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What is NAC?

What is NAC? (N-acetyl cysteine)

NAC is a popular supplement with benefits that include overall health and anti-aging help, among many others.


NAC is an abbreviation for N-acetyl-cysteine, a form of the amino acid L-cysteine-- the N-acetyl form of the sulfur-containing amino acid cysteine to be exact.


What is N-acetyl cysteine

NAC is considered a "semi-essential" amino acid or a "conditionally essential" amino acid. This means that your body can create some


NAC from other amino acids, particularly L-methionine and L-serine. Taking a


NAC supplement quickly becomes "essential" when methionine and serine intake is low. More on that in a minute. NAC benefits include clearing away brain fog for a sharper memory and clearing excess mucous for better breathing.


NAC is also a potent anti-inflammatory as it suppresses cytokine production and stabilizes mast cells-- mast cells in your immune system act as your body's alarm system for pathogenic invaders. This anti-inflammatory action is critical in the fight against aging.


NAC is found in high-protein foods, including beef, chicken, turkey, eggs, dairy, and legumes. But food sources aren't necessarily sufficient for reasons we'll explore. That's why many natural health doctors recommend consuming NAC in supplement form to ensure optimal health benefits.


One of NAC's outstanding benefits is replenishing the most abundant antioxidant in your body, glutathione.


Replenishes "Master Antioxidant" Glutathione

NAC is needed to produce glutathione, your body's "master" antioxidant. When absorbed, NAC converts into L-cysteine, then glutathione, by pairing with the amino acids glutamine and glycine. This raises your all-important glutathione levels. In turn, glutathione promotes oxidative balance and reduces free radical damage in each of your cells.


This is important, because taking glutathione (GSH) itself as a nootropic-- a supplement that improves brain function-- does not accomplish the goal of increased glutathione levels because it does not cross the blood-brain barrier. However, NAC easily penetrates the blood-brain barrier and raises glutathione levels in your brain.1 Since glutathione levels decrease with age, taking NAC supplements as you get older is essential.


Benefits of NAC Supplements

NAC supplements offer a variety of health benefits.


For one, it is a potent antioxidant that restores glutathione levels in both body and brain, in order to maintain oxidative balance in cells.


NAC also help to your memory and mood that can deteriorate with age by reducing inflammation and oxidative damage, and modulating glutamate levels and dopamine.


NAC is also a potent detoxifier. It's been used to treat acetaminophen overdose (Tylenol poisoning) for decades in ERs to reverse liver damage.


NAC gives your liver the glutathione it needs to fight off the liver-damaging metabolite NAPQI in Tylenol.


A Potent Anti-Aging Supplement

Because NAC is a precursor to glutathione, supplementing with NAC provides every cell in your body with additional glutathione. There's a very reliable link between glutathione levels and longevity.


Studies show that adults over 60 with the highest blood glutathione levels enjoy more wellness and less chronic disease. Glutathione is also a characteristic of long-lived women and centenarians.


Adding glutathione into your anti-aging regimen can protect you against cellular damage and oxidative stress. But again, taking glutathione directly won't work, due to absorption problems. The best way is to supply your body with glutathione precursors including NAC. By doing this, the potential for attaining and maintaining good health is staggering.


Other ways to boost your glutathione levels include consuming enough high-quality protein, including raw milk and whey protein, and to reduce your toxic load by consuming more organic foods instead of conventional food that contains more chemical residues from pesticides and antibiotics.


NAC Supports Memory and Mood

The brain is particularly vulnerable to inflammation and free radicals. Thus, many people regard NAC as a supportive brain-boosting nootropic. For one thing, NAC regulates levels of glutamate in your brain. As a nootropic, helps prevent glutamate toxicity, boosts dopamine, and reduces inflammation, oxidative stress, and free radical damage.


