Had a relative say he was going to take it as a treatment for his ADHD and he’d read some articles. This relative is all over the place with legit ideas mixed with ones I don’t think have the scientific backing. I thought about looking it up like I usually would and just felt tired (there are so many fake sites and articles about medical stuff to sift through…). But someone here maybe already researched it or has actual background on the subject? For all I know, this is a completely well known and mundane treatment for it.

  • givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    Why the big scary lead up? Niacin flush is uncomfortable but not risky

    Yeah…

    But uh, we did it for “reasons” in the military and no matter how much you warn someone, they will think something is seriously wrong.

    So even if someone is taking a low dose, it’s important they understand a whole bunch of weird shit is going to happen for a couple hours.

    At high enough doses, you don’t just secret thru urine, it comes out thru your skin, pushing out all the junk that clogs your pores and leaving a weird film/coating. And a whole bunch of other stuff people may panic about. Even if they’re not intending to take enough for that stuff to happen

    It’s better to freak out before, and realize it’s not a big deal. That way when you do it, you’re not thinking you’re dying.

        • TheGoldenV@lemmy.world
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          1 month ago

          Flush = Red and hot

          Flush = Remove metabolite

          Two different things. I was happy to use the non shit experience version.

          • givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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            1 month ago

            The first one is the generic meaning for one your skin tends red…

            The second one is “niacin flush”.

            There isn’t two different versions, you just don’t understand.

            https://www.healthline.com/nutrition/niacin-flush#What-is-niacin-flush

            It’s called “niacin flush” because the visible reaction includes “flushing” but it’s more than that.

            If there’s “no flush niacin” that just means the advertised dosage isn’t enough for what the vast majority of people taking niacin are taking it for.

            They intentionally take a dose high enough to trigger a “niacin flush” because some of the junk it pushes out of your skin, are the metobolites that would make you test positive on certain urinalysis tests.

            • TheGoldenV@lemmy.world
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              1 month ago

              Huh, well that’s interesting. I guess my info from the E3 mafia was incorrect after all.

              Or I’ve forgotten in the intervening 20 years. Either way, point to you!

              • frongt@lemmy.zip
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                1 month ago

                See there’s your problem, you were supposed to listen to the E-4 mafia!

      • jordanlund@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        The no flush niacin is good if you’re B-3 deficient, but it doesn’t carry enough for therapy use.