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NAD+ makes me tired

nad+

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#1 Wilberforce

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Posted 05 December 2014 - 09:53 AM


Hi guys

 

Just got some 100mg NAD+ from a reputable company L*F and finding it makes me tired for a couple of hours - especially in the eyes - with no noticeable positives.  Does anyone have similar experiences and suggestions for any cofactors or alternatives to NAD+?

 

Many thanks

 

Will.


Edited by Wilberforce, 05 December 2014 - 09:57 AM.


#2 albedo

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Posted 05 December 2014 - 12:06 PM

I suggest you report this on the thread already existing on the personal experience using NR:

http://www.longecity...erience-thread/



#3 Wilberforce

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Posted 05 December 2014 - 01:43 PM

Thank you - scanned that but seeing no references to being tired immediately after or any suggested cofactors.



#4 Bryan_S

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Posted 05 December 2014 - 03:30 PM

Nothing directly about your tieredness however we talked about NAD the other day. It likely degrades to NAM, which shouldn't have that effect so something else may be at play.  Posted 03 December 2014 - 02:35 PM

 

http://molpharm.aspe...073916.full.pdf

 

and 

 

(Broetto-Biazon et al., 2008)

 

The problem is NAD it rapidly degraded. We had this same discussion last night Post 126 on 

Are Other Precursors as Effective in Increasing NAD+ as NR? If it could be stabilized from ingestion to the cell membrane it would be an excellent choice.

 

 


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#5 niner

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Posted 06 December 2014 - 10:23 PM

When you say tired in the eyes, do you mean that your eyes are getting hard to keep open, like you really just want to lay down and sleep?  Or is it more like your eyes feel a little inflamed, itchy, runny, or the like?  If it's the latter, maybe you're allergic to something in the pill.



#6 mtn2011

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Posted 17 January 2015 - 05:32 PM

I started Life Extension NAD+ a few days ago in the mornings with resveratorl and am starting the crash hard in the evening, I feel better for a while then am totally exhausted



#7 EEtanner

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Posted 06 June 2018 - 11:24 PM

Necro!

 

In the event someone else googles this as I did, I wanted to add that this is my experience as well.  100mg NAD (LifeExtension NAD+ Cell Regenerator - Nicotinamide Riboside) taken at night, the next day I am completely exhausted.  Looks like some people just have different chemistry going on.



#8 Fredhelms

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Posted 09 June 2018 - 07:54 PM

Same product and same result. I didn’t feel like it caused insomnia but I did notice my deep sleep dropped by 25% as measured on my Dreem for the two weeks of taking it. May just be a coincidence. I’d love to hear if someone else had the same result.

#9 Justin BoBustinBananaFanaF

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Posted 11 October 2018 - 10:03 PM

Same product and same result. I didn’t feel like it caused insomnia but I did notice my deep sleep dropped by 25% as measured on my Dreem for the two weeks of taking it. May just be a coincidence. I’d love to hear if someone else had the same result.

 

LifeExtension NR seems to help me sleep. What time do you take it. I heard that it was circadian and should be taken in the AM
 



#10 MikeDC

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Posted 19 October 2018 - 02:03 PM

I got a boost in energy for a few days and then got really tired for a few days. After that things turned normal. The theory is increased NAD+ allowed mitophagy to function again to clean up tons of bad mitochandria.

#11 Turnbuckle

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Posted 19 October 2018 - 05:30 PM

A higher NAD+/NADH ratio will increase mito fission and set mito QC into motion. This feeling you're getting may reflect a high level of defective mtDNA, which will perform poorly in fissioned mitochondria. Smokers on average have three times the mutation rate in mtDNA, so if you are or have been a smoker, that could explain it. In any case, getting rid of defective mitochondria (defective mtDNA, actually) is a good thing.

 

https://www.ncbi.nlm...les/PMC2443276/


Edited by Turnbuckle, 19 October 2018 - 05:40 PM.


#12 Zed

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Posted 24 February 2020 - 12:36 PM

A higher NAD+/NADH ratio will increase mito fission and set mito QC into motion. This feeling you're getting may reflect a high level of defective mtDNA, which will perform poorly in fissioned mitochondria. Smokers on average have three times the mutation rate in mtDNA, so if you are or have been a smoker, that could explain it. In any case, getting rid of defective mitochondria (defective mtDNA, actually) is a good thing.

 

https://www.ncbi.nlm...les/PMC2443276/

 

Interesting .
Do you have any links for your "mito QC" hypothesis?  The only link I could source was a study that referenced Nicotinamide and its downstream effects on Sirt1 - i understand NMN and NAD+ act on all the Sirt's. 
https://www.ncbi.nlm...pubmed/22493485

Also your link to smoking and mutation rate of mtDNA while interesting doesn't surprise and also doesnt lead to your assumption that this is what may be causing the "mito QC' to swing into action and is a good thing.
This has been the classic go-to for quacks for ages -
Q- "here take this it will make you healthier" .
P -."But it makes me feel bad and I have less energy and have lost my get up and go"...
Q."Oh thats because its doing <add some pseudo scientific mumbo jumbo here> all under the covers and "is a good thing" 
No its not specially when you are paying an arm and a leg for it - others dont have this "Herxheimer Reaction" and it could be covering up something more serious.
My take is we are all wired very differently and if something you are paying big bucks for isnt giving you a positive reaction then listen to your gut and stop it or microdose it - dont just assume that "some healing" is happening under the covers because someone says so.  Now if you can actually measure said mtMRA mutation and NAD+'s  subsequent "getting rid of these defections"  yes by all means continue but in the absence of that evidence its silly to keep taking something that has negative effects on your life.
 