NAC's ability to cross the blood-brain barrier, boosting glutathione, and acting as an antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, and free radical scavenger can be a game-changer for your memory. It supports cognition, memory, and mood, as well as long-term potentiation (strengthening of synapses based on recent synaptic activity that enhances neuron signals).


In addition, NAC controls glutamate levels and dopamine release in the brain. Too much glutamate is toxic to brain cells and causes cell death, diminishing cognition, memory and mood. NAC supports healthy dopamine receptors and function. Dopamine controls movement, motivation, memory, mood, attention, and your brain's reward system. So NAC may enhance memory and cognitive function, help alleviate brain fog and irritability, and even influence addictions.


In an interesting study, researchers studied 30 adult male Winstar rats divided into three groups. The control group drank distilled water, the second group got aspartame, and the third group received aspartame plus NAC for 90 days.


The NAC group had increased Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor (BDNF), fewer inflammatory enzymes, and inflammatory cytokines in the cerebral cortex. The researchers concluded that NAC prevents neurotoxicity, improves neurological function, and suppresses brain inflammation


The next time you reach for a Diet Coke, realize that consuming the artificial sweetener aspartame induces brain inflammation and oxidative stress, and triggers brain cell death. You might want to take a lesson from the third study group by taking NAC with that Diet Coke. Or without the Diet Coke, for that matter.


Neuroscientists have found brain pathways involving inflammation and oxidative stress can lead to problems like schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, depression, and some forms of autism.


Depression and bipolar disorder are partially triggered by glutathione depletion. Researchers in a double-blind, multi-center, placebo-controlled study evaluated 75 persons with bipolar disorder. The experimental group received 1 gram of NAC twice daily for 24 weeks. NAC treatment caused a significant improvement in the depressive symptoms of the NAC group.


NAC reduces the symptoms of various psychiatric and neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer's disease, and even helps reduce substance abuse cravings.


Offers Powerful Detoxification

For years, ERs have administered intravenously NAC to patients who present with acetaminophen overdoses, as it is a known detoxification agent. NAC supplementation can relieve symptoms of liver toxicity resulting from Tylenol overdose as well as alcoholic liver disease or non-alcoholic fatty liver disease.


Part of NAC's benefits for liver detoxification rests with its ability to increase glutathione levels in the body -- which are rapidly depleted by drug toxicity.


Provides Immune Support

Glutathione (and NAC by extension) benefits your immune health. Research suggests that glutathione promotes your immune system's innate immune response to viruses, independent of its antioxidant properties as well as due to its antioxidant properties. NAC also stabilizes your immune system mast cells.


Improves Insulin Resistance

Obesity and high blood sugar can trigger inflammation in fat tissue, which can in turn damage or hinder insulin receptors. Animal studies suggest that NAC decreases inflammation and thereby improves insulin resistance.


NAC Supplement Dosage and Timing

Although L-Cysteine is naturally produced in your body with the help of the amino acid methionine, acute stress, illness, toxicity, or poor dietary choices can deplete L-Cysteine levels. The most efficient way to boost L-Cysteine levels is to supplement with N-Acetyl L-Cysteine (NAC).


NAC is considered safe and effective at daily dosages of 600 to 1,800 mg. Recommended dosages vary depending on your reason for taking it. You may be wondering when to take NAC morning or night?


The best time to take N-acetyl-cysteine (NAC) depends on your specific health goals:

  • Morning: Taking NAC in the morning can give your body a boost in antioxidant production (glutathione) to help combat oxidative stress throughout the day. It may also support mental clarity and energy levels.

  • Night: Taking NAC at night may benefit those looking to enhance detoxification processes, which often occur during sleep. It can also support lung health by reducing mucus and inflammation.


NAC does not disrupt your circadian rhythm, so timing is flexible.


More important is timing your daily NAC dose around meals. That's because it's most effective when taken on an empty stomach (at least 30 minutes before or two hours after a meal) for optimal absorption.


Cami Grasher

If you need support, please reach out for a discovery call with Cami Grasher.


 
 
 

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