell in your body.
Vitamin B5 is essential for the synthesis of acetylcholine (ACh). Adequate levels of ACh can boost focus, memory, learning, and reduce brain fog.
Pantothenic acid is at the heart of the KREBs cycle and electron transport chain which helps convert nutrients from food into energy which is used to make adenosine triphosphate (ATP). ATP is the fuel source within each of your cells. More energy increases mental clarity, alertness, memory and mood.
Pantothenic acid as part of Coenzyme-A (CoA) is involved in the synthesis of the neurotransmitters acetylcholine, epinephrine, and serotonin. Affecting alertness, cognition, memory and mood.
Pantothenic acid is often referred to as the “anti-stress vitamin”. Your adrenal glands use CoA (made partly from pantothenic acid) along with cholesterol and Vitamin C to manufacture cortisol and epinephrine.
Vitamin B5 has a reputation for reducing stress, anxiety and depression.
Neurohackers who supplement with pantothenic acid report being wonderfully optimistic, energetic and mentally sharp.
People report Vitamin B5 helps them focus better, they feel a profound increase in energy and concentration improves.
Many people dealing with acne find their skin looks great. Acne is cleared within a few days to a few weeks of supplementing with pantothenic acid.
Men and women find that supplementing with Vitamin B5 helps prevent hair loss. And if taken early enough may even help avoid hair turning prematurely gray.
Some neurohackers report that pantothenic acid helps improve vision and hearing.
If you are using an acetylcholine (ACh) precursor like Alpha GPC or CDP-Choline in your nootropic stack, you should be using Vitamin B5. Because B5 is needed to make Coenzyme-A (CoA). CoA and choline are needed to synthesize acetylcholine.
If you’ve added choline to your racetam stack and still get a “choline headache” it’s likely because you don’t have adequate Vitamin B5 in your system.
Pantothenic Acid or Pantethine is generally well tolerated in doses up to 1,200 mg/day. Some neurohackers report doses above 1,000 mg can induce gastrointestinal side effects like nausea or heartburn.
This indepth Vitamin B5 (Pantothenic Acid) review covers:
00:00 Vitamin B5 intro
00:24 Vitamin B5 as a nootropic
02:40 How does Vitamin B5 work in the brain?
04:36 Vitamin B5 benefits
06:25 How does Vitamin B5 feel?
07:19 Vitamin B5 clinical studies
07:58 Vitamin B5 recommended dosage
09:39 Vitamin B5 side effects
10:16 Available forms of Vitamin B5
For more on Vitamin B5 (Pantothenic Acid) including a full transcript of this video and links to clinical studies, go to: https://nootropicsexpert.com/vitamin-...
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