STAGE 08 / THE PUBLISHER
About NAD Order
An independent editorial console for the published NAD+ literature — what it is, and what it deliberately is not.
What this site is
NAD Order is an independent editorial project that publishes plain-English summaries of the peer-reviewed research literature on NAD+ (nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide) and its precursors, NMN and NR. We read the published studies, log what they actually measured, and cite every quantitative claim to its source. The format is an arcade-style research console — a deliberate visual frame for reading the evidence, not a storefront. There is no checkout here, no price, and no product.
What this site is not
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 — not NAD+, not NMN, not NR, not injectables. We do not fill prescriptions, run infusions, or offer consultations. The word "order" in our name is read strictly in the arcade register — an invitation to read the research, a console "continue" prompt — never a commercial order. Our work is editorial commentary on publicly available science, nothing more.
How we handle the evidence
We keep three things rigorously separate: NAD+ itself, its precursors (NMN, NR), and the route of administration (oral, IV, injection). We never describe an oral-NMN or oral-NR trial as "taking NAD+," because the trials dosed a precursor and measured the resulting NAD+. We report regulatory facts as filed — including the unsettled FDA question over NMN's supplement status and the Class I recall of a compounded injectable — without editorializing them into bans or endorsements. Where the human evidence is thin, we say so plainly; the 2025 review concluding that human efficacy data remain limited is part of the record, not a footnote to bury [15].
Why the name
NAD Order frames the literature as a sequence to be read in order — the coenzyme first, then its decline with age, then the precursor and IV evidence, each logged to source. The arcade-console styling is an editorial device for making dense biochemistry legible and honest about its gaps. It signals a position relative to the research — a reading desk for the evidence — not a service, a clinic, or a shop.