Realfoodology - NAD+, Detox, Fertility & More: Why This Molecule Matters So Much | Dr. Greg Kelly of Qualia
Episode Date: May 27, 2025251: Today I’m joined by Dr. Gregory Kelly, VP of Product Development at Qualia Life. We dive into NAD+—why it’s crucial for energy, aging, and overall vitality—and how to know if your levels ...are low. We also talk about detox, fertility, B vitamins, and what sets Qualia’s NAD+ apart from the rest. If you're curious about longevity or navigating the supplement world, you won’t want to miss this one. I’ve been using their products for years and trust them more than most on the market. Qualia | Go to qualialife.com/REALFOODOLOGY for up to 50% off your purchase and use code REALFOODOLOGY for an additional 15%. Topics Discussed: What is NAD+ and why is it important for energy and aging? How can I tell if my NAD+ levels are low? What makes Qualia’s NAD+ supplement different from others on the market? Can NAD+ supplements support longevity and mitochondrial health? Are supplements from Amazon safe or effective? Timestamps: 00:00:00 – Introduction 00:02:14 – What is NAD+ 00:06:12 – NAD+ and mitochondrial health 00:07:59 – NAD+ for lifespan and vitality 00:13:06 – NAD+ and longevity 00:16:56 – NAD+ for detox and stress 00:20:01 – How to naturally boost NAD+ 00:22:15 – NAD+ and fertility 00:24:23 – NAD+ and whole-body health 00:26:35 – How NAD+ is made in the body 00:27:49 – What makes Qualia NAD+ different 00:31:45 – MTHFR gene and B vitamins 00:35:11 – B vitamins’ role in NAD+ 00:36:11 – Why Niagen® is used 00:37:18 – Signs of low NAD+ 00:40:04 – NAD+ research and studies 00:46:15 – Caffeine and NAD+ 00:48:15 – NAD+ dosage and usage tips 00:53:21 – Balancing NAD+ safely 00:55:06 – Fake supplements on Amazon Further Listening: Stop Aging + Enhance Focus | Greg Kelly of Qualia Sponsored By: Qualia | Go to qualialife.com/REALFOODOLOGY for up to 50% off your purchase and use code REALFOODOLOGY for an additional 15%. Check Out Qualia: Qualia | Go to qualialife.com/REALFOODOLOGY for up to 50% off your purchase and use code REALFOODOLOGY for an additional 15%. Instagram Podcast Check Out Courtney: LEAVE US A VOICE MESSAGE Check Out My new FREE Grocery Guide! @realfoodology www.realfoodology.com My Immune Supplement by 2x4 Air Dr Air Purifier AquaTru Water Filter EWG Tap Water Database Produced By: Drake Peterson
Transcript
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On today's episode of the Real Foodology podcast.
I need to do other things in addition to the good lifestyle and diet choices.
Hello, friends.
Welcome back to another episode of the Real Foodology podcast.
I am your host Courtney Swan and today's guest is Dr. Gregory Kelly.
He is the VP of product development at Qualia Life.
He's also a naturopathic physician and he's the author of the book Shape Shift.
I'm a huge fan of Qualia Life Supplements. In fact, they're one of the only ones that I actually
trust and personally take in my own life, which is why I love bringing them on here and doing a
deep dive into their supplements. Qualia has a product called NAD Plus. So we talk about what
NAD is, what is it used for in the body? How it helps with longevity and aging?
What are signs and symptoms that you might have declining levels of NAD?
What NAD will do for you as far as how you'll feel in your body?
We dive into what makes NAD Plus different than other ones on the market.
And I was really fascinated by this and I'm about to go take my NAD Plus right now because
I haven't taken it yet today.
Stay tuned till the very end.
We share a code that you can use to order Qualia products for 15% off.
We mentioned some other products in there that I really love and that I personally take
and use every day.
And you can use that code for all of them.
So make sure you stay tuned till the very end to get that code.
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guys.
Greg, thank you so much for coming back on. It's such a pleasure to have you back. It
was such a great episode that we did before. And so I'm excited to dive into NAD today.
Yeah, I think it's a super interesting area. So I'm excited to share some with you and
to our listeners today.
Yeah. So, okay, so admittedly for me, NAD is something that I've been hearing about
for a while. But you know, we hear about so many different supplements and so many different
things to take. And sometimes even for myself, I have a hard time differentiating between like,
okay, what are the things I really need to do versus the things that maybe just
are like trends and they're going to come and pass.
But it seems like NAD has some really, really cool research behind it,
especially for longevity.
So can you explain what NAD is and what it's used for in the body?
Yeah, so going back to when I was doing my pre-med and first year of naturopathic school, biochemistry
classes would have taught NAD is having two pivotal roles.
One is it's needed to kind of carry the energy in food so that at some point mitochondria
can turn it into energy.
So think of that as one, like NAD, you know, super important to make cellular energy.
The other is NAD can have a P tagged onto it.
So NADP would be the way it shows up in a chemistry book.
And when that happens, it's involved in building molecules and helping cells detox.
So glutathione as an example, which you would know. I'm sure many listeners, it's super important molecule inside cells to help them with antioxidant
defenses to detox things from the environment.
And in that NADP role, the core NAD molecules is involved in that, like protection and building
other molecules.
So those are the classic things. But then
late 90s, there's this other group of uses for NAD became more and more well established
in scientists like a David Sinclair, who I'm sure some listeners would know of. And these
are thought of as consumption uses. So those first two I mentioned, the NAD molecule kind of just toggles
back and forth between two states. In biochemistry, that's called redox. You don't really need to know
it. But in these consumption uses, the molecule is literally devoured and broken apart to fuel an
enzyme. And the enzymes that were found to be dependent on NAD include something called sirtuins, and David Sinclair
was the original researcher, or his lab was, on those.
And they're involved with a lot to do with cellular stress and presumably longevity.
Then eventually what are called PARPs.
And again, listeners don't need to know that, but PARPSA enzymes used to repair DNA, which
is crazily important.
