NAC is the supplement most people take to top up their body's main internal antioxidant, glutathione. It's a stable form of the amino acid cysteine, which is the rate-limiting ingredient your cells need to make glutathione. Swallow it, your liver and tissues use the cysteine to build more glutathione, and the downstream effects show up in liver function, lung mucus clearance, hangover recovery, skin, and a long list of psychiatric and metabolic conditions where oxidative stress is part of the picture.

Most people pick it up for one of four reasons: to support the liver during heavy drinking, paracetamol use, or any period of elevated toxin load; to thin mucus and reduce flare-ups in chronic bronchitis or COPD; to help with compulsive behaviours like hair-pulling, skin-picking, or nail-biting where it has surprisingly good trial data; or to support fertility in PCOS. It's cheap, well-tolerated, sold over the counter in most countries, and has a pharmacy-grade history (it's the standard hospital antidote for paracetamol overdose), which is unusual for something also marketed as a supplement.

Deep-dive


Dosage:


Here's what you can expect:

For the typical respiratory use (chronic mucus, smoker's cough, recurring bronchitis), the effect tends to show up within 2-4 weeks as thinner mucus that clears more easily. Fewer flare-ups across a winter or year is the more meaningful endpoint, harder to feel day-to-day but real on the data.

For liver support around drinking or paracetamol use, the subjective signal is usually "hangovers feel less brutal" and "I bounce back faster."