-
I have spent some time going over the Nuchido site and chasing down some interviews with its CEO Dr. Nichola Conlon. They are at the very beginning of their commercial operation, but it looks fairly impressive. I have ordered a 180 bottle of Time+, and my wife and I will try it for 2 weeks and see what we think.
The Nuchido site provides some links to scientific publications. Most of these are journal publications a few years old discussing various aspects of NAD+ levels and aging. However, the first reference in the list, which may be downloaded from this LINK, is a .pdf of a poster with Conlon as first author apparently presented at the poster session of some unspecified scientific meeting. It described the work on which the commercial Time+ product is based. (Warning: the type is way too small to read if you print out the file on letter-size paper. I recommend opening it with a PDF Reader, zooming until you can read the type, and panning around to examine the various sections.)
Let me describe what I learned from the poster. The NAD+ consumed by the body produces a residue that is recycled to make new NAD+. As the body ages, this recycling degrades, resulting in the age-related NAD+ deficiency. The authors have used the (unspecified) methods of Systems Pharmacology to identify a number of natural supplements (see below) that boost the recycling process. An unspecified cocktail of these supplements was used in the work described.
The work used two human volunteers as subjects, an 57 year old male and a 48 year old female. The subjects were given oral doses of "Interventions" over a two week period, given at 4 PM each day because this is the NAD+ low point. The subjects provided many blood samples that were analyzed for NAD+ levels as well as levels of SIRT1 and NAMPT. Judging from poster pictures, the blood analysis involved chromatography.
Intervention NCD201.1 was the recycle boost cocktail plus the NAD+ precursor Nicotinamide Riboside (NR). It was observed that following the 2-week treatment, the subject's NAD+ level was boosted by "344%", i.e., by a boost factor of 3.44. Intervention NCD202 did the same procedure with the NR omitted. This boosted the NAD+ level by a factor of 1.7. Note that this is about the same as provided by taking NR or NMN as daily supplements.
Both NR and NMN are fairly expensive, so the team decided to do a third trial with relatively inexpensive but less bio-available Niacin in the form of Nicotinamide as the precursor. The results were spectacular. The NAD+ level was boosted by a factor of 9.62. Apparently, the strategy of boosting the recycling process rather than just providing it with precursor inputs yields huge NAD+ increases.
We note that Nuchido Time+ is stated to provide a NAD+ boost of only a factor of 2.42. Apparently they have throttled back the boost factor, probably in the interest of caution. Here is the contents statement from the Time+ bottle:
-
I can think of two reasons: (1) They could patent their Proprietary Blend or keep it a trade secret, and (2) boosting NAD+ by almost a factor of 10 is possibly dangerous overkill, since the falloff with age is only perhaps a factor of 2. However, some individuals on longecity.org seem to be putting together own versions of NCD201.2 to take themselves, so perhaps we will soon have reports of possible side effects.
-
Primary Source of NCD201 Ingredients
I found the primary source of the NCD201.1 ingredients listed above. It is from a patent application by Conlon, and can be viewed at this LINK. It includes this table:
-
Sorry for resurrecting such an old topic but I have to ask: why no love for NUCHIDO anymore? I mean, the discussion had seemingly died off about 2 years ago, with no one posting, updating etc... Is it because "NAD restoration" is old news or that NUCHIDIO is just too expensive and that people have been making their own version buying these ingredients cheaper separately?
-
Hi guys,
I just thought I would revive this topic as I've just started with Nuchido and would like to share my experience so far.....first a little background, I'm 75, physically very active as I have been all my life, decided when I reached 65 to prove there was indeed life as a pensioner ! My diet has been Paleo for about 20 years and is now low-carb without obsessing about Keto, I've been Intermittent Fasting since the lockdown with occasional longer fasts, also follow Wim Hof's breathing and cold exposure protocols.
First came into the whole NAD restoration question via David Sinclair's YouTube videos on resveratrol. Started taking this in pill form about 2 months ago, noticed an immediate kick in energy, was encouraged to examine NAD precursors, but found Dr Conlon's explanation of Nuchido rather convincing so started 2 weeks ago with Time +.
Must say first results are encouraging, noticed a small subtle further increase in energy over the resveratrol level, plus increases also in sleep quality ( and I'm already a deep sleeper but this is another level ) and most significantly in cognitive performance. I'm not able to afford to establish a baseline for NAD level, so 2 anecdotal improvements : 1 I'm astonishing my personal trainer by beating personal bests on a regular basis, and I'm hitting my golf ball out of the park ( not literally ! ) and 2 I regularly play a few chess games online to keep the brain ticking over and my rating has shot up 100 points.
I'm not even taking the full recommended dose of 2x3 capsules per day, just averaging about 2x2 max. Keep you posted on further progress.
-
Thanks to the encouragement of your excellent administrator I've summoned up the courage to update my story. To the sceptics among you I should point out that at age 75 I suspect my NAD levels are pretty degraded, so even a modest stimulus is likely to produce some results more quickly than in a 40 year old for example.
Anyway the experience remains positive, energy levels still high. Like most people of my age my biggest dread is declining into one of those dementia-related syndromes, so the improvement in my cognitive abilities is probably the most welcome outcome of all. If there are any chessplayers among you I'm extremely proud and rather boastful about the fact that my online grading has gone over the 2000 level for the first time in my life.
Another positive to report is the feeling that there is some kind of subtle healing/restorative process going on in my body - for instance the joint pain in my right hip which has been troubling me for months has almost disappeared completely, and a couple of minor skin irritations have completely vanished.
For some years now I have been taking part in an Age Research Study being conducted by the University of Leiden, which requires me to regularly take online tests measuring pattern recognition, short term memory and reaction times. I'm expecting to visit them shortly for an EEG, so will ask if it's possible to see my results recently, might be interesting.
I'm intrigued to discover how much of my progress is due to the Resveratrol and how much to Nuchido. My feeling, based on absolutely no evidence, is that Resveratrol is the main energy stimulant and Nuchido stronger on the cognitive and health side. So I've decided to stop with Nuchido for a month and just rely on the Resveratrol, which is actually a very modest 100mg per day Trans-Resveratrol and probably not from the highest quality source. Assuming the responses to this update are not too overwhelmingly virulent I'll post another update in a month.
-
Almost 2 months into my Nuchido self-trial and it's still positive. For good commercial reasons no doubt they recommend 6 capsules per day, I've never taken more than 4 and often less, including occasional days without to recycle. Notice some incidental side effects such as improved balance ( yoga lessons ) and my nails and hair growing quicker and thicker. Energy levels and cognitive ability remain higher. For me personally the incidental health benefits are as important as the NAD levels, don't know if taking NMN or NR also produce them. When my current supply runs out I'm going to re-order.
-
Hi Gary, I may not have expressed myself very well, sorry about that. I first started taking resveratrol, which gave me an immediate energy boost, then 2 weeks later I started with Nuchido, which I've just reordered, so I'll be continuing with both. The Nuchido people told me they expected a good synergy with resveratrol and I think they were right. Let me know if there is any more I can help you with.
-
It's my impression, based on absolutely zero evidence except my own feelings, that the Resveratrol is the main driver of more energy and the Nuchido provides the health benefits such as improved cognitive ability and healing. At age 75 I'm actually more interested in the latter as preventing typical old age conditions such as dementia. The extra energy feels wonderful but I see it as a bonus. I can imagine people in younger age groups might have a different set of priorities.