We want our DNA just over time as it replicates itself.
There can be drift and errors that kind of get introduced into the code.
And we have enzymes that repair that.
And the NAD molecule is food for those enzymes, so to speak.
So those two uses, I think, were why by, say, like 2005 or 2006, NAD was starting to
show up in scientific studies connected really strongly to longevity.
And then I think the really pivotal study was actually David Sinclair's lab in 2013,
where when they did something to boost NAD in animals, they found those animals live
longer and were way healthier.
So all of a sudden, there was this direct link to, oh, maybe we should do things to
fuel the pipeline, so to speak, so that our bodies can maintain more youthful levels of
NAD through the aging process.
And maybe we won't get all the benefits those animals had, but we will get some of them.
So that is kind of the big picture journey.
But for listeners, just to reiterate,
like NAD is crucial for making energy,
for helping cells protect themselves and build molecules,
and then to fuel different things that cells rely on
to keep themselves healthy,
no matter what the stress is or damage to DNA.
Okay, that's fascinating. So you mentioned energy a couple times.
So my brain always just goes straight to mitochondria.
So my assumption would be that NAD is having an effect on our mitochondria.
Is that true?
Yeah, yeah. So NAD, there'd be a lot of that molecule actually stored inside our mitochondria and
some outside the mitochondria as well.
But yeah, the core...
So ultimately what mitochondria do is they convert the stored hydrogens, which are electrons,
in food into cellular energy or ATP.
And NAD is what carries most of those hydrogens.
So the NAD plus becomes NADH.
It basically accepts that,
and then that H is what powers the mitochondria, the hydrogen.
Okay, amazing.
And so when people take NAD,
will they feel a remarkable difference in their energy
or is it more just something that is subtle
that they would notice?
I would use the idea of more subtle. It's not like a stimulant.
Yeah, so it's not like you're going to have...
Right. Yeah. Okay.
But it's super common that people, I know taking Kauai NAD Plus as an example,
the number one thing I hear from people is a sense of feeling more energy, but more maybe in that
vitality or not fatigued sense than like that jittery energy type of caffeinated or stimulant
effect.
Okay, that's amazing. I love that word vitality so much because it just gives this picture
of what I think more of like is lifespan because so many people are talking about longevity
in the sense of like, for example, I hear the Dave Asprey's of the world say like, of what I think more of is lifespan. Because so many people are talking about longevity
in the sense of like, you know, like for example,
I hear the Dave Asprey's of the world say like,
I'm going to live to 150.
And then I see, you know, the contrarian people saying,
well, I don't want to be here for 150 years.
Like I would rather not have to live that long.
But this is where I come into the conversation of,
you know, lifespan, which I think is so important
that not enough people are talking about is the quality of life while you're here.
My assumption would be that NAD would really help with that, like you said, vitality so
that while you're here on earth, no matter what phase of life you're in, you're going
to have the energy to show up for the things that you want to do and have clarity to show
up the best for the work that you do, etc.
It's all about having that vitality for life so that you can show up for things that you
want to and need to in life.
Yeah, absolutely.
I don't know who introduced it, but I've seen the idea once in a while of something called
six span.
And the general idea is that's the time towards the end of our life.
And for some people, maybe not even close to the end, it could be many, many years before,
that we have some degree of disability or chronic issue that's impacting us severely
enough that we don't actually get to live our life to our fullest.
And one of the interesting things is that that number of years in the six band category has been increasing
fairly dramatically.
And especially in women, in the latest study I saw in the US, I want to say over the last
10 to 15 years, six band has increased by two years in women.
And on average, somewhere more than a third
of our years after age 60 are spent
in a six span kind of state for most,
for the average Americans, certainly not,
I hope for most of your listeners.
Yeah, yeah, I think most of my listeners are here
because we desire to thrive in life, right?
And that means, in all areas of our life
and looking to improve our vitality and our quality of life.
And that looks like, you know, taking care of our diet
and getting really good sleep and, you know,
paying attention to stuff like this.
Like when NAD comes on the market going,
oh, that sounds like something maybe I need to be doing
in order to continue down this life path so that, you know,
I use my parents as an example all the time.
I mean, my parents are in their seventies
and they're still hiking with me, they're still skiing,
they're still doing all the things
that we did together growing up.
And it's so amazing,
because my hope is that they'll still be doing that
when I have grandkids around.
And so that is really what I personally am striving for
because I don't want to be bedridden
or finding myself in a wheelchair
or on 20 different medications by the time I'm hitting my 60s or 70s.
Absolutely. I'm all on board with you there.
My dad actually didn't live as long even to make it till 70.
And the last, I know, handful of years after he retired,
he would have struggled just to navigate a big airport
just from his weight and health. So he was like, I'm done traveling.
So yeah, I think all of us probably listening to this call have examples in our life of people
who we may love but whose health trajectory we may not want to duplicate.
Yeah. Yeah. And, you know, Western traditional medicine has told us,
oh, that's just aging. That's just what happens. You know, you just age and all these things decline.
And while obviously there is a truth to some of that, I don't believe that that is all of our fate
and the truth about the fact of the matter
that that's what's actually happening.
And I don't think that we're taking care of our diets and our lifestyles in the way that we should be.
And so this is why personally I was super excited to do this episode because NAD just really intrigues me and I don't know much about it.
And so I wanted to learn about all the ins and outs of it and how I know, into my 70s and 80s. Yeah, and I think what before we dive back into NED, what you just hinted at, I think
to me is really important. And it's, I would almost put it in the storytelling category,
right? Like we have these stories like, oh, aging is inevitable, or, you know, this is
what happens. And my desire for Dr. Gregg, at least least is to be a better storyteller to myself and
people I care about. And I remember whenever I would have seen Finding Nemo originally
in the theaters, there's a scene and I might not have the exact, you know, scene perfectly
accurate, but he ends up with these sea turtles and they're in the Gulf Stream and one of
them has a surfer voice and he's talking to them.
I think the sea turtle says something like, oh dude, I'm like 120 years old and still
young, that type of thing.
