What Is NAD+ and Why Is Everyone Injecting It?
NAD+ plays a central role in cellular energy, DNA repair, and healthy aging. Here’s what NAD+ injections actually do, what the science says, and who they may be right for.
Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide, better known as NAD+, has gone from a molecule in a biology textbook to one of the most talked-about treatments in longevity medicine. Celebrity clinics offer NAD+ IV infusions, telehealth platforms prescribe weekly injections, and supplement shelves are filled with NMN and NR capsules.
But most people taking it only have a vague understanding of what NAD+ actually does. This guide breaks down the real science behind NAD+ injections, the potential benefits, and how to think about whether they fit your health goals.
What NAD+ Is and Why It Exists
NAD+ is a coenzyme, or helper molecule, found in every cell in your body. Its core job is to act as an electron carrier in cellular respiration, which is the process your mitochondria use to convert food into ATP.
ATP is the energy currency your body uses to power nearly every biological function. Without adequate NAD+, your cells cannot produce energy as efficiently.
But NAD+ does more than support energy production. It is also required for two important classes of proteins: sirtuins and PARPs.
Sirtuins and longevity signaling
Sirtuins, often called longevity proteins, help regulate DNA repair, inflammation, circadian rhythm, stress response, and metabolic function. These proteins depend on NAD+ to work properly.
PARPs and DNA repair
PARPs, or poly ADP-ribose polymerases, are enzymes involved in DNA repair. When DNA damage occurs, PARPs activate to help repair the damage. This process consumes NAD+.
That is the key issue: NAD+ is constantly being used. Every time your cells repair damage, manage stress, regulate inflammation, or support mitochondrial function, NAD+ demand increases.
Why NAD+ Levels Decline With Age
NAD+ Decline by Decade
NAD+ levels tend to decline as people age. An inline infographic can be placed here showing NAD+ decline from age 20 through age 80.
NAD+ levels decline significantly with age. Research suggests levels may drop substantially between young adulthood and middle age, with continued decline into older age.
This is not just a minor biochemical detail. NAD+ decline may impact how efficiently your cells produce energy, repair damage, regulate inflammation, and maintain metabolic health.
The decline happens from both sides of the equation. NAD+ production slows down, while NAD+ consumption increases.
Production slows
One reason NAD+ levels decline is that NAMPT, an enzyme involved in the body’s main NAD+ biosynthesis pathway, becomes less active with age. When this pathway slows, your body may not replenish NAD+ as efficiently.
Consumption increases
At the same time, aging is associated with greater oxidative stress, more DNA damage, and higher activity from NAD+-consuming enzymes such as PARPs and CD38. This creates a larger gap between NAD+ supply and demand.
What the NAD+ Research Actually Shows
NAD+ has become popular in wellness and longevity circles, but the reason it matters is not hype. NAD+ is tied directly to mitochondrial function, cellular repair, metabolism, and aging biology.
One of the most cited studies in NAD+ longevity research was published in Cell in 2013 by Gomes and colleagues. In animal research, investigators found that declining NAD+ impaired sirtuin function in aging muscle and that restoring NAD+ levels improved markers of mitochondrial and muscle aging.
Human research has also explored NAD+ precursors such as NMN and NR. A 2021 study published in Cell Metabolism found that NMN supplementation improved insulin sensitivity and muscle-related metabolic measures in postmenopausal women with prediabetes.
A 2016 study published in Nature Communications found that NR supplementation increased whole-blood NAD+ levels in healthy adults.
Why Inject NAD+ Instead of Taking Oral Supplements?
Oral NAD+ precursors such as NMN and NR can raise NAD+ levels and have human research behind them. These supplements work by giving the body building blocks that can be converted into NAD+.
NAD+ injections offer a different delivery model. Instead of going through digestion first, injectable therapy bypasses the digestive system and delivers treatment through subcutaneous administration.
This may support faster uptake, more predictable delivery, and a different pharmacokinetic profile compared to oral supplements.
