Just looked at her Chemistry Department dissertation and it's not totally clear what portion of the blood she tested. "Whole blood" is mentioned once but there is no mention anywhere of centrifuging it to separate the cells from the plasma. The problem generally cited isn't so much the sensitivity of the test but that NR in drawn blood degrades so quickly that even if it is there, it might be gone by the time its done centrifuging to separate out the plasma. There is mention of immediately flash-freezing the blood to avoid this degradation but the plasma cannot be separated in that state.
Howard
I say again: "It's also not clear to me why we would care particularly much about levels of NR, NMN, eNAMPT and the rest except as they may inform about tissue NAD+, — but we don't have to guess about this, since as documented from multiple studies and in multiple tissues across multiple timescales, NR pretty consistently outperforms NMN [in raising tissue NAD+]. (As noted, a possible exception is the hypothalamus [SNIP]"
We need an NMN study that follows NAD+ for more than 6 hours. We also need to know why NMN likes kidney so much.
Or, why kidney likes NMN more than NR.
What we need to pay attention . Ron H put forward a pretty plausible explanation, which I subsequently quoted approvingly:
Second, there is the matter of CD73.
A general line of reasoning, at least by people posting in this forum, is that NR is better than NMN at boosting NAD+ synthesis, simply because NMN needs to be converted by CD73 to NR before it can enter the cell, whereas NR itself enters the cell directly. In fact, this seems to be corroborated by most head-to-head comparisons of NR and NMN in Ratajczak paper [PMID 27725675]. Such comparisons are shown in Figs 2d and e, 4, 5e, 6a (controls), 7 and 8a. [...]
- I find it striking that in Figure 7 of the Ratajczak paper only in kidney the effects of NR and NMN are indistinguishable, and that CD73 levels in this organ are clearly higher than in the other tissues (cf. their supplementary Fig. 3a). In Figure 8 10-fold lower doses of NR and NMN are used and here the advantage of NR over NMN disappears.
able wrote: And [we need to know] why NR likes liver so much.
I think that's pretty obvious.
able wrote: Yes, and we need an NR study that is longer than a couple of months (vs 12 months for NMN).
Again, Able: we have several NR studies that lasted 3-4 mo, and one that lasted 10.
We thought NAD+ can’t be increased much higher in young people. The study shows NAD+ increase in younger people can be much higher than for old people. Old people have lower NAD+ and have less increase of NAD+ from NR supplementation. The best time to start NR is probably when you are at 20.
I put it to you that this actually is a strong argument against young people using the stuff. IF there is a benefit to boosting NAD+ levels, it's presumably to restore youthful levels of NAD+ in older people whose NAD+ levels may hypothetically be repressed by aging processes, leading to downstream metabolic dysfunction. Raising it over the levels in a young healthy person is more likely to lead to redox imbalance, or metabolic dysfunction resulting from homeostatic feedback (futile cycling, etc), which latter has been observed both in human studies (the Elysium trial) and in animals (the Sinclair exercise study).
Important questions will include whether such feedback occurs only to people achieving "excessively" high NAD+ levels, or whether everyone tends to trend back to his or her baseline level over time. As blue has reminded us a couple of times, the UWash study only lasted 9 days, and the Colorado trial only 6 weeks, and the Elysium and Colorado trials only reported medians and ranges for the NAD+ metabolome: the feedback effect was not observed in the Elysium trial at 30 days, but was at 60.
It is inaccurate to say old people will not benefit from it. They benefit a lot from it.
We have no idea if they benefit from it or not. Anecdotes are not evidence, and there's only hints of benefits inconsistently reported in the short-term studies to date.