Ever since then, my story is always like, oh, I age in sea turtle years.
I love that.
The counterpoint to aging in dog years.
Whether that matters or not, like, who knows?
But I think the stories we tell ourselves and the things we believe
do color the results we can get in life.
Absolutely. I completely agree.
I think there's so many different factors to longevity and higher quality of life.
And I think just one of them is diet and obviously taking care of your health,
but there's so many other things, you things, your mindset and all of that.
Okay, so, or sorry, were you going to say something?
I was going to say, let's just dive back into NAD.
So another reason, as it became more connected to longevity,
and just for listeners, NAD is not something you could just go into
your doctor's office or a lab core request and say, oh, run my NAD levels.
It's generally been a hard to measure thing done in university settings or research settings.
But with the attention on longevity, there have been more and more studies that have
looked at NAD levels of different people at different ages.
And one of the consistent findings is that NAD levels decrease progressively as we get older. Occasionally,
I'll hear people say, oh, what about exercise? Does an exercise help? And the answer is like,
yes and no, right? So one study I thought was super interesting was they compared NAD
levels in red blood cells among sprinters, older sprinters, older long distance runners,
and then sedentary people.
And the sprinters had the best levels on average, the long distance runners, the next best,
sedentary not so great.
So exercise was clearly playing a role.
And that said, all of these are still progressively declining.
So the 70-year-old sprinter had much higher levels than a 70-year-old sedentary person, but much lower levels than a 40-year-old sprinter, as an example.
And I know I've done before and after NAD testing on myself.
And you generally think I do pretty healthy things, and sleep, exercise.
I'm not a sprinter, but I do exercise.
And my levels on their own,
without doing something like quiet NAD,
I can't keep in an optimal range,
just through good lifestyle.
And for listeners, I'm in my early 60s,
so that I'm working against time, right?
So if I want my levels to be more like, you know,
a younger Gregg's would be that I need to do other things
in addition to the good lifestyle and diet choices.
Okay, yeah, I mean, that's a really good reminder.
Well, cause as with most of these things,
we do know that NAD declines over time.
And why is that?
Is it just in a natural progression
that happens while we age?
Yeah, it's not really, it's not diet, right? So my diet, I'm probably getting as many things
that would help my cells build it at this point in my life as I was 30 years ago, because my diet
really hasn't changed that much. So it's really more about one, like our cells, is the cell's
ability to make it degraded a little bit?
And the answer is probably yes.
Another big reason is those consumption uses that I mentioned.
There's probably more fuel needed for those than there was, say, 30 years ago.
So because of that, the NAD molecules that my cells are making are just getting broken
apart quicker, right?
So there's just more demand.
And then there's other things that play into it.
You would know of the concept of inflammation, but inflammation can cause also consumption
of a lot of the NAD our cells would make.
And then we talked about zombie cells, you and I, in the past too, right?
And zombie cells, so senescent cells would be the accurate name for them scientifically,
can consume a lot of NAD.
They can be voracious consumers of it.
And so they're using more than their fair share of the resources, so to speak.
And we build up more, in general, zombie cells as we age as well.
So you have all these different factors playing in that make it really hard for ourselves
to stay well-filled with the NAD molecule as we get older.
Yeah, that's really fascinating. And you brought up inflamaging and this is something that
all of us just living in the world that we live in and we're being exposed to so many
different things, pollution, off off gassing of our furniture,
you know, pesticides, like you name it,
all this stuff that I talk about,
which can all lead to,
I think can lead to the senescent cells, right?
And then can also lead to this, yeah, inflammation.
And, you know, I obviously never say any of this
to scare people because, you know,
we can only control so much,
so we can't live in fear about it,
but there are things that we can do
in order to decelerate some of that kind of stuff and take care of ourselves in other ways,
and one of them would be taking NAD. Yeah, and there's a few other big names besides David Sinclair
that are scientists that have specialized on NAD and in ways to maintain healthy levels. One of them is Dr. Charles Brenner. And he's
famous for discovering how nicotinamide riboside, which is an NAD booster, can be turned into
NAD. He was the one that identified those enzymes, the ones that do the work.
And I had an opportunity at one point to speak to him for another podcast. And one of the
things he strongly believes based on the research, and he's much more focused as a scientist,
was that when you think of NAD, the main thing you should think of is it's what our cells rely on
when they're metabolically stressed or stressed in other ways.
Without enough, they're just not resilient.
It's just a really central molecule for allowing them to respond healthily to stress.
Going back to, I guess, the zombie cells.
One of the things that senescent cells do that gives them that nickname of zombie cells
is they secrete stressful
compounds, often very inflammatory, into the environment around them, which act to stress
healthy cells.
And if a healthy cell has not got enough resilience, it also becomes a zombie cell, right?
And that's one of the reasons zombie cells propagate and kind of, you know, like a snowball
rolling downhill as we get older.
And NAD would be one of the things that would allow them to say, I got this, I can handle
this stress and not be zombified by you.
So it's just super important that just like us, like I don't know, you know, two days
from now, something really stressful may happen in my life or environment that I'm not planning for.
And our cells are like us.
They can get stressed out by many of the same things that you talk about.
Radiation, poor nutrition, social stress even can affect our cells.
And, you know, often they don't know it's coming, right?
So we need them to have the resources available
so when stress does occur, they can say, I
got this.
Yeah, I love that.
And you had mentioned, so there are natural ways too.
What are just some natural ways that we can build NAD?
Obviously, you mentioned too that it's better to supplement so that we can get to the optimal
levels.
But just out of my curiosity, what are ways also that we just naturally build NAD? Yeah.
So the N in NAD stands for what's nicotinamide.
But that for people, they probably would recognize that there's a vitamin called niacinamide.
Nicotinamide is just another way of saying that same.
Niacin, which is the flushing B3, also can be made into the N, right? So those two, what I think of as the classic forms of vitamin B3,
are the old ways, but they can help for sure build the NAD molecule.
