GlyNAC are folks here familiar with this combo?
#31
Posted 20 May 2021 - 11:49 AM
#32
Posted 21 May 2021 - 06:16 AM
Every intervention is a trade off. Do the benefits out weigh the possible risks of side effects. In my particular case the benefits do. The drop off in energy, stamina and insulin sensitivity is profound. I was doing great until 65 yo., and it was like dropping off a cliff and 10 years later it has got better, but nothing like I felt in my 50's. I will of course continue to monitor my health for any signs of pulmonary hypertension or any other side effects. I am of course not the average person taking this protocol. Have tried and have adopted many interventions while discarding others. Been doing this for 10 years. Somewhere you have to take chances with your health in order to move forward. If not, we all know what the consequence's are. Frailty, Disease and Death.
Yes, I agree that there are more people taking Rapamycin and Senolytics than this protocol, but look at the number of papers and trials on these interventions.
You are correct, I could not find any cysteine levels for 20 somethings. My mistake.
I will continue to rigorously monitor my health as I move forward with the GlyNAC intervention. I feel the science is good. Have always been a first adopter.
#33
Posted 12 March 2022 - 04:52 PM
Nutrients. 2022 Mar 7;14(5):1114.
PMID: 35268089
#34
Posted 13 March 2022 - 07:34 AM
GlyNac remains tempting but this other NAC thread worries me:
https://www.longecit...ac/#entry914125
#35
Posted 29 January 2023 - 06:57 PM
Impressive clinical trial:
https://academic.oup...8639?login=true
Dose: 100 mg/kg/d each of glycine and NAC, and 200 mg/kg/d of alanine
Results: "Compared to YA, OA had GSH deficiency, OxS, mitochondrial dysfunction (with defective molecular regulation), inflammation, endothelial dysfunction, IR, multiple aging hallmarks, impaired physical function, increased waist circumference, and systolic blood pressure. GlyNAC (and not placebo) supplementation in OA improved/corrected these defects."
Edited by ambivalent, 29 January 2023 - 07:02 PM.
#36
Posted 30 January 2023 - 08:23 PM
Impressive clinical trial:
https://academic.oup...8639?login=true
Dose: 100 mg/kg/d each of glycine and NAC, and 200 mg/kg/d of alanine
Results: "Compared to YA, OA had GSH deficiency, OxS, mitochondrial dysfunction (with defective molecular regulation), inflammation, endothelial dysfunction, IR, multiple aging hallmarks, impaired physical function, increased waist circumference, and systolic blood pressure. GlyNAC (and not placebo) supplementation in OA improved/corrected these defects."
I weigh 80kg, so for this trial, I would need a daily dose of 8gm glycine, 8gm NAC, and 16gm analine.
Has anyone here taken those dose levels? And lived to tell the tale?
And the trial subjects are much younger than my 78yro, is that a problem?
It looks rather inexpensive to follow this trial protocol, if these powder sources are ok:
https://zebraorganic...der-5-6-oz.html (this powder source recommends taking 1 of their scoops daily containing 1.6gm NAC and 1.6gm glycine)
https://www.amazon.c...s/dp/B00MWE8WAM (this powder source recommends taking 1 of their scoops daily containing 3gm analine)
So the trial dose could have used about 5 scoops daily of each of these products, for an 80kg subject.
I do not remember any comments in the paper about what time of day to take these dosages, or whether to take them with meals or without.
Edited by Krell, 30 January 2023 - 08:31 PM.
#37
Posted 30 January 2023 - 09:28 PM
Krell, it might be worth while taking a look at Fafner55's paper for some additional information - it's a long read (I haven't read it!). But yes, you're numbers seem consistent with the study.
https://www.longecit...ed-individuals/
#38
Posted 31 January 2023 - 08:08 PM
I think the concern is with NAC. I use NAC and there is no way I would use 8 grams. 2 grams is questionably safe. Read about NAC and irreversible pulmonary hypertension. I'd tread cautiously with doses of NAC exceeding 1.8 grams max.
Edit: and I wouldn't take all 1.8 grams at once but stagger 3 doses of 600 mg throughout the day.
Papers? Is there a glutathione lab you can perform that will tell you what your levels are?
Edited by ironfistx, 31 January 2023 - 08:09 PM.
#39
Posted 31 January 2023 - 08:14 PM
Seems Quest has one at $190 from ultalabs and Labcorp has one for $59 from marekhealth.com.
Is this the test you'd get to find glutathione levels?
Also tagged with one or more of these keywords: nac, glycine, ghs
8 user(s) are reading this topic
0 members, 8 guests, 0 anonymous users