Bromantane
A Russian adamantane-derived actoprotector that gently raises endogenous dopamine synthesis to deliver crash-free stimulation with an unusual anxiolytic, rather than anxiogenic, profile.
Bromantane is an atypical psychostimulant and anxiolytic developed in the 1980s at the Zakusov Institute of Pharmacology and approved in Russia under the trade name Ladasten for neurasthenic and asthenic disorders. Structurally it is an adamantane derivative related to amantadine and memantine, but pharmacologically distinct: it combines mild dopamine reuptake inhibition with upregulation of dopamine-synthesis enzymes and promotion of neurosteroid production. It has never been approved outside Russia, circulates as a research chemical in Western biohacker communities, and is prohibited for competitive athletes under the WADA S6 stimulants list.
Class
Small-molecule adamantane derivative (atypical psychostimulant / actoprotector) — not a peptide
Routes
Oral (50 mg tablets / powder)
Category
Cognitive & Nootropic
Researched benefits
What it's studied for
Motivation and drive
By gently upregulating endogenous dopamine synthesis in mesolimbic and mesocortical neurons rather than forcing synaptic release, Bromantane is reported to increase motivation and drive without the overstimulation of classical stimulants.
Anxiety reduction
Bromantane promotes neurosteroid synthesis, particularly of allopregnanolone (a positive modulator of GABA-A receptors), which is thought to underlie an anxiolytic rather than anxiogenic profile — unusual among cognition-active compounds.
Crash-free stimulation
Its mild dual-action mechanism produces alertness and reduced fatigue without the anxiety, cardiovascular stimulation, appetite suppression, and rebound crash typical of amphetamines or methylphenidate.
Physical stamina and adaptation
Originally created as an adaptogen (actoprotector) for Soviet military and elite athletic use, it is positioned to support physical stamina and adaptation during physical and cognitive stress.
Anti-asthenic and anti-fatigue effects
Russian placebo-controlled trials in neurasthenia, asthenic depression, and chronic/post-infectious fatigue report benefits on fatigue, attention, mood, and sleep-quality scales at 50-100 mg/day over 2-6 week courses.
Mood enhancement
The dopaminergic upregulation combined with GABAergic calming plausibly accounts for reported mood improvement alongside alertness at therapeutic doses.
Mechanism
How it works
Bromantane's mechanism is genuinely unusual among cognition- and energy-supporting compounds because it combines monoaminergic modulation with neurosteroidogenesis. It acts simultaneously as a mild dopamine reuptake inhibitor and as an activator of tyrosine hydroxylase and aromatic L-amino acid decarboxylase gene expression in mesolimbic and mesocortical dopamine neurons. The net effect is a gentle upregulation of endogenous dopamine synthesis rather than the forceful synaptic dopamine release characteristic of amphetamines or methylphenidate.
Alongside this dopaminergic effect, Bromantane promotes neurosteroid synthesis — particularly of allopregnanolone and related GABA-A positive modulators. This GABAergic component is thought to underlie its anxiolytic rather than anxiogenic profile and distinguishes it from conventional stimulants that typically produce dose-dependent anxiety. The pairing of dopaminergic stimulation with GABAergic calming plausibly accounts for the reported combination of alertness and reduced anxiety at therapeutic doses.
As an adamantane derivative, Bromantane is structurally related to amantadine and memantine but pharmacologically distinct from both. Its clinical positioning in Russia has been for neurasthenia, asthenic depression, chronic fatigue states, post-infectious fatigue, and adaptation support during physical and cognitive stress, reflecting its origin as an actoprotector rather than a classical CNS stimulant.
Dosing protocols
Dosing & administration
Dosing reflects protocols reported in research and community literature for educational purposes. It is not medical advice or a recommendation. Most peptides here are not approved for human use.
Beginner (tolerance assessment)
- Dose
- 50 mg
- Frequency
- Once daily
- Timing
- Morning, with breakfast
- Duration
- 3-5 days
- Route
- Oral
Mirrors the lower end of Russian clinical trial dosing to gauge tolerability before titrating up. Morning dosing avoids sleep disruption.