The amino acid tryptophan, believe it or not,
goes through like 11 different steps,
but it can be made into the N molecule eventually.
Interesting.
Tryptophan is connected to so many different things the more I learn.
It's so interesting.
I know it's a precursor to HTP, right?
There's so many, yeah.
Tryptophan is a funny one.
I hear about it a lot, actually.
There's a couple different routes tryptophan can go.
And most tryptophan we consume goes into that 11-step pathway.
But then a whole bunch of different things can be made off of that.
But the endpoint can also be making the end so we can make NAD.
It also can fuel another pathway that goes into the HTP, serotonin, melatonin, if you
like, shunted in that direction.
And the other interesting thing about tryptophan is that we don't really
get large amounts in our diet. So some amino acids like glycine or tyrosine, we might get
like, you know, someone, even a moderate protein diet is getting, you know, 10, 15, 20 grams
of. But a diet rich in tryptophan might only be only be somewhere less than a gram, for sure.
So it's also an interesting amino acid in that we don't have to supplement a lot to
really make a big impact on it, where to move the needle on something like glycine, we might
need to take grams of it as an example.
But yeah, you're right.
It's a really interesting thing because it plays into mood and sleep and inflammation
and NAD and all kinds of other things.
Yeah, it's really fascinating. So I want to ask you about NAD and fertility and if there's
any connection there. I'm personally, my listeners know that I'm on what I'm calling my year
of like a fertility journey because I'm really hoping to be pregnant by the end of this year.
And again, my assumption is because this is repairing DNA, it helps with energy levels,
it helps with mitochondria, that it would help with fertility.
And is there any sort of connection there?
You know, I often talk about my, I don't have any studies that come to mind, but I know
it has been looked at for things.
And it's one of the things is that reproduction takes a lot of
energy, like cellular energy, right? ATP. And those cells often can almost age prematurely
because of stress and other things. So I don't want to make up science, but I'm pretty sure I've seen things in
the past. These would be animal studies where maintaining more optimal levels of NAD has been
connected to fertility. I'm not aware of any human studies though that have looked at that.
Yeah, that makes sense. I mean, I guess just in general, like I said, and this is just me,
and my personal just lens and assumption is that if it's helping repair DNA and it helps with ATP production and, you know, is
in those pathways helping with the mitochondria, my assumption would be that it would have
a positive effect at the very least on your eggs and your cells.
Yeah, and I think it would also play into, so one of the things is a framework, the hallmarks of aging that, you know, mitochondria
and inflammation and gut dysbiosis and telomere shortening and senescence are all kind of woven
into that and NAD is connected to most of those hallmarks. So, and the reason it is, is because
when we don't have enough of it, then cellular function acts in an older way. And with reproductive cells, they often are really voracious energy-dependent cells.
And so they tend to suffer, just like our brain does, more than some other cells
because they're so reliant on ATP, as an example.
That makes sense.
Hopefully, we'll be seeing more studies on this moving forward
as we've started slowly in science,
making the connections and realizing that we can't just silo out every little,
you know, different mechanism in the body
and also silo out different body parts because, you know, we're realizing it's all connected.
You know, it's very fascinating.
This is why I love the study of holistic and naturopathy,
which you've studied and know very well,
is that we're looking at the body as a whole
and realizing that if it's affecting one thing in our body,
it's going to have a cascade effect
on everything else in the body.
And it's just, I love that.
And I hope science goes down that path further.
Well, and I know what I would think of as the old time nature pass
back when I was a student in the early to mid 90s,
were super interesting because they didn't know biochemistry,
you know, like it was not their thing, right?
They learned something different
back when they would have got their degrees.
But there was this strong belief
that our health was dependent on the health of our tissues and organs,
and that their health was dependent on the health of our cells.
So while they didn't know, like say the biochemistry of NAD, and a lot of that didn't exist,
even when I was in naturopathic school, that recognition that when we do things to build health from that lower level,
at more a holistic level, good things tend to happen,
and often in many, many different systems, right?
And I know my general approach as a naturopath
would have been along the lines,
and this oversimplifies it for listeners,
but it would be like, okay, in general,
if we give the body more resources,
more of the things it relies on,
and remove obstacles to using them or that are impairing its function,
which can be toxins or things that you talk about all the time with your audience,
that combination, more resources, removing obstacles, almost always, really good things happen.
Yeah. Yeah, exactly.
It's like you give the body the tools and things that it needs in order to function properly.
It wants to be in a state of health and it will figure out a way to do that if given the right environment and the right tools.
Yep, absolutely.
So then I was just going to say we didn't complete like how to make an AD.
Oh, yeah. Let's finish.
So there's the old B3s, the tryptophan, but then there's these newer compounds that appear
to be more efficient in allowing our cells.
So one of those is nicotinamide riboside, which I mentioned connected to Dr. Brenner,
and another one is NMN, which is more connected to David Sinclair.
And those are one step or more closer to the final NAD molecule than the older B3s.
They probably also have different impact in the gut microbiome than those older ones.
And it does look like certain tissues in our body have preferences.
So some tissues, the kidney as an example, I think,
actually has a preference to using the fleshing niacin to make NAD. Other tissues may be a different one. So, you know, in general,
I know when that's the case, when cells can use a lot of different things to do something,
I like to give them all those different things and then let them figure out how to use them.
So, you know, I know at Qualia, we would take the approach that's applying a blend of these
different ways to build it would
be our preferred way of doing it. Okay, and you helped recently formulate the Qualia NAD+.
Can you tell us about that? What makes it so innovative? Yeah, so Qualia NAD+, uses Niagen,
which is the clinically studied form of nicotinamide riboside, both of the old types of B3 as well,
for that portfolio reason I mentioned. And then we combine it with a bunch of things that help
those molecules progress through their pathways to get and be made into NAD, because
cellular work always uses enzymes. So enzymes are the workhorses.
And so if we would take NR as an example,
it still has to go through two enzyme steps
before it can be made into NAD.
