What is Niacinamide?

Category: Supplements

false

Niacin is converted to niacinamide in vivo, and though the two are identical in their vitamin functions, niacinamide does not have the same pharmacologic and toxic effects of niacin, which occur incidental to niacin's conversion. Thus niacinamide does not reduce cholesterol or cause flushing

Reported purpose & perceived effectiveness
Purpose Patients Evaluations Perceived Effectiveness
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis 5 1
Acne breakout 4 0
General health 3 0
Multiple sclerosis 3 0
Acne 2 0

Show all 19 reasons taken


  • Major
  • Moderate
  • Slight
  • None
  • Can't tell

Side effects

Side effects as an overall problem

Side effects as an overall problem
Severity Evaluations Percentage
Severe 0
Moderate 0
Mild 0
None 5

Commonly reported side effects and conditions associated with Niacinamide

Side effect Patients Percentage
None 1

Why patients stopped taking Niacinamide

Multiple reasons could be selected

Reason Patients Percentage
Other 3
Course of treatment ended 1
Did not seem to work 1
Personal research 1
See all 6 patients who've stopped taking Niacinamide

Duration

Stopped taking Niacinamide

Duration Patients Percentage
1 - 6 months 3
6 months - 1 year 2
5 - 10 years 2
Adherence
Adherence Evaluations Percentage
Always 4
Usually 1
Sometimes 0
Never taken as prescribed 0
Burden
Burden Evaluations Percentage
Very hard to take 0
Somewhat hard to take 0
A little hard to take 0
Not at all hard to take 5
Cost per month
Cost per month Evaluations Percentage
$200+ 0
$100-199 0
$50-99 0
$25-49 0
< $25 1
Not specified 4
Last updated:
There are no evaluations for Niacinamide.