Hi @sc380 , I’m giving Augmented NAC a try right now per the Dr. Tina Peers protocol of 600mg per day. I ramped up for a few days (200mg 2 days, 400mg 2 days) and then on May 7th, 2025, I started taking 600mg per day with an activated charcoal in the afternoon, and I still am taking Augmented NAC to date. June 30th I am having my spike protein antibodies retested, so that will be close to the 2 month mark of 600mg a day.
For reference, April 7th, 2025, my spike protein antibodies were 10,177 and were likely still close to that when I began Augmented NAC exactly 1 month later. On February 28th, 2024 they were >25,000.
A note about taking NAC that I learned from another YouTube video is that NAC works best when not in the presence of protein. So, try to take it 30 minutes prior to a meal.
I will be closely testing every month or so to give a good resolution chart of the impact from Augmented NAC. I’m very happy to share what I learn with everyone here and personally will be interested in visualizing the chart in Excel.
Dr. Peers mentioned that there is some urine test that is capable of testing the spike protein metabolites and that it is a way to identify if you are flushing out spike protein, though I have yet to find what that test is and if it is available to the general public.
I have no idea what rate one should expect to see antibodies decrease once the spike protein is essentially eliminated. I just asked copilot what the rate of decrease would be under normal circumstances:
"The rate at which spike protein antibodies decline varies widely depending on factors like the type of exposure (infection vs. vaccination), age, severity of illness, and individual immune response. That said, here’s a general picture:
-
After natural infection, spike-specific IgG antibodies typically peak within a few weeks and then begin to decline over several months. Some studies suggest a half-life of around 100–120 days, though this can vary.
-
After vaccination, especially with mRNA vaccines, antibody levels also peak within a few weeks post-dose and then gradually wane. A Canadian cohort study found that individuals with hybrid immunity (infection plus vaccination) had more durable and broader antibody responses than those with infection alone.
-
Repeated boosting with the same spike protein sequence may lead to diminishing breadth of response over time, potentially reducing effectiveness against variants.
So while antibodies do decline, memory B cells and T cells often persist longer, contributing to ongoing immune protection even after antibody levels drop. If you’re thinking about immunity longevity or booster timing, I can help you dig deeper into that too."