And flushing niacin, it's three niacinamide,
the non-flushing, it's two,
and every single one of those enzymes uses ATP, every single one. So, NAD is super important to make
ATP, but ATP is crazily important to make it NAD molecules. And so, much of the rest of what we add
in are cofactors like the full B complex, magnesium magnesium that are critical in allowing ourselves to
both make and use ATP. So that's one of the things that makes the
qualia product distinctive. So it's that those two features that we
combine a blend of building block molecules and then a variety of
nutrients to help cells do the work they need to be able to turn those
molecules into NAD. And because of that, when we've studied ours, ours has consistently worked to
boost NAD levels quite dramatically. That's amazing. What are some of the compounds that
you've put in there that you found have really made a difference? So one of the more interesting things, so that different, I mentioned different tissues,
you know, like so much in the body is tissue specific, even enzymes.
So one, the molecule or the enzymes that would turn the NMN molecule into NAD,
which everything passes through at some point or another, in the brain,
caffeine actually allowed that enzyme to work better.
We put what I think of as a microdose of caffeine from an organic coffee berry extract in there
to help that because helping the brain to make NAD is super important. It's the most energetically
demanding organ in our body. We have a small amount of Resveratrol
because Resveratrol also helps with the recycling
of the breakdown products, the consumption byproducts,
like returning those into NAD.
Magnesium, I know, you know,
magnesium, most people think,
oh, I love magnesium, it's super important.
But one of the things
that I always surprised I never hear when people talk about magnesium is that it's really
a mitochondrial mineral, first and foremost. A lot of it's stored in mitochondria, and
it's because it's needed to make ATP, but it's also always needed for ATP to be active.
So whenever, you know, listeners, whenever you hear ATP,
always think ATP magnesium,
because it's that complex that allows ATP to do its work.
Awesome, okay.
And then we put,
did 20 to 25% of the other B vitamins,
because all the other Bs, the whole complex,
not just B3 and R's are important in converting food ultimately into ATP.
So the two focus points of the Quai NAD Plus are building NAD
but also building the ATP so that you can build NAD.
I love that and that's super fascinating and makes amazing, it makes great sense.
So I'm curious from the lens of the B vitamins.
So I think a lot of my listeners can relate to this too.
So I have MTHFR gene.
So I have to be super careful about the sourcing of the Bs
that I take because of my undermethylating that's happening.
For these, would these forms of vitamin B,
like the B12 for example, be okay for somebody
that has
MTHFR?
Yeah, so that's a great question.
So do you know the idea of vitamers?
Have you heard that term?
So like vitamin, right?
Vitamin B1, B2.
But many vitamins have more than one form in our bodies, so in our cells.
And so when that's the case, they're called vitamers,
these different forms, right?
So B12 as an example, you know, exists as a methyl cobalamin
and also a denisyl cobalamin.
Like those two forms would be what are ultimately used
in enzymes in our body.
Folates have a bunch of vitamers forms,
including a methylated form,
a form before the methylated form and others. And foods, not all foods, but many, definitely all
animal foods would contain all the vitamins. Plants, not always. So even B3 would have niacin,
the flushing vitamin form, niacinamide, the non-flushing, the catenamide
riboside.
These are all different forms that would have that vitamin activity, so vitamins.
Yeast as it turns out would contain all of the vitamin forms as well.
In the Qualia product, we actually use an activated yeast to supply the B vitamins.
And the way labeling requires, we have to label what was fed to the yeast, but we don't get to
label what they produced. So it will show folic acid on the supplement packs on the product,
but that yeast extract would actually contain the whole family of folates.
would actually contain the whole family of folates. Oh, wow. Okay. And obviously, so it would be okay for somebody who has an issue with
methylation.
Yeah.
Okay. Oh, that's so fascinating. Because I was wondering about that because I'm actually
looking at the label right now and I can see all this like from culture. And I was so curious
about that because I've been trained to look like, okay, is that vitamin B12? Is it a, uh, what's the name of the adenocobalamin?
Yeah, adenosylcobalamin, which is sometimes called cobalamide, but adenosyl is usually how it's
labeled. And that, that has a different role compared to the methylcobalamin, which is the, um,
I think of the methylcobalamin as much more studied for the brain and nervous system,
where adenosyl has slightly different roles.
And an animal food, this activated yeast, something that's basically converting the
core vitamin into the forms it uses is going to have the whole portfolio.
So it's one of the reasons, like the real foodology, right? Your podcast, like food just is more complex.
Yes.
Like there's an inherent, you know, synergy and wisdom in food that often,
you know, doesn't occur when we create these things in isolation.
Absolutely. Yeah. That's, I talk about this all the time.
And I find that fascinating. So I guess my other question is then, can I,
cause I, on the days that I've been taking NAD+,
I don't take my B complex,
and I'm asking this because I'm sure many other listeners
will be curious about this too.
Is it overkill to take your B complex and this as well?
Like, is this enough of the vitamin,
the B vitamins for you to get what you need?
It would certainly be providing more than adequate amounts of
any of the B3 vitamin family, but it's only 20 to maybe 28% of the other B vitamin
family. So it would depend on an individual. For many of us that's
sufficient to augment what we're getting in a good diet. For some people they
feel, as an example, some people love taking a lot of vitamin B1, like 50 milligrams
or more and will notice that neutropically in the brain as an example. So each individual would need
to kind of make that call, but we're definitely covering all the bases in a way to really fill
in the gap between an average diet and what would be a much better
diet for all of these.
Okay.
And I'm curious too, also looking at the label, why, and you might have already answered this,
but I didn't get a clear answer that I think that I heard.
Why did you use Niagen?
Yeah, so Niagen is basically the brand name of something called nicotinamide riboside chloride.
And it's a crystalline form, which means it's really pure and really stable.
And because of that, it's the one that's been used in something like 80% of all the research
on nicotinamide riboside, and as as I know every single human study on NR. And it's a really
expensive form of nicotinamide riboside because it's patented and has been so intensively studied.