Standard
- Dose
- 100 mg
- Frequency
- Once daily
- Timing
- Morning
- Duration
- 2-4 weeks total (including the initial titration days)
- Route
- Oral
Increase to 100 mg once daily in the morning if 50 mg is well tolerated. This matches the upper end of the 50-100 mg/day range used in Russian trials.
Split-dose alternative
- Dose
- 50 mg + 50 mg
- Frequency
- Twice daily
- Timing
- Morning plus early afternoon (before 14:00-15:00 local time)
- Duration
- 2-4 weeks
- Route
- Oral
Later doses risk delayed sleep onset, so keep the second dose to early afternoon.
- Document baseline measures on validated fatigue, mood, anxiety, and attention scales before starting, and reassess at weeks 2 and 4. A meaningful response is roughly a 20-30% improvement in fatigue scores with subjective functional improvement.
- Complete an evidence-graded workup for reversible causes of fatigue first (comprehensive metabolic panel, CBC, iron studies with ferritin, vitamin D 25-OH, TSH and free T4, and where indicated screening for sleep apnoea, depression, and anxiety); treating these has larger effect sizes than Bromantane.
- Russian clinical practice favours a cyclical pattern of 2-4 week courses with several-week washouts. If clear benefit occurs, pause 2-4 weeks before considering a repeat cycle; if no measurable change occurs, further cycles have low expected value.
- Long-term safety beyond roughly 6 months of cyclical use is not characterised, so commit in advance to a maximum cycle duration with an explicit off-ramp.
- For powder rather than pre-capsulated Ladasten tablets, accurate weighing requires an analytical balance with 1-5 mg precision. Demand third-party mass-spectrometry and HPLC verification of identity and >98% purity, since grey-market material may be misidentified adamantane compounds.
Evidence
Research & clinical studies (1)
Representative clinical and mechanistic overview of Bromantane (Ladasten) in asthenic disorders (Mikhaylova et al.)
Cited in the source as a representative clinical overview supporting Bromantane's mechanism and efficacy in asthenic/neurasthenic presentations, with placebo-controlled trials supporting benefit in fatigue and attention.
PMID 28035569Combinations
Stacking & blends
Bromantane + Phenylpiracetam
Enhanced focus and stimulation
Listed as a synergistic pairing in the source interaction matrix, combining Bromantane's dopaminergic upregulation with phenylpiracetam's stimulant nootropic effects.
Bromantane + Selank
Calm, motivated focus
Listed as a synergistic pairing; Selank's anxiolytic profile complements Bromantane's combination of drive and neurosteroid-mediated calm.
Safety
Side effects & considerations
Commonly reported effects
Contraindications & cautions
- Pregnancy and lactation
- Children and adolescents
- Hypersensitivity to adamantane-class agents (amantadine, memantine)
- History of psychosis or schizophrenia spectrum disorders (personal or first-degree relative)
- Diagnosed bipolar disorder (risk of precipitating mania/hypomania)
- Significant uncontrolled cardiovascular disease (recent MI, symptomatic CAD, uncontrolled hypertension, clinically significant arrhythmias, heart failure)
- Concurrent MAO inhibitors (hypertensive crisis risk)
- Concurrent SSRIs, SNRIs, tricyclics, antipsychotics, or mood stabilisers without prescriber involvement
- Uncontrolled seizure disorders
- Active stimulant use disorder
- Severe hepatic or renal disease
- Phenylketonuria
- Competitive athletes subject to WADA or similar anti-doping codes
Reported side effects in Russian clinical practice are generally mild and often at placebo-comparable rates in controlled trials. Discontinue for persistent insomnia despite morning-only dosing, sustained tachycardia or significant blood-pressure elevation, new or worsening psychiatric symptoms (anxiety, psychosis, mania), allergic reactions, new cardiovascular symptoms, seizure activity, or signs of hepatic dysfunction. There is also a specific warning about overheating/hyperthermia risk during intense exercise in heat. Abuse liability appears low in rodent paradigms, but human long-term safety data beyond ~6 months of cyclical use is lacking.
