Longevity

NAD+ Dosage Protocol

The essential cellular coenzyme for energy metabolism, DNA repair, and sirtuin activation, administered via IV or SC to overcome age-related decline. Complete dosing guide and peer-reviewed references.

Last reviewed March 2025 · 2 cited sources
Select vial size
NAD+ vial
Reconstitution
Add 5.0 mL BAC water → 100 mg/mL
Daily dose range
50–500 mg (titrated)
Unit math (U-100 syringe)
1 unit = 0.01 mL ≈ 1000 mcg
Storage (lyophilized)
Freeze at −4 °F · Reconstituted: 36–46 °F · Use within 24 hours (IV) / 7 days (SC)

Dosing & Reconstitution Guide

The protocol below uses a 5.0 mL reconstitution volume to keep injection units comfortably above 10 on a standard U-100 insulin syringe, reducing measurement error. Doses are titrated as shown below.

Phase Daily dose U-100 units Injection volume
SC daily50–100 mgVariable0.50–1.00 mL
IV250–500 mg over 1–2 hrsIn salineFull vial

Route: IV / Subcutaneous · Frequency: IV 1–2× weekly; SC daily · Cycle: Ongoing

Reconstitution steps

01
Draw 5.0 mL of bacteriostatic water into a sterile syringe.
02
Inject the water slowly down the interior wall of the peptide vial -never directly onto the powder -to prevent foaming and denaturation.
03
Swirl or roll gently until fully dissolved. Do not shake. The lyophilized powder should dissolve completely within 30–60 seconds.
04
Label the vial with the reconstitution date and concentration (100 mg/mL). Refrigerate at 36–46 °F, protected from light. Use within 24 hours (IV) / 7 days (SC).
Research use only. This protocol is derived from published preclinical and early-phase clinical literature. NAD+ is not FDA-approved for human use. This information is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Consult a qualified healthcare professional before beginning any peptide protocol.

Supplies Needed

Estimates below assume the titration schedule listed above.

NAD+ vials (500 mg each)
Per cycleAs needed per titration
U-100 insulin syringes
8 weeks56 syringes
12 weeks84 syringes
16 weeks112 syringes
Bacteriostatic water (10 mL bottles)
Per vial5.0 mL needed
Alcohol swabs (100-count boxes)
8 weeks2 boxes (~112 swabs)
12 weeks2 boxes (~168 swabs)
16 weeks3 boxes (~224 swabs)

Storage Instructions

Lyophilized (dry powder)
−4 °F
Store frozen in dry, dark conditions. Minimize humidity exposure. Stable for 12–24 months when properly stored.
Reconstituted (in solution)
36–46 °F
Refrigerate after reconstitution. Use within 24 hours (IV) / 7 days (SC). Do not refreeze reconstituted solution -freeze-thaw cycles degrade peptide integrity.

Allow refrigerated vials to reach room temperature before opening to minimize condensation uptake. Always inspect for cloudiness or particulates before use -discard if present.

Verified Source

We recommend Pacific Edge Labs for research-grade NAD+. Third-party lab tests are published on each product page.

Why Pacific Edge Labs

  • High-purity compounds with third-party lab results available on the website
  • Consistent quality control with ISO-aligned handling and documentation
  • Fast, discreet shipping with proper handling and packaging
View NAD+ on Pacific Edge Labs →

How NAD+ Works

Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+) is the primary electron carrier in the mitochondrial electron transport chain, essential for ATP production. Beyond energy metabolism, NAD+ serves as the obligate substrate for poly(ADP-ribose) polymerases (PARPs) in DNA strand break repair and for sirtuins (SIRT1-7), which regulate gene expression, inflammation, and metabolic homeostasis.[1]

NAD+ levels decline 40–60% between ages 30 and 70, contributing to age-related metabolic dysfunction, impaired DNA repair, and reduced sirtuin activity. Intravenous NAD+ delivers rapid cellular repletion beyond what oral precursors (NMN, NR) can achieve, though it must be infused slowly to avoid flushing, nausea, and chest tightness. Reconstituted stability is limited -24 hours for IV and approximately 7 days for SC preparations.[2]

Observed Effects & Side Effect Profile

The following observations are derived from preclinical literature and limited early-phase human data. They do not constitute clinical claims.