And because we wanted to make the best product possible, we decided that we wanted to use that
and partner with the supplier. They sell it themselves under the brand name of TrueNiogen.
Oh, I've seen that brand, yeah.
That would be the exact same thing that we're using in the Qalya NAD+.
But then you're getting all the plus with that as well.
Yeah, correct.
Yeah, everything else added in.
So what are the consequences of declining NAD plus levels?
Is this something that people would see as signs and symptoms that their body is declining in NAD plus levels? Like, is this something that people would see as signs and symptoms
that their body is declining in NAD?
Yeah, I always like to go and start just at,
like, what's the classic vitamin B3 deficiency things, right?
And so they were, I think I learned them as the 3Ds,
but sometimes it's called the 4Ds.
But the classic things going way back
that led eventually to the discovery of vitamin B3
were one was the idea of dementia, but not in a modern sense. Like dementia as it was being used
back in the 1930s for that deficiency was more, you know, brain fog and mood. But just think really
strong cognitive challenges showing up. The second D was dermatitis.
So there's a really red, scaly skin rash
that would eventually develop.
And the third D was diarrhea.
And the fourth D is death.
So like that would be the final.
And what seems to be the case with mild or insufficiency is that it
tends to still show up in those three areas, digestion, skin, and cognition slash mood.
And so, in cognition slash mood, I also put that sense of energy and vitality because that is what
our brain is what gives us that sensory experience. So those are the main areas.
Sleep would be another that could be an early warning.
Feeling like we're not bouncing back well from exercise
could be another, right?
Any of these things that start to have to do
with cellular energetics, but cognition especially, right?
So fatigue would be your classic one.
Like feeling fatigued doesn't necessarily mean
our cells are depleted of energy,
but our brain is feeling like they are.
Wow.
Okay, I'm like, I need to be more consistent
with my NAD+.
For sure, I love, whenever I have you on the podcast,
it makes me so excited about the different,
I mean, I love all the quality of products.
And we talked a lot about last time, I mean, I love all the quality of products.
We talked a lot about last time how I take mine almost every day.
I call it, this is just my personal thing, I call it my natural adderall because it really turns on my brain.
And every time we do these episodes, I'm so motivated then to take these supplements that you talk about.
And for good reason. I mean, this one, I'm like, you know, the NAD sits on my counter and I right now
admittedly probably take it like two or three times a week.
But I'm like, and I need to get on this every day because I'm starting to notice a
little bit like I'm feeling more fatigued.
Sometimes I don't bounce back from my workouts as much as I used to.
And yeah, so I'm excited to get back on it like full force.
Oh, awesome. One other thing, and this is pretty new research,
and I think it was actually sponsored by Nestle's,
that big food and chocolate company.
But the gist of the study, and it was in animals,
so it's never completely sure it'll translate to humans,
but that niacinamide, that form of NAD booster
that is also, along with niagen, built into
CoiNAD, was really important for muscle satellite cells, which are the stem cells in muscle
tissue.
And it was somehow activating those without making NAD, like in a completely different
way. And so while NAD is the core story of things like these N-containing precursors,
again the other interesting thing in that study is nicotinamide riboside. So niagen
didn't work nearly as well. It was really the niacinamide that was needed for these specific type of stem cells.
And so when I see things like that, it also makes me go back to, again, that wisdom of food. Food
has all these things in it, maybe not as much as we would need to have that action, but it also was
encouraging to then have that as more almost justification for why the Qualia approach to providing this
portfolio of different end containing or NED boosting things is a wiser way to go.
Yeah, I love that.
Well, and this is what I love so much about Qualia.
I mean, there's very few, I have to be honest, there's very, very few supplement companies
on the market
hands down, like I just love all of the formulations you guys make because in my experience everything I've taken has worked really well. And then it's so cool to have you come on and then
you talk about the science behind why you put all these together and you know, this
is where my nerdy science brain kind of comes in where I'm like, oh, it's so cool to hear
why you put all these different things in there versus other things and to see that
it really works.
Well, and I think that really works part is so important and overlooked.
You know, we do our best to make good products, but then we study our products.
You know, we've so far, you know, just even before we made Qualia NAD,
I took it for 23 days and measured my NAD levels before and after.
And mine went up a hundred and I think it was a hundred and forty nine percent.
So I had a crazy good response to it, right? At the time, the person running the lab is like,
what did you do? I've not seen this. Right? But I took it every day, first thing in the morning,
when I do like my hydration. So I took it at the same time. I did it every day. Yeah.
Is that important to do as well? Should you take it every morning first thing?
I
Don't know if first thing is super important, but we're I'm there's not a lot of circadian or body clock research with
NAD or its building blocks
But there's definitely some that would show, like, our levels in our blood
naturally would peak about early to mid-afternoon. But it would take, you know, it takes hours
from when we take it orally for it to actually make its way through digestion, the liver,
to the blood, right? So taking it in early would help that natural cycle. But the study
that to me is the most predictive potentially was in animals where they either
infuse directly the whole NAD molecule at the beginning, what would be like our breakfast
or sunrise or sunset.
And one of the things that NAD boosting has been most well known for in animals is metabolic
health.
So that's your lipids and your glucose and your triglycerides and liver health.
And what they found in that study was when the timing mattered.
If they gave the NAD infusion at the beginning
of the animal's day,
good things happened with metabolic health.
But if they gave that same thing at the end of the day,
equivalent to like sunset for us,
then bad things happened.
So timing mattered
immensely. And then to check to see, they also then gave niacinamide as well, that precursor,
and the same thing. The timing mattered. So it's not a lot to go on, but I'm often,
I have a strong belief that body clocking translates very well from other animals to us,
because it's all conserved.
We're all evolutionarily wired to the sun schedule.
And so because of that, I choose to do my quality NAD somewhere between first thing in the morning
and, you know, or at breakfast as the default way.
And, you know, I've heard other people have different opinions, but I think
at this point that seems to me the most sound approach.
