New — Free Peptide Starter Guide (2026): 13 chapters, 34 cited studies

Get it free
ToolsCompareNoopept vs Adipotide

Noopept vs Adipotide

Side-by-side comparison of key properties, dosing, and research.

Cognitive Enhancement
Noopept
Fat Loss & Metabolic
Adipotide
Summary
Noopept is a potent dipeptide-derived nootropic from Russia, structurally related to piracetam but estimated to be 1,000 times more potent by mass. It enhances memory consolidation, learning, and recall while providing neuroprotection via BDNF and NGF upregulation.
Adipotide (FTPP) is a chimeric proapoptotic peptide that selectively targets and destroys blood vessels feeding white adipose tissue. It binds prohibitin on the vasculature of fat tissue, delivering a proapoptotic sequence that induces cell death in fat-specific blood vessels, causing targeted fat tissue regression.
Half-Life
~5–10 minutes but metabolite (CPG) effects last hours
Estimated 2-4 hours
Admin Route
Oral, Sublingual, Intranasal
Subcutaneous, Intravenous (research)
Research
Typical Dose
10–30 mg
Not established for humans; primate studies used 0.1-1 mg/kg
Frequency
1–2x daily
Daily for 4 weeks (research protocol)
Key Benefits
  • Enhances memory formation and recall
  • Improves learning speed and cognitive processing
  • Neuroprotective via BDNF/NGF upregulation
  • Anxiolytic at low-to-moderate doses
  • Improves verbal fluency and information processing
  • Antioxidant (reduces oxidative damage in neurons)
  • May improve cognitive symptoms of mild cognitive impairment
  • Targeted reduction of white adipose tissue
  • Promotes fat vasculature apoptosis without systemic toxicity
  • Demonstrated significant fat loss in primate studies
  • Potential for visceral and subcutaneous fat reduction
  • Novel non-hormonal mechanism distinct from GLP-1 agonists
  • Explored for obesity and metabolic syndrome
Side Effects
  • Headaches (choline depletion — pair with choline source)
  • Irritability or anxiety at high doses
  • Overstimulation
  • Rare: brain fog with chronic use
  • +1 more
  • Renal toxicity observed in primate studies (transient, dose-dependent)
  • Dehydration and electrolyte imbalances in research
  • Weight regain upon cessation
  • Limited human data; side effect profile largely from animal studies
Stacks With