Burning the candle <u>at both ends.</u>

Fast Living

Burning the candle at both ends.

Late nights, long flights, big weekends. They take something from the body. NAD⁺ supports the cellular reset — not by masking the morning after, but by helping your cells do the recovery work they’re already trying to do.

A depleted system needs more than sleep

Alcohol, late nights and long-haul travel create two simultaneous demands on the body that sleep alone cannot address.

Toxic load

The liver treats alcohol as a toxin and prioritises its removal above everything else — diverting NAD⁺ away from energy production, blood sugar regulation and brain function in the process.

Cellular depletion

With NAD⁺ diverted, mitochondria slow, inflammation stays elevated and neurotransmitter balance is disrupted. Recovery takes longer than it should — not because you’re weak, but because the cellular resources aren’t there.

Brain fog that lingers

Not imaginary — reduced neural energy, neurotransmitter imbalance and neuroinflammation. Thoughts feel slower because neurons are running low on energy.

Flat mood & hangxiety

Alcohol disrupts serotonin and dopamine signalling. Stress hormones rise. The morning-after mood is biological, not personal.

Energy that won't return

Caffeine stimulates — it doesn't replenish. When NAD⁺ is depleted, cellular energy production stays impaired however much coffee you drink.

NAD⁺ support isn't a free pass — it's responsible recovery

It doesn’t prevent alcohol damage. It doesn’t make excess safe. It supports the cellular processes your body is already running during recovery — giving them more to work with. That’s the honest version.

Where NAD⁺ Helps

Supporting the recovery systems your body is already running

NAD⁺ sits at the intersection of the systems that alcohol and disrupted sleep deplete most. Foundational support — not a shortcut.

Liver detoxification

NAD⁺-dependent enzymes are central to how the liver processes toxins. Supporting NAD⁺ helps the liver recover between stressors more efficiently.

Brain fog & clarity

NAD⁺ supports neuron energy production, reduces neuroinflammation and restores communication between brain cells. The fog clears when the cells have what they need.

Mood & hangxiety

NAD⁺ supports neurochemical balance and stress response pathways — helping the brain regulate emotion rather than react to it.

Energy restoration

Restoring NAD⁺ gives mitochondria what they need to resume efficient ATP production — the difference between stable energy and relying on caffeine to function.

Puffiness & inflammation

NAD⁺ helps regulate cellular stress responses and inflammatory signalling. When NAD⁺ is restored, inflammation resolves faster and fluid balance returns more quickly.

Sleep & circadian reset

NAD⁺ directly regulates circadian clock proteins — supporting the sleep-wake cycles and nighttime repair that alcohol and jet lag disrupt.

Your Journey

What to expect over time

Benefits build progressively. Individual responses vary, but here's a typical pattern.

15-30 MINS

Clearer head

Most users notice improved mental clarity and energy within the first half hour. Not a stimulant effect — more like fog lifting. A sense of cellular steadiness returning.

HOURS 2-4

Energy returning

Baseline energy improves. Less reliance on caffeine to get through the day. Inflammation begins resolving. The heavy, swollen feeling reduces.

DAY 2

Mood stabilises

Neurochemical balance begins to restore. The anxiety and low mood of the morning after is biological — and it resolves biologically, with the right cellular support.

ROUTINE

Steady baseline

Regular NAD⁺ support maintains a higher baseline of cellular resilience — so the next disruption starts from a stronger position. Consistent use compounds quietly.

Real Experiences from Real People

Why do partying, late nights, and travel leave me feeling so depleted?

Late nights, alcohol, and long‑haul travel all increase the body’s recovery workload. The liver works harder, sleep timing is disrupted, inflammation rises, and cells are asked to do more with less rest. These processes rely heavily on NAD⁺, a molecule your cells use to produce energy and repair daily wear. When demand outpaces recovery, fatigue, brain fog, and low mood tend to linger—not because something is “wrong,” but because cellular resources are temporarily stretched.

Scientific sources

  • Frontiers in Toxicology – Alcohol‑induced NAD⁺ depletion and inflammation [frontiersin.org]
  • Cell Biology & Toxicology – NAD⁺ depletion in alcohol‑associated liver stress [link.springer.com]

What does NAD⁺ have to do with hangovers?

Alcohol is treated by the body as a toxin that must be processed quickly. This detox pathway uses large amounts of NAD⁺, particularly in the liver. As NAD⁺ is diverted to alcohol metabolism, less is available for normal energy production and brain chemistry balance. The result can feel like a heavy hangover: fatigue, headaches, low mood, and mental fog. Supporting recovery is about helping the body restore balance after drinking—not masking the effects of alcohol.

Scientific sources

Why does my brain feel slow or foggy after late nights or flying?

Your brain is one of the most energy‑hungry organs in the body. Alcohol, poor sleep, dehydration, and jet lag all interfere with how efficiently brain cells produce energy. NAD⁺ plays a central role in brain energy metabolism and inflammatory regulation, so when levels dip, thinking can feel slower and focus harder to maintain. Brain fog isn’t imaginary—it’s a sign the brain is still in recovery mode.

Scientific sources

  • Biomolecules – NAD⁺ metabolism and brain energy demand [mdpi.com]
  • Journal of Neuroinflammation – NAD⁺, mitochondrial function, and neuroinflammation [link.springer.com]

Why does travel disrupt my sleep so badly—and where does NAD⁺ fit in?

Jet lag and late nights disrupt your circadian rhythm, the internal clock that governs sleep, hormones, and cellular repair. NAD⁺ is closely linked to this clock through proteins that help regulate sleep–wake cycles. When sleep timing is irregular, NAD⁺ rhythms can become misaligned, which misaligns your sleep wake cycle to when you want to be awake and active. This makes deep, restorative sleep harder to achieve. Supporting circadian stability by boosting your NAD+ in the mornings can help the body reset after travel.

Scientific sources

  • Journal of Sleep Medicine – NAD⁺, sirtuins, and circadian rhythm regulation [e-jsm.org]
  • Molecular Cell – NAD⁺ and circadian clock coordination [cell.com]

Is supporting NAD⁺ about “fixing” excess—or something else?

Supporting NAD⁺ isn’t about making late nights, drinking, or constant travel consequence‑free. It doesn’t replace sleep, hydration, or moderation. Instead, it’s about supporting the body’s natural recovery systems when life temporarily asks more of them. Think consistency over intensity. Recovery over stimulation. Support—not shortcuts.

Scientific sources

  • Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology – Regulation and limits of NAD⁺ metabolism [nature.com]
  • American Journal of Physiology – Safety and clinical context of NAD⁺ support [journals.p…iology.org]