It makes sense. And then you think about to take into consideration with quality as NAD
plus and how does the B vitamins, I always make sure to take my B vitamins first thing
in the morning so that my food can assimilate the B vitamins to then create ATP because
I don't want to be, you know, energized and creating ATP at like 4 or 5 p.m.
and not saying I'm going to be totally wired, but I think that there is something to waking up your cells in the morning
and allowing them to create that energy throughout the day so that by the time sun goes down and you're getting ready for bed,
your cells aren't like, we're creating all this energy. It's like, no, it's time for bed.
Absolutely. A lot of what B vitamins facilitate is converting food into energy and making
neurotransmitters. And a lot of that is our day jobs, so to speak.
And then I think the other thing is there's, I mentioned earlier, we kind of have a microdose
of caffeine in our product to facilitate the brain making NAD.
Like you, I love call you mind,
but I generally do best when I have any caffeine containing things prior to noon.
Yeah, me too, I'm the same way.
So actually, okay, that does remind me, because I do want to fair amount of people that would consider themselves pretty sensitive to caffeine.
So would this be something, let's ease their minds?
I mean, I'm looking, it's 28 milligrams, so it's not even half a cup of coffee.
It'd be more like somewhere between one-fifth to one-fourth of a 10 to 12 ounce cup of coffee.
Okay. So a very, you know, small amount and
embedded in this like food matrix of the coffee, um, fruit extract, it doesn't seem to be like a,
even at a higher amount because we use, we've used this same extract in quality mind.
It doesn't seem to be like a, a really hyper jittery, you know, like a caffeine-ism type of response to the food
compared to the isolated caffeine.
Yeah, and I can tell the listeners too,
I kind of go back and forth depending on the day
and my needs with mind.
Sometimes I take the caffeine free
and sometimes I take the one with the caffeine.
And just from my experience with mind and taking that,
I don't feel this like crazy jitteriness and neither do I feel with the caffeine.
I don't feel jittery. I don't feel like I've had like a ton of caffeine. I just feel really focused and like energized. And same when I take this NAD plus, it's kind of like similar.
Like I don't even really notice the effects of the caffeine.
Yeah. And for someone that, you know, you know, wants to try it, but is a little leery,
they could always start with one capsule of, you know, the quality NAD or, you know, with
one or two of the quality of mind with caffeine, if they want to give that a try or, you know,
like you mentioned, there's a caffeine-free version of Qualia Mind.
That's also just an amazing product.
Yeah. This is just more like a selfish question for my personal just understanding,
because part of the reason I mentioned earlier that I've only been taking the NAD Plus a couple times a week is because I don't want to over stack too much. Like, would it be OK for me to take the caffeine free quality of mind and the NAD Plus together on the same day?
I mean, obviously you're not a doctor, but just like relatively speaking, you know, or you are a doctor, but you're not my personal doctor.
You can't give medical advice is what I'm saying. Yeah.
Yeah. So I am super comfortable taking the quality of Mind, stacked with the QIA NED.
Frankly, a lot of our products stack together.
I've done it all.
Okay, great.
Yeah.
One of the things we pay attention to would be if someone's stacking multiple of our products,
would they be getting into an amount of a nutrient, a mineral, a vitamin, you name it, that could be potentially
not a great thing.
And so we plan that accordingly when we create our products.
Okay, good.
Because that was kind of my question is, I'm someone who takes a decent amount of supplements
and I've always been really careful about not over-stacking them.
And so I would take mine one day and NAD the other day, but I miss taking my mind every day.
It helps a lot.
Well, and then things that I'll do just periodically too.
I love the idea with weightlifting or exercise in general of like a detraining week,
or sometimes it's called deloading, but that can be, you know, for weight lifting, it could be
once every eight to 12 weeks, a whole week where you just don't lift weights, or they can be
deloading, which means you lift weights, but you're just doing more of the yoga of weights, like a lot,
less weight. And I think that's a sound approach even to supplementation that, you know, for
something like quality of mind as an example, because of circumstances through the year,
there's invariably a week here or there
that whether it's preparing for something
that doesn't want me to be taking a bunch of herbs
or travel or some other reason
that I would naturally have a week off from Qualia Mind.
And our general recommendation is always five days on,
two days off anyways, right?
So there's a break put in.
For quality NAD, I think of that like a magnesium.
A quality magnesium is something that's super safe to take every day, but it's also fine
to take a deloading or detraining week off every couple of months as well, which again,
just naturally happens for me.
So, you know, and sometimes we also have a product called Qualia Mitochondrioplasts that,
you know, sometimes I'll shift that front and center and let these other things kind of
recede for a few weeks to a month. So. That's really smart. Yeah, I like that.
So, oh, I'm curious too. Is there a possibility, can you ever take too much NAD? Can you like
quote unquote overdose on it?
Yeah. So the NAD precursors, like the Fleshing Niacin has been used in crazy high amounts
for managing cholesterol for many, many decades, right? And the non-fleshing has also been used in high amounts and at really high amounts,
so when you get into say like two grams of those, then it can definitely start to compromise other
things like insulin resistance, if like would be something that some people, not everyone,
when they take really high amounts of those precursors can get. And I think the framework that some people, not everyone,
And I think that would be the case with NAD boosters in general. You know, whether it's the older ones, like I mentioned, or the newer ones like NMN or NR,
I don't think it's prudent to chase boosting NAD to the end-all and be-all.
And one of the things, you know, I mentioned we've done two studies.
The original lab we used is called GINfin infinity, they make finger stick kits to do it.
And they've done enough testing that they have a sense of okay, this is an optimal level, but they also have a too high level that they've identified.
And their optimal is really coded based off what the healthiest, say, university age younger people
would have.
But then there's suboptimal and they have other levels.
And mine is an example, taking the QIA NED Plus, moved me squarely into their optimal
range.
And it was the same with the other initial people that I had do the end-of-one testing
with me before we measured it.