#13 Turnbuckle

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Posted 24 February 2020 - 01:49 PM

Interesting .
Do you have any links for your "mito QC" hypothesis?  The only link I could source was a study that referenced Nicotinamide and its downstream effects on Sirt1 - i understand NMN and NAD+ act on all the Sirt's. 
https://www.ncbi.nlm...pubmed/22493485

Also your link to smoking and mutation rate of mtDNA while interesting doesn't surprise and also doesnt lead to your assumption that this is what may be causing the "mito QC' to swing into action and is a good thing.
This has been the classic go-to for quacks for ages -
Q- "here take this it will make you healthier" .
P -."But it makes me feel bad and I have less energy and have lost my get up and go"...
Q."Oh thats because its doing <add some pseudo scientific mumbo jumbo here> all under the covers and "is a good thing" 
No its not specially when you are paying an arm and a leg for it - others dont have this "Herxheimer Reaction" and it could be covering up something more serious.
My take is we are all wired very differently and if something you are paying big bucks for isnt giving you a positive reaction then listen to your gut and stop it or microdose it - dont just assume that "some healing" is happening under the covers because someone says so.  Now if you can actually measure said mtMRA mutation and NAD+'s  subsequent "getting rid of these defections"  yes by all means continue but in the absence of that evidence its silly to keep taking something that has negative effects on your life.
 

 

There is no one supplement you can take every day to fix a mitochondrial problem, but the body can be helped into doing the job itself with the right protocol. Cells have a natural QC program for eliminating defective mitochondria (defective mtDNA, actually), and for this to work properly, mitochondria have to be fissioned into the smallest possible size that contain only on mtDNA loop. This is necessary to keep loops with different bad genes from covering for each other and to fit them into lysosomes for recycling. With a single bad loop, mitochondrial membrane potential  (ΔΨm) drops off so that the well known Pink1/Parkin QC mechanism can come into play. 

 

Recent work has shown that Parkin promotes the degradation of dysfunctional mitochondria in vertebrate cell culture. Here we postulate a model whereby the PINK1/Parkin pathway regulates mitochondrial dynamics in an effort to promote the turnover of damaged mitochondria.

https://www.ncbi.nlm...pubmed/19967438

 

 

PINK1 is intimately involved with mitochondrial quality control by identifying damaged mitochondria and targeting specific mitochondria for degradation. Healthy mitochondria maintain a membrane potential that can be used to import PINK1 into the inner membrane where it is cleaved by PARL and cleared from the outer membrane. Severely damaged mitochondria lack sufficient membrane potential to import PINK1, which then accumulates on the outer membrane. PINK1 then recruits parkin to target the damaged mitochondria for degradation through autophagy.[14] Due to the presence of PINK1 throughout the cytoplasm, it has been suggested that PINK1 functions as a "scout" to probe for damaged mitochondria.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PINK1

 

 

 

One can easily achieve the necessary fission by raising the NAD+/NADH ratio with cheap supplements.

 

Removal of dysfunctional mitochondria requires the activation of autophagy coupled with ongoing mitochondrial fission (7). Our current and previous studies show that both of these processes can be induced by NAM treatment. The earlier part of this study showed that the effect of NAM was exerted through an increase of [NAD+]/[NADH] ratio.

https://www.ncbi.nlm...les/PMC3365962/

 

 

 

While NAM (nicotinamide) will work by itself if taken in an intermittent fashion, NAM+ribose works even better, as the body has very limited stores of ribose to make NAD out of. (NAM + ribose works faster and is far cheaper than NR or other supplements being sold for NAD+). Thus a protocol consists of stimulating fission to get rid of defective loops, then stimulating fusion and biogenesis to replace them. Each cycle will get rid of a few percent, but with repeated cycles, the health of cells' mitochondrial populations can be reestablished. I first looked at this in 2016, and eliminated the substantial damage that statins caused me with several months of treatments. See these  threads--

 

https://www.longecit...e-mitochondria/

https://www.longecit...drial-dynamics/

https://www.longecit...-46#entry870740

 

Mitochondria work less efficiently in a fission state, and when there is a lot of damage, ATP production can be severely depressed. Thus best to start off slowly, with only one day of fission, followed by biogenesis the next day, preferably with fusion.


Edited by Turnbuckle, 24 February 2020 - 01:52 PM.


#14 MikeDC

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Posted 24 February 2020 - 02:18 PM

I remember reading somewhere that when NAD+ is low, mitochandria favors fission. When you take NR to increase NAD+, fusion gets balanced and mitochandria quality control starts to clean up bad mitochandria and you temporarily have less mitochandria and less energy. I have experienced this as well.





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