Andrew Huberman· PhD
And then there's a third way that's commonly used to try and increase NAD levels, and that's by infusing by intravenous infusion, or in some cases, by oral administration, either liquid or pill form, NAD itself.
The evidence is convergent. Multiple independent sources reach the same conclusion, the underlying mechanism is well-characterized, and even the field's most cautious voices treat it as worth doing.
And then there's a third way that's commonly used to try and increase NAD levels, and that's by infusing by intravenous infusion, or in some cases, by oral administration, either liquid or pill form, NAD itself.
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what Josh's research soed which is basically NAD flux research has demonstrated that look the liver is probably the place of greatest uptake
now of course the other way that these things are typically delivered is through intravenous nad which says hey you don't need to make it we'll give it to you we know you can't take nad orally so you have to do it intravenously there I think it went everywhere in that paper right but does it get into the cells yes they're a cell but can take up
because there's some evidence that nad doesn't directly get into cells it's a large molecule there's some evidence that nerve cells take it up but in general it has to be broken down first before it's taken up into cells and reconstituted inside the cell