Reported benefits (research literature)
  • Essential coenzyme for ATP production, DNA repair, and sirtuin activation
  • IV delivery achieves rapid cellular repletion beyond oral precursors
  • Addresses 40–60% age-related NAD+ decline directly
  • Supports PARP-mediated DNA repair and SIRT1-7 metabolic regulation
Known limitations & side effects
  • IV infusion must be SLOW -flushing, nausea, chest tightness if pushed too rapidly
  • Very short reconstituted stability (24 hours IV)
  • Requires clinical supervision for IV administration
  • Expensive -each IV session uses 250–1000 mg
  • SC route has limited data compared to IV protocols

Lifestyle Considerations

While the following suggestions are not protocol requirements, research on tissue repair and peptide efficacy consistently highlights these as factors that influence outcomes:

01
Protein intake. Collagen synthesis and tissue remodeling require adequate dietary protein. Research generally supports 1.6–2.2 g/kg/day during active recovery periods.
02
Sleep. The majority of tissue repair and growth hormone secretion occurs during deep sleep stages. 7–9 hours of quality sleep per night supports the biological environment in which recovery peptides operate.
03
Activity balance. Avoid complete immobilization (which impedes collagen remodeling) and overuse (which re-injures tissue). Progressive loading appropriate to the injury stage supports functional recovery.
04
Stress management. Elevated cortisol chronically impairs immune function and tissue repair. Evidence-based stress reduction techniques support the recovery environment.

Injection Technique

Standard subcutaneous injection guidance from clinical best-practice references.

01
Wash hands thoroughly. Clean your work surface. Gather all supplies before beginning.
02
Wipe the vial rubber stopper with a fresh alcohol swab. Allow it to dry completely before inserting a needle.
03
Draw the calculated dose volume into a sterile insulin syringe. Invert the syringe and tap to remove air bubbles; expel them before withdrawing the needle from the vial.
04
Select an injection site: abdomen (at least 2 inches from the navel), outer thigh, or upper outer arm. Clean with a fresh alcohol swab and allow to dry.
05
Pinch a fold of skin between thumb and forefinger. Insert the needle at a 45–90° angle depending on body fat thickness -45° for leaner individuals, 90° for more subcutaneous tissue.
06
Do not aspirate. Current clinical guidelines do not recommend aspiration for subcutaneous injections. Inject slowly and steadily over 2–3 seconds.
07
Wait 3–5 seconds after the plunger bottoms out before withdrawing the needle at the same angle. Apply gentle pressure with a clean swab -do not rub vigorously.
08
Rotate injection sites systematically with every dose. Reusing the same site repeatedly causes lipohypertrophy (hardened fat tissue) which reduces absorption consistency.
09
Dispose of used needles and syringes immediately in a puncture-resistant sharps container. Never recap needles by hand.

Important Notes

Research use only. NAD+ is not FDA-approved for human use. Human clinical data may be limited. Do not use without consulting a qualified healthcare professional.
One syringe per injection. Never reuse needles or syringes. Each injection requires a fresh, sterile syringe to prevent contamination and infection risk.
IV must be slow infusion -flushing/nausea/chest tightness if pushed too rapidly
Very short stability -24 hours IV
Document your protocol. Record daily dose, injection site, and any observations. This supports consistency and allows you to identify patterns or issues over the course of the cycle.
Inspect before each use. The reconstituted solution should be clear and colorless. Discard if cloudy, discolored, or if particulates are visible.

References

All dosing recommendations and mechanism descriptions on this page are derived from the following peer-reviewed publications and regulatory documents.

1
PubMed 24786309
Imai S et al. NAD+ and sirtuins in aging and disease
pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/24786309 ↗
2
PubMed 29744033
Yoshino J et al. NAD+ biosynthesis, aging, and disease
pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29744033 ↗

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