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ImmuneModerate Evidence

Glutathione (GSH / L-Glutathione / Gamma-Glutamylcysteinylglycine)

Glutathione is a tripeptide and the body's most abundant endogenous antioxidant, present in virtually every cell at millimolar concentrations. It regenerates other antioxidants (vitamins C and E), detoxifies drugs and carcinogens, and supports immune function. Liposomal oral forms raised whole blood GSH by 40% in 2 weeks (Sinha et al., 2018). Levels decline with age.

FormBlends Peptide Context

Reviewed May 14, 2026

Use Glutathione peptide guide as a decision-support page, not a shortcut. Its job is to frame benefits, dosing, evidence strength, sourcing, and safety boundaries in one place, especially where the search overlaps with peptide therapy. A useful reader should leave with better questions about clinician oversight, evidence quality, safety limits, cost, pharmacy path, and what changes for their own health history.

  • Confirm whether the page is discussing approved care, compounded access, off-label use, or research-only context.
  • Check the date, evidence quality, safety limits, and whether newer clinical or regulatory updates may change the answer.
  • Ask a licensed clinician how the information applies to your history, medications, labs, goals, and risk profile.

Clinical decision snapshot

Glutathione authority snapshot

Glutathione is evaluated by mechanism, evidence quality, regulatory status, practical access, and safety questions a licensed clinician would need to review before use.

Oxidative stressDetoxification supportImmune function optimizationAge-related GSH decline

Evidence signal

Meaningful evidence with limits

Regulatory reality

Not affected by peptide compounding restrictions

Safety screen

Abdominal cramps, bloating, nausea (oral forms, mild), Injection site reactions (IV/SC), Allergic reactions including rare anaphylaxis (IV) should be reviewed in context.

This page currently connects to 6 source-backed evidence items through visible references or structured citation data.

Decision path

What is the supervised-review path for Glutathione?

Glutathione should be evaluated by evidence quality, safety status, source quality, dosing context, and whether the goal fits a legitimate clinical pathway. This page is a research and decision aid, not a self-prescribing guide.

Peptide
Glutathione
Category
Immune
Evidence
Meaningful evidence with limits
FDA status
Not FDA approved

Step 1

Check evidence level

Glutathione's role as the body's primary antioxidant is well-established biochemistry. Clinical evidence for supplementation is moderate. Sinha et al. (Eur J Clin Nutr 2018, PMC: PMC6389332) showed liposomal GSH raised whole blood levels by 40% and enhanced NK cell killing in 2 weeks. Sechi et al. (1996, PMID: 8938817) showed 42% disability improvement in early Parkinson's with IV GSH. However, a 2009 RCT (Hauser, PMID: 19230029) found no efficacy difference versus placebo in Parkinson's.

Review evidence

Step 2

Screen safety context

Abdominal cramps, bloating, nausea (oral forms, mild), Injection site reactions (IV/SC), Allergic reactions including rare anaphylaxis (IV) should be discussed in light of history, dose, and source.

Check side effects

Step 3

Confirm access route

If this is research-only or not directly offered, compare clinic and provider routes before taking action.

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Last updated: April 6, 2026

Typical Dosage

IV: 600-2,000 mg per session, 1-3x per week. Subcutaneous: 200-400 mg, 2-3x per week. Liposomal oral: 250-500 mg daily. Plain oral: 250-1,000 mg daily (lower absorption). NAC (as precursor): 600-1,800 mg daily oral.

Administration

Intravenous infusion, Subcutaneous injection, Oral (liposomal), Oral (reduced)

Typical Cost

$20-80/month (oral/liposomal); $100-200/month (SC injection); $200-900/month (IV sessions)

FDA Status

Not FDA Approved

Half-Life

Approximately 10-14 minutes plasma half-life after IV administration. Endogenous intracellular half-life is much longer (hours to days depending on tissue).

Onset of Action

IV effects immediate. Oral liposomal GSH raises measurable blood levels within 1-2 weeks. Plain oral takes 4-8 weeks for measurable increases.

Bioavailability

IV: 100% (immediate). Oral plain: approximately 20-30%. Liposomal oral: up to 6x higher plasma levels than plain oral. Subcutaneous: high but slower absorption.

About Glutathione

Glutathione (gamma-L-glutamyl-L-cysteinyl-glycine) is a tripeptide with CAS number 70-18-8 and molecular weight 307.32 Da. It's the most abundant intracellular antioxidant in the human body, present at 1-10 millimolar concentrations inside cells. What makes glutathione different from other antioxidants is its role as a regenerator. When vitamin C or vitamin E gets oxidized while neutralizing free radicals, glutathione reduces them back to their active forms. This makes it the central hub of the entire cellular antioxidant network. Without adequate GSH, other antioxidants can't recycle, and the whole system degrades. The bioavailability problem has historically limited oral glutathione supplementation. Plain oral GSH gets broken down by stomach acid and intestinal peptidases before it can be absorbed intact. This is where liposomal technology changed the equation. Sinha et al. (European Journal of Clinical Nutrition 2018, PMC: PMC6389332) showed that liposomal glutathione raised whole blood GSH by 40%, erythrocyte GSH by 25%, and plasma GSH by 28% within just 2 weeks. It also increased PBMC GSH by 100% and enhanced NK cell cytotoxicity. A 2025 study showed liposomal formulations achieving 6x higher plasma concentrations than plain GSH. The Parkinson's story is instructive about GSH's evidence level. Sechi et al. (1996, PMID: 8938817) gave IV GSH 600 mg twice daily to 9 early Parkinson's patients for 30 days. All showed improvement, with disability scores declining by 42%. Effects lasted 2-4 months after stopping treatment. But when Hauser et al. (Movement Disorders 2009, PMID: 19230029) ran a proper randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial with IV GSH 1,400 mg 3x/week for 4 weeks, there was no efficacy difference versus placebo. The treatment was well-tolerated, but the positive open-label results didn't hold up. The GlyNAC approach (glycine + N-acetyl cysteine) has gained traction from Dr. Rajagopal Sekhar's work at Baylor College of Medicine. By providing both the rate-limiting amino acid for GSH synthesis (cysteine via NAC) and glycine (the other amino acid constituent), GlyNAC supplementation showed improvements in oxidative stress, mitochondrial function, inflammation, and body composition in elderly subjects. IV glutathione drips have become a staple at wellness clinics, typically at 1,000-2,000 mg per infusion. The plasma half-life is only about 14 minutes (Aebi et al., 1991, PMID: 1907548), so the effects of a single IV session are transient. This is why some practitioners prefer subcutaneous injection (200-400 mg, 2-3x per week) or daily liposomal oral supplementation for sustained levels. Glutathione was not affected by the FDA's peptide compounding restrictions. It's available as a dietary supplement, through IV clinics, and through compounding pharmacies. The FDA has warned against using dietary-grade glutathione for sterile injectable preparations due to impurity and endotoxin risks, so compounding pharmacies should use pharmaceutical-grade bulk substance.

