Nac and its effects on dopamine and addiction

Bigbear

The Kodiak
Trusted Member
This is really cool. Its one of those super supplememts that almost do everything but this benefit is would have been skeptical over if I didnt experience it myself. I struggle sometimes with addictions like sugary foods, porn and nicotine. Ive noticed whenever im taking nac its entirely different. I experimented purposely recently and noticed a huge difference. Before taking it I was eating butter tarts and chewing nicorette lozenges like crazy but once I started taking and it kicked in I havent watched any porn or wanted to, I havent ate much junk food, maybe a Lil but nothing close to how it was before, and the nicorette lozenges I cant even handle. Its amazing the nac reduces the dopamine hits you get from these triggering behaviors. Im just taking 600mg a day and I feel a huge effect. I dont take it year round though because eventually I even stop feeling my perscriprion adderall working. Here's so.e chatgpt aboyt it specifically:
 
N-acetylcysteine (NAC) has some interesting effects on dopamine regulation, cravings, and addiction pathways, but they’re indirect — not like dopamine-boosting stimulants.
Here’s the breakdown in plain language:
🧠 How NAC Affects Dopamine
NAC doesn’t increase dopamine directly. Instead, it works through glutamate, another neurotransmitter that strongly influences dopamine release and reward pathways.
1. NAC restores glutamate balance
Addiction, compulsive behaviors, and binge-reward cycles often create a glutamate imbalance in the brain, especially in the nucleus accumbens (the reward center).
NAC:
boosts a transporter system called xCT,
increases extracellular cysteine,
which balances glutamate levels outside neurons.
This makes dopamine responses less chaotic and less reactive to triggers.
2. NAC reduces dopamine spikes from addictive cues
By normalizing glutamate, NAC helps prevent those “reward pathway hyperactivations” when someone encounters:
drugs
porn
gambling triggers
binge food
compulsive behaviors
This means: less craving and less compulsion.
You still produce dopamine normally — just fewer exaggerated spikes.
3. NAC boosts antioxidant protection
It increases glutathione, the brain’s main antioxidant.
Chronic addiction (especially stimulants, alcohol, opioids, nicotine) increases oxidative stress, which alters dopamine neurons.
NAC protects these dopamine neurons, which:
stabilizes mood
reduces irritability
improves recovery from withdrawal
🔥 Evidence in Addictions
Studies show NAC can reduce cravings or compulsive behavior in:
✔️ Cannabis addiction
Pretty strong evidence — reduced cravings, improved abstinence in teens and adults.
✔️ Cocaine & stimulant addiction
Mixed results, but NAC tends to help with craving more than preventing relapse.
✔️ Nicotine addiction
Helps reduce cue-induced cravings.
✔️ Pornography / compulsive sexual behavior
Several case reports and pilot studies show NAC reduces compulsive urges by balancing glutamate.
✔️ Gambling addiction
Some positive results in small trials.
✔️ OCD-like behaviors / hair pulling
NAC helps significantly by modulating glutamate — similar mechanism.
⏱️ How long until it works?
Most people feel:
Less craving in 1–2 weeks
Much stronger reduction at 4–6 weeks
💊 Dosage People Commonly Use
Not medical advice — just what typical research protocols use:
600–1200 mg per day = general wellness, antioxidant
1800–2400 mg per day = addiction, compulsive behavior, cravings
Taken in divided doses (900 mg morning / 900 mg evening).
 
Its mind boggling to me that theres so many addiction problems in the west and something as simple as this isnt known by any doctors or talked about in any rehabs or media. Im just fucking around with it i could only imagine what a real specialist could do with it.
 
Very interesting info - thanks for sharing. It is a staple of mine rotated throughout the year. I have never noticed a reduction in cravings albeit I don't have many to begin with, but would love to smoke if I knew it wouldn't kill me or make me disabled at one point. I quit a long time ago, but did when it was something to do when you stood at a door controlling crowds from coming into the bar for 8 hours straight. I still miss the terrible habit and periodically will have nicorette so I don't get the carcinogens but get the nicotine.
Considering they can IV this antioxidant and the health benefits to your organs and in general killing free radicals, if it is good for addiction - it is a sin they don't use it. It is available at all hospitals for acetaminophen poisoning and a few other forms of poisonings. Considering oral NAC is 10% max, can you imagine if it was given via IV. Considering NAC is picked over glutathione orally as gluathione is useless orally but so in injectable / IV form. I am curious if it is the glutathione (which is usually why it is taken), or if NAC has something else to it? I don't have the answer but I will do a deeper dive when I have time tonight.
Thank you posting this as this may help many people. I have read dozens of Naturopathic books and most touch on oral NAC, and I don't recall one mentioning the benefit of blunting addiction but you are living proof it helped.
 
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