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NAC Doesn’t Add to Cardiac Rehab for Cognition

April 30, 2026by Chris Aiken, MD0
Exercise alone does the heavy lifting

STUDY: https://doi.org/10.1186/s13195-026-02062-z

STUDY TYPE: Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial

FUNDING: Canadian Institute of Health Research

Background

N-acetylcysteine (NAC) is a precursor to glutathione, the brain’s main antioxidant. Oxidative stress drives vascular cognitive decline, so boosting glutathione is a plausible target — and NAC crosses the blood-brain barrier. This trial tested whether adding NAC to an exercise-based cardiac rehabilitation program could improve cognition in patients with vascular mild cognitive impairment.

The Study
  • 59 adults with coronary artery disease and mild cognitive impairment
  • Randomized to oral NAC (2400 mg/day, titrated over four weeks) or placebo for 24 weeks, all while enrolled in a supervised cardiac rehabilitation program.
  • The primary outcome was a composite executive function score; secondary outcomes included memory, attention, and global cognition (Montreal Cognitive Assessment).

Both groups improved on executive function over time, but NAC added nothing over placebo (treatment effect B = -0.04, essentially zero). No secondary cognitive outcomes differed between groups. Both groups also improved on non-verbal memory and global cognition, with MoCA scores rising more than 2 points.

NAC was generally well-tolerated; nausea was the one adverse event significantly more common in the NAC group (about 14% during ramp-up vs. 0% on placebo).

Practice Implications
  1. Exercise has powerful pro-cognitive effects, so no surprise that NAC wasn’t able to add to that. Still, the evidence for NAC’s cognitive benefits is slim.
  2. NAC has small trials in depression, schizophrenia, and other psychiatric disorders, but their inconsistent results leave us uncertain of its role. However, there is a signal in that data. NAC works better when inflammation is high (hs-CRP ≥ 3 mg/L) or when taken for longer than 4–6 months.

Here are lab-tested products for NAC.

— Chris Aiken, MD
Director, Psych Partners
Editor in Chief, Carlat Psychiatry Report

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