So with the amount that's applied in QIA-NAD, I'm really comfortable that we help move people
over time into that just right zone without the concern of too much. Okay. And is that something
where just taking consistently, you don't have to worry about like it compounding and then all of a sudden you have
really high levels of NAD. Like does it kind of like balance itself out? I'm having a hard time
asking a question, but do you know what I'm saying where you don't have to worry about it
compounding essentially? Yeah. And what can happen for sure, like in studies typically there's a
little bit, there's some improvement within a week.
There's even more within a month.
There's then slightly more by eight weeks.
So it tends to ramp and then level off over time.
So I know with the amount we use,
that wouldn't be a concern.
But if someone said, oh, my quality NAD is great,
instead of doing their suggested dose,
I'll just do four or five times that much, then maybe you start to get into that
too much and that you are building, you know, like too much.
And you had mentioned, you know, like your methylation status.
One of the ways that our body uses to get rid of excesses of any of the end containing
things, like, you know, so when the niacinamide or any demolecule gets consumed and broken down,
niacinamide is a leftover piece always.
No matter what we built it with originally,
the leftover when it's consumed to repair DNA as an example is niacinamide.
The way our body gets rid of excess niacinamide,
like more than it thinks it needs, is putting methyl groups on it
so that it can be eliminated. Right? So if we take crazy high amounts of these things,
it could really tax our methylation status, which as you appropriately pointed out, some people have
genetic sluggishness through the methylation pathways. Yeah. Okay. Well, that's good to know.
That's fascinating.
Well, I got through all my questions.
Is there anything else about NAD plus,
or just quality in general that you feel like
is important for our listeners to hear?
Yeah, I mentioned quickly in passing
that we did two studies.
So I feel like I should-
Yeah.
So we've done two placebo controlled studies.
So in addition to like, you know, my personal experience and measured NAD levels compared to placebo in both. And the first
study on average, the NAD levels went up 74%. The second study on average was 67%. So we have a lot
of confidence that if, you know, your listeners take quality NAD, that they'll get those benefits.
We also looked at symptoms and generally,
symptoms related to cognition, mood, energy, vitality,
improved in both of our studies.
And then the last thing would be more
in the buyer beware category.
The company that actually makes Niagen that we buy it from,
at one point, I want to say within the
last six months, bought a bunch of products on Amazon that claimed to have nicotinamide riboside
in them and then had an independent lab test all of them and only five met label claim, meaning had the amount of NR that the label said they had. And
something like 75% had so, like basically little to none. And especially bad
offenders were any of the liposomal or gummy or those forms. And the reason is,
and nicotinamide riboside, like many compounds, isn't, is somewhat unstable to moisture and light and other things.
And when you make things like gummies and liposomes, you're making it really hard to keep that.
So even if those companies put in the right amount, which I don't know,
but I'll give them the benefit of the doubt they did, they put it into a matrix that's not stable. So because of that, most of these products
that they tested off Amazon claimed to have an arbor.
The user wasn't going to get those benefits.
So I think it's super important for listeners,
whether it's Qualia, NED+, or another product to boost NED.
Qualia, NED+, or another product to boost NED, it's important to know, one, that compound that you're relying on to build NED is actually in the product.
And even better when a company like Qualia has done studies and shown our product actually
does what we built it to do, which is increase the amount of this in your tissues and then give you
actual benefits like more energy.
Yeah.
Yeah, it's a great point.
It's an overall great point that you brought up too.
And I periodically love to just remind my listeners that personally, I won't buy any
supplements off Amazon unless if I know that the company itself is selling
that on Amazon.
Because I just don't, there's so many scammers and fraudulent supplement companies that are
selling on Amazon and there's really no way to check, there's no like checks and balances.
And so you could be buying a supplement that you think is something and it could be something
else,
but like if I went to qual in that that's what the makers of Niagen found was that there was fraudulent
true Niagen, you know, being sold on Amazon that they bought. And, you know, when you when looked at closely,
it's clear that it's fraudulent. But of course, it didn't have any actual NR in it. So yeah, I think it's, you know, I
for things as important as supplements and I love Amazon. I've been an Amazon Prime person for many,
many years but for supplements I like to go directly to the company's website personally
to buy them whenever possible. Yeah, me too. Which actually speaking of, I feel like this is a good
opportunity just to share with the listeners. So if you guys go to qualialife.com slash realfoodology and you can use the code realfoodology,
you'll save 15% off any purchase.
So just buy from them directly.
We don't trust anywhere else.
I don't even know if you can find Qualia anywhere else outside of it, but just know that if
you go to qualialife.com slash realfoodology, you'll save 15%.
And yeah, I mean, this has been an amazing episode.
If you wanna just share with the listeners
where they can find you and where they can find Qualia.
Yeah, so we're qualialife.com.
I periodically host our,
or some guests for our collective insights podcast.
Often I cherry pick people
that are neuroscience backgrounds
or sometimes longevity, but.
Love that.
And then, you know, Instagram is probably the best place
to just, you know, follow Qualia.
We do a lot of education on that channel.
We also do really long form blogs periodically
on our website.
I, you know, as Qualia NAD, as an example of QuietMind,
if you really wanted to go in the weeds
about those products, there's long blogs on our website
where I explain each ingredient in it
and why I think the ingredient was a fit
and why we even chose the amount to include that we did.
So we do our best to be really transparent with our audience.
So again, quality of life dot com or just following us on Instagram.
That would be what I'd recommend.
Yeah. And if you're interested in we talked about mind
and we also talked about those zombie cells, senescent cells.
I actually did another episode with Greg and you can just look it up under real
foodology and you can go back and up under real foodology.
And you can go back and listen to those.
I'm a huge fan of your Cinalytic product.
I'm a huge fan of MIND.
I take that almost every day. helps with my focus and my concentration.
of the game when it comes to supplements. And I'm so grateful that you guys are doing the work
that you're doing and providing such amazing supplements
for people.
Thank you.
And thank you to all you listeners for joining me today.
Yeah, thank you so much, Greg.
Thank you so much for listening
to the Real Foodology podcast.
This is a Wellness Lab production produced
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The content of this show is for educational and informational purposes only. It is not
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