Every morning San Francisco tech worker Danny Hernandez jump starts his day with a supplement called Nootroo.
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"I wake up, take a Nootroo," said Hernandez. "It gives me kind of the clarity of mind I need to make better decisions."
Alex Nobosod downs a different pill from another Bay Area company called Nootrobox, which sponsors his online gaming team.
"If you think about vitamins that you would take normally for your body, for your overall body health, these are very similar, but they are targeted for brain function," said Nobosod.
The supplements are among a growing wave of products loosely called Nootropics, based on the Greek word for mind.
Formulas vary wildly, but most list a mix of ingredients that some believe bolster brain power.
Stanford graduate Geoffery Woo founded Nootrobox.
"How well you can focus, how well you can sustain attention, your working memory and how you deal with stress," said Woo. "So, Nootropics help enhance various aspects of that."
And they've found an eager fan base. The concept of brain or bio-hacking has accelerated into a Bay Area movement in recent years, with developers using everything from homemade headsets to bio-feedback devices to stimulate brain activity.
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Nootroo founder Eric Matzner says Nootropics sprung from the same kind of experimentation.
"People who wanted enhancement started taking this into their own hands, and they discovered a wide, large, deep body of information," said Matzner.
The result are pills and powders, increasingly popular with type-A achievers from Silicon Valley to Wall Street.
But how safe and effective are the products? Like supplements in general, Nootropics don't go through the rigorous FDA approval process.
"So ultimately we don't actually know how safe they are if you're taking them chronically," said doctor Hallam Gugelmann of the California Pacific Medical Center. "We don't know how effective they are if you're taking them chronically."
Gugelmann is a toxicology specialist and he's concerned those potential side effects from Nootropic products in general wouldn't be spotted until after the fact.
"FDA tries to go back and identify, was this caused by the supplement and should the supplement be taken off the market," said Gugelmann.
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Manufacturers who spoke with ABC7 News say they haven't had reports of serious side effects, despite any concerns the market is growing, driven in part by users who believe they are seeing gains in their mental performance.
"Things are coming to you.You're having good ideas, like you're, you feel energy," said one Nootropics user Danny Hernandez.
"All we are looking for is, you know, 10 to 15 percent improvement,"said Nobosod.
The supplements are often sold online and with the supplement industry now estimated in the tens of billions of dollars, there should be plenty of brainpower going into the development and marketing of Nootropics.
Regulators could still change the Nootropics landscape. The FDA has ruled one popular ingredient, Piracetam, is essentially a drug and can no longer be marketed as a dietary supplement. The agency said they're aware of similar substances contained in some Nootropic products, but have not issued a ruling on those yet.
Written and produced by Tim Didion.