ABOUT / THE PUBLISHER
About Meds NAD
An independent editorial project reading the NAD+ research as a console of cited summaries — not a clinic, not a pharmacy, not a store.
What Meds NAD is
Meds NAD is an independent editorial project that publishes summaries of the peer-reviewed research literature on NAD+ — the coenzyme, its oral precursors (NMN, NR, nicotinamide), and the injectable and IV studies. We are not a clinic. We do not employ clinicians and we do not provide medical advice. We do not manufacture, sell, or distribute any product. Our work is editorial commentary on publicly available science.
The site reads the literature as a chrome console reads a signal: each finding tagged by species and route, each number carried back to the study that measured it. That format exists because NAD+ search demand conflates the coenzyme with its precursors and the oral route with injections — and the studies do not. Keeping those distinctions exact is the whole job.
What the name means
The word "meds" in this domain is editorial framing, not a claim about services. Meds NAD does not prescribe, dispense, compound, or sell anything, and it is not a telehealth provider. There is no approved "NAD+ drug" to prescribe: NAD+ and its precursors are sold as dietary supplements, and IV/injectable NAD+ is a compounded, unapproved wellness therapy. The name signals the subject this digest reads — the medicalized wellness market around NAD+ — and the position the publisher takes relative to that literature: a reader of the published record, nothing dispensed and nothing for sale.
How we handle citations
Every quantitative claim on this site — every dose, percentage, duration, and p-value — maps to a numbered source on the references page, drawn from PubMed, peer-reviewed journals, and clinical-trial literature. Where the evidence is strong, we say so plainly; where it is preliminary or contested — oral NAD+'s poor absorption, IV NAD+'s rapid clearance and weak controlled evidence, the contested supplement status of NMN, the Class I recall of a compounded injectable — we flag it just as plainly. We do not state findings the cited studies did not measure, and we make no claim that NAD+ or any precursor treats, reverses, cures, or prevents any disease.