Burning the Candle at Both Ends?
Drinking, late nights, flying across time zones, and disrupted sleep can all make the best of us feel exhausted and off our a-game. Even young, fit people can feel wiped out, foggy puffy low in mood and sometimes unable to sleep properly. This isn't because something is “wrong” — but because their cellular resources are temporarily depleted.
Burning the Candle at Both Ends lowers your NAD+
1. What NAD⁺ is — explained simply
NAD⁺ (nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide) is a molecule found in every cell of your body. It’s involved in:
- Turning food into energy
- Helping the liver process toxins
- Repairing cellular damage
- Supporting brain function
- Regulating sleep–wake rhythms
A simple way to think about it:
NAD⁺ is the “money” your cells need to carry out their daily tasks.
When you burn through NAD⁺ faster than your body can replace it, everything feels harder—physically and mentally.
2. Why partying, alcohol, and travel drain the body so fast
Drinking, late nights, flying across time zones, and disrupted sleep all have one thing in common:
They massively increase the body’s workload.
They:
- Stress the liver
- Increase inflammation
- Disrupt sleep timing
- Dehydrate tissues
- Increase oxidative stress
- Force the brain and mitochondria to work harder
All of these processes consume NAD⁺.
So even young, fit people can feel:
- Wiped out
- Foggy
- Puffy
- Low in mood
- Unable to sleep properly
Not because something is “wrong” — but because their cellular resources are temporarily depleted.
3. Alcohol and NAD⁺: why hangovers feel so brutal
Alcohol metabolism is expensive
When you drink alcohol, your liver treats it as a toxin that must be neutralised quickly.
To do this, the liver:
- Converts alcohol into acetaldehyde (very toxic)
- Then into acetate (less harmful)
- Then into water and carbon dioxide
This detox process outlined above uses huge amounts of NAD⁺.
What happens when NAD⁺ is depleted
As NAD⁺ is diverted to alcohol processing:
- Energy production drops
- Blood sugar regulation suffers
- Brain chemistry is disrupted
- Inflammatory signalling increases
This contributes to classic hangover symptoms:
- Headaches
- Nausea
- Fatigue
- Anxiety or low mood
- Brain fog
Supporting NAD⁺ doesn’t stop alcohol damage—but it may help the body recover faster once drinking stops.
4. Hangover recovery: why “sleeping it off” isn’t enough
People often say:
“I slept nine hours and still feel awful.”
That’s because hangovers aren’t just about sleep deprivation—they’re about cellular recovery.
After drinking, your body needs to:
- Restore energy levels
- Rebalance brain chemistry
- Repair stressed cells
- Clear inflammatory by‑products
All of this requires NAD⁺.
When NAD⁺ is low:
- Recovery slows
- Symptoms linger longer
- Energy doesn’t bounce back easily
Supporting NAD⁺ helps speed up the reset process, not by masking symptoms, but by helping cells return to normal function.
5. Detoxification and liver function
The liver is your body’s main clean‑up crew
Your liver doesn’t just deal with alcohol. It also processes:
- Medications
- Food additives
- Environmental toxins
- Hormones
- Metabolic waste products
The liver relies heavily on NAD⁺‑dependent enzymes to do this work.
Why frequent drinking and travel strain the liver
- Alcohol increases liver workload
- Dehydration thickens bile flow
- Poor sleep disrupts liver repair cycles
- Late‑night eating adds metabolic stress
Low NAD⁺ means:
- Detox processes slow down
- Waste products hang around longer in the system
- Inflammatory stress increases
Supporting NAD⁺ helps the liver:
- Process toxins more efficiently
- Recover faster between stressors
- Maintain healthier metabolic balance
6. Brain fog: why thinking feels slow after partying or flying
Brain fog isn’t imaginary
Brain fog comes from a mix of:
- Dehydration
- Inflammation
- Neurotransmitter imbalance
- Reduced brain energy
Alcohol and jet lag both interfere with brain energy metabolism.
NAD⁺ and brain energy
The brain uses a huge amount of NAD⁺ because it:
- Helps neurons make energy
- Supports communication between brain cells
- Regulates stress signalling
When NAD⁺ is depleted:
- Thoughts feel sluggish
- Focus is poor
- Memory feels unreliable
- Reaction time slows
Supporting NAD⁺ helps the brain:
- Regain energy efficiency
- Clear inflammatory signals
- Restore mental sharpness
7. Puffiness, bloating, and that “hung over” look
After late nights, drinking, or long flights, people often notice:
- Puffy face
- Swollen eyes
- Bloated abdomen
- Rings or shoes feel tight
This isn’t just water retention—it’s inflammation and impaired fluid balance.