Injections vs. Oral NAD+ Precursors
| Category | NAD+ Injections | NMN / NR Supplements |
|---|---|---|
| Delivery | Subcutaneous injection | Oral capsule or powder |
| Digestive bypass | Yes | No |
| Use case | Therapeutic repletion and targeted support | Gradual maintenance support |
| Speed | Typically faster | Typically more gradual |
| Provider oversight | Recommended | Often self-directed |
At Lifted Health, NAD+ injections are subcutaneous and self-administered at home after proper onboarding. Many patients are interested in NAD+ injections for energy, mental clarity, sleep quality, metabolic support, and proactive longevity.
Potential NAD+ Injection Benefits
NAD+ injection benefits are usually discussed in the context of cellular health, energy production, and aging support. Individual results vary, and benefits depend on your baseline health, lifestyle, consistency, and provider-guided plan.
Cellular energy support
NAD+ supports mitochondrial function, which plays a central role in how your cells generate usable energy. This is why many patients explore NAD+ injections when dealing with low energy or age-related fatigue.
Healthy aging support
Because NAD+ is involved in DNA repair, sirtuin activity, and cellular stress response, it is often positioned as part of a broader longevity strategy.
Metabolic support
NAD+ is involved in metabolic regulation and insulin-related pathways. Some people use NAD+ therapy alongside weight loss or metabolic health programs.
Cognitive and mental clarity support
Patients often report interest in NAD+ injections for mental clarity, focus, and cognitive performance. While experiences vary, this is one of the most common awareness-level reasons people look into NAD+ therapy.
Who Is a Good Candidate for NAD+ Injections?
NAD+ therapy is not a one-size-fits-all treatment. It may be a strong fit for people looking for proactive support around energy, aging, and cellular health.
The best candidates are usually people who want a provider-guided longevity strategy rather than a random supplement stack.
- Adults experiencing fatigue without a clear clinical cause.
- People over 40 interested in proactive longevity support.
- Patients focused on cellular energy, mitochondrial health, and recovery.
- Patients using GLP-1 treatment who want metabolic support during weight loss.
- People interested in combining NAD+ with other wellness treatments such as glutathione, B12, or sermorelin.
Common Lifted Health Pairings
NAD+ injections may be paired with glutathione for antioxidant support, B12 for energy and nutrient support, and sermorelin for broader longevity and recovery goals. A licensed provider can help determine which options make sense based on your health profile.
The Bottom Line
NAD+ is not just a wellness trend. It is a molecule your cells rely on for energy production, repair, and healthy aging. As NAD+ levels decline with age, some people may benefit from a more direct strategy to support cellular repletion.
NAD+ injections offer a faster and more targeted option than oral supplements for people looking to support energy, cellular health, and longevity under provider guidance.
The right question is not whether NAD+ is popular. The right question is whether NAD+ therapy fits your health goals, current symptoms, and long-term strategy.
Frequently Asked Questions
What does NAD+ do in the body?
NAD+ is a coenzyme required for cellular energy production, DNA repair, and the activation of proteins called sirtuins. It supports mitochondrial function, metabolic efficiency, and cellular repair processes throughout the body.
Why do NAD+ levels decline with age?
NAD+ levels decline because production slows while consumption increases. Aging is associated with more oxidative stress and DNA damage, which activates NAD+-consuming enzymes and creates a larger gap between supply and demand.
How quickly do NAD+ injections work?
Many patients report changes in energy, mental clarity, or sleep quality within the first few weeks. Full benefits may take longer and depend on consistency, dose, lifestyle, and individual health factors.
Are NAD+ injections safe?
NAD+ is naturally present in the body, but injectable therapy should still be reviewed by a licensed provider. Safety depends on your health history, medications, treatment plan, and how the therapy is administered.
How are NAD+ injections different from NMN or NR supplements?
NMN and NR are oral precursors that the body can convert into NAD+. NAD+ injections use a different delivery method and bypass digestion, which may offer faster and more predictable support for therapeutic repletion.
Can I take NAD+ injections with other Lifted Health treatments?
Yes, NAD+ injections may be used alongside other treatments when clinically appropriate. Common combinations include glutathione, B12, sermorelin, and GLP-1 medications as part of a broader wellness or longevity plan.
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