FAQ
Bromantane — common questions
What makes Bromantane pharmacologically unusual compared to classical stimulants?
Unlike amphetamines or methylphenidate, which force synaptic dopamine release or reuptake blockade, Bromantane acts as a mild dopamine reuptake inhibitor while also activating tyrosine hydroxylase and aromatic L-amino acid decarboxylase gene expression to gently raise endogenous dopamine synthesis. It simultaneously promotes neurosteroid synthesis (notably allopregnanolone, a GABA-A positive modulator), giving it an anxiolytic rather than anxiogenic profile. This dual action of dopaminergic stimulation plus GABAergic calming accounts for the unusual combination of alertness and reduced anxiety at therapeutic doses.
How does Bromantane compare with modafinil, methylphenidate, and amphetamines?
All promote wakefulness and attention but through different mechanisms and side-effect profiles. Modafinil, methylphenidate, and amphetamines have extensive Western randomised evidence and regulated (often controlled) supply. Bromantane's gentler dual-action mechanism produces comparable benefits on fatigue and attention in the Russian literature but with reportedly less anxiety, cardiovascular stimulation, appetite suppression, sleep disruption, and abuse liability. No head-to-head randomised trials against modafinil or methylphenidate exist in Western literature, so the comparison remains indirect.
What does a reasonable Bromantane protocol look like?
A conservative first cycle mirrors Russian trial dosing: 50 mg once daily in the morning with breakfast for 3-5 days to assess tolerability, increasing to 100 mg once daily in the morning if well tolerated, for a total of 2-4 weeks. An alternative is 50 mg morning plus 50 mg early afternoon (before 14:00-15:00). Document baseline fatigue, mood, anxiety, and attention measures and reassess at weeks 2 and 4; a meaningful response is a 20-30% improvement in fatigue scores. If benefit occurs, pause 2-4 weeks before repeating.
Is Bromantane banned for athletes?
Yes. Bromantane was added to the WADA prohibited list in 1996 after several Russian athletes tested positive at the Atlanta Olympics, and it remains on the S6 Stimulants list under in-competition prohibited categories. It produces detectable urinary metabolites, and positive tests typically result in multi-year competitive bans. Any athlete subject to WADA-style testing should categorically avoid it.
Is it safe to combine with SSRIs or ADHD medications?
Drug-drug interactions for Bromantane are not well characterised. Combining it with SSRIs, SNRIs, or tricyclics carries theoretical serotonergic and altered-efficacy risks; MAO inhibitors carry hypertensive crisis risk and should be avoided; classical ADHD stimulants add dopaminergic effects that can amplify side effects; antipsychotics may be antagonised by its dopaminergic component. Anyone on chronic psychiatric medication should involve their prescriber before use.
Does Bromantane have abuse potential or long-term safety data?
Russian preclinical rodent studies (self-administration, conditioned place preference, withdrawal) suggest low abuse potential relative to cocaine and amphetamines, with no robust dependence or withdrawal on discontinuation. Russian trials generally cover 2-6 week courses, with some older literature extending to 3-6 months of cyclical use, but no large-scale multi-year safety follow-up exists. Long-term safety beyond roughly 6 months of cyclical use is uncharacterised.
Can Bromantane help with ADHD or cognitive fatigue?
Russian trials show benefit in asthenic and neurasthenic presentations that overlap with attention, fatigue, and cognitive-fog symptoms, but Bromantane has never been studied in DSM-5-diagnosed ADHD, and no head-to-head trials against ADHD medications exist. Anyone with significant attention complaints should pursue proper diagnostic workup first, since depression, anxiety, sleep disorders, and thyroid dysfunction can mimic ADHD and have different evidence-graded treatments.
How should I think about sourcing and purity?
Pharmaceutical-grade Bromantane is made in Russia as Ladasten (typically 50 mg tablets) with limited access elsewhere. Outside Russia it circulates as a research chemical with variable quality; grey-market risks include substitution with amantadine or memantine, inaccurate labelling, and contamination. Demand third-party mass-spectrometry and HPLC verification of identity and >98% purity with a batch-specific certificate of analysis, and avoid suppliers who cannot provide it.