How NAD⁺ is involved
NAD⁺ helps regulate:
- Cellular stress responses
- Inflammatory signalling
- Lymphatic and metabolic efficiency
When NAD⁺ is low:
- Inflammation lingers
- Fluid clearance slows
- Tissues stay swollen longer
Supporting NAD⁺ may help the body:
- Resolve inflammation faster
- Restore normal fluid balance
- Reduce the “puffy” aftermath of excess
8. Energy levels: why stimulants stop working
After repeated late nights or travel, many people rely on:
- Coffee
- Energy drinks
- Sugar
These stimulate the nervous system—but don’t fix the energy problem.
The real issue is cellular energy
Energy isn’t just about being awake—it’s about how efficiently cells make ATP (the body’s usable energy currency). NAD⁺ is essential for this process.
When NAD⁺ is depleted:
- Caffeine feels jittery but ineffective
- Energy crashes become frequent
- Motivation drops
Supporting NAD⁺ may help restore:
- Baseline cellular energy production
- Physical stamina
- Mental drive
This feels different from stimulation—it’s more stable and sustainable.
9. Low mood and “hangxiety”
Many people experience:
- Anxiety
- Low mood
- Irritability
- Emotional flatness
after drinking or travel.
Why this happens
Alcohol and sleep disruption:
- Alter neurotransmitter levels
- Increase stress hormones
- Reduce serotonin and dopamine signalling
- Increase brain inflammation
Low NAD⁺ worsens this by:
- Reducing brain energy
- Increasing sensitivity to stress
- Slowing recovery of emotional balance
Supporting NAD⁺ may help the brain:
- Re‑establish neurotransmitter balance
- Reduce inflammatory stress signals
- Improve emotional resilience
This doesn’t numb emotions—it helps the brain regulate them more effectively.
10. Sleep disruption and jet lag: Why jet lag is so hard on the body
Jet lag isn’t just about being tired. It’s a full circadian disruption.
Your internal clock controls:
- Sleep timing
- Hormone release
- Body temperature
- Digestion
- Mental alertness
Alcohol and late nights also disrupt this clock in a similar way.
NAD⁺ and your internal clock
NAD⁺ plays a key role in:
- Regulating circadian rhythm proteins
- Coordinating sleep–wake cycles
- Supporting night‑time cellular repair
Low NAD⁺ leads to:
- Fragmented sleep
- Early waking
- Poor deep sleep
- Daytime fatigue
Supporting NAD⁺ may help:
- Reinforce circadian signalling
- Improve sleep quality
- Increase the speed of adjustment after travel
11. Why frequent travellers and party‑goers burn through NAD⁺ faster
People who:
- Drink regularly
- Binge drink
- Sleep irregularly
- Cross time zones
- Experience high stress
- Eat late at night
Use up NAD⁺ faster because:
- Detox demands increase
- Repair needs increase
- Inflammation stays elevated
- Sleep‑based recovery is reduced
This doesn’t mean they’re unhealthy—it means their recovery systems are under constant physiological load.
12. Why people supplement NAD⁺ rather than just “rest more”
You can’t absorb NAD⁺ directly from food very well. Instead, the body needs to make it from precursors (building blocks) or have it supplemented directly via the VAION NAD+ injector pen or IV drip.
When lifestyle stress outpaces production:
- NAD⁺ levels dip
- Recovery slows
- Symptoms accumulate
Supplementing your NAD+ will:
- Replenish depleted NAD⁺
- Support natural detox and repair
- Improve recovery efficiency
It’s about supporting recovery, not enabling excess.
13. Important reality checks (very important)
NAD⁺ support:
- Does not prevent alcohol damage
- Does not make heavy drinking “safe”
- Does not replace sleep, hydration, or moderation
- It is not a treatment for alcohol misuse or sleep disorders.
It works best alongside:
- Hydration
- Nutritious food
- Sleep
- Movement
- Breaks between stressors
Think of it as helping the body bounce back, not giving it a free pass.
14. The big picture
In simple terms:
Partying, drinking, and travel all drain the body’s cellular batteries. NAD⁺ is a key component of those batteries.
When NAD⁺ is low, recovery is slow and symptoms linger.
Supporting NAD⁺ may help:
- Speed hangover recovery
- Support liver detoxification
- Reduce brain fog
- Decrease puffiness
- Restore energy levels
- Improve mood stability
- Improve sleep quality and jet‑lag recovery
15. Simple summary
NAD⁺ helps your body:
- Process toxins
- Make energy
- Repair damage
- Regulate the brain
- Reset your internal clock
People who party hard, drink, or travel often place higher demands on these systems.
Supporting NAD⁺ isn’t about cheating biology—it’s about giving the body the tools it needs to recover more effectively.