How Glutathione Works

Glutathione's redox-active thiol group on its cysteine residue directly neutralizes reactive oxygen species (ROS) and reactive nitrogen species. It cycles between reduced (GSH) and oxidized (GSSG) forms. GSH is a substrate for glutathione peroxidase (GPx), glutathione S-transferase (GST), and glutathione reductase. It's essential for Phase II detoxification (xenobiotic conjugation), supports lymphocyte proliferation and NK cell activity, and maintains mitochondrial membrane integrity. N-Acetyl Cysteine (NAC) provides the rate-limiting cysteine needed for GSH synthesis.

Receptor targets:

No specific receptor. Functions through direct chemical reactivity (thiol group) and as cofactor for GPx, GST, and GR enzyme families.

Benefits

  • Central hub of the cellular antioxidant network (regenerates vitamins C and E)
  • Liposomal form raised whole blood GSH by 40% and enhanced NK cell killing in 2 weeks
  • Essential for Phase II detoxification of drugs, toxins, and carcinogens
  • Supports lymphocyte proliferation and natural killer cell activity
  • Maintains mitochondrial membrane integrity
  • IV GSH showed 42% improvement in disability scores in early Parkinson's (Sechi et al., 1996)
  • GlyNAC supplementation improved mitochondrial function in elderly subjects (Baylor research)

What Does the Research Say?

Glutathione's role as the body's primary antioxidant is well-established biochemistry. Clinical evidence for supplementation is moderate. Sinha et al. (Eur J Clin Nutr 2018, PMC: PMC6389332) showed liposomal GSH raised whole blood levels by 40% and enhanced NK cell killing in 2 weeks. Sechi et al. (1996, PMID: 8938817) showed 42% disability improvement in early Parkinson's with IV GSH. However, a 2009 RCT (Hauser, PMID: 19230029) found no efficacy difference versus placebo in Parkinson's.

Oral supplementation with liposomal glutathione elevates body stores of glutathione and markers of immune function

European Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 2018 · DOI · PubMed

Liposomal GSH raised whole blood GSH by 40%, erythrocyte GSH by 25%, plasma GSH by 28%, and PBMC GSH by 100% in 2 weeks. Enhanced NK cell cytotoxicity.

Randomized, double-blind, pilot evaluation of intravenous glutathione in Parkinson's disease

Movement Disorders, 2009 · DOI · PubMed

IV GSH 1,400 mg 3x/week for 4 weeks was well tolerated but showed no efficacy difference versus placebo on primary Parkinson's outcome measures

High-dose intravenous glutathione in man: pharmacokinetics and effects on cyst(e)ine in plasma and urine

European Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1991 · DOI · PubMed

IV GSH plasma half-life of approximately 14 minutes. 2 g/m2 raised plasma GSH from 17.5 to 823 umol/L with rapid clearance.

PubMed evidence trail

Research sources used to frame this page

For Glutathione, FormBlends checks the page topic against primary trials, systematic reviews, guidelines, and current PubMed-indexed literature where available. These citations are context, not a claim that every study applies to every patient.

Potential Side Effects

  • Abdominal cramps, bloating, nausea (oral forms, mild)
  • Injection site reactions (IV/SC)
  • Allergic reactions including rare anaphylaxis (IV)
  • Bronchospasm (rare, IV)
  • Long-term zinc depletion (GSH interferes with zinc absorption)
  • Potential hepatotoxicity with high-dose IV in patients with liver disease

Drug Interactions

CompoundInteractionSeverity
Chemotherapy (cisplatin)GSH has been studied as an adjunct to reduce cisplatin nephrotoxicity and neurotoxicity. Theoretical concern about reducing chemotherapy efficacy. Always consult oncologist.moderate
NitroglycerinGSH may potentiate vasodilatory effects.minor
Zinc supplementsLong-term high-dose GSH may deplete zinc. Consider zinc co-supplementation.minor

Who Is Glutathione For?

Women

Growing interest for PCOS (reducing oxidative stress), fertility support, and menopausal symptom management. Not recommended during pregnancy or breastfeeding at supplemental doses due to lack of safety data, though it is naturally produced by the body.

Adults Over 50

GSH levels decline with age, making this a core longevity target. The Baylor GlyNAC research (glycine + NAC) specifically targeted older adults and showed improvements in oxidative stress, mitochondrial function, inflammation, and body composition. Particularly relevant for neurodegenerative disease prevention.

Athletes

Not on the WADA Prohibited List. Considered a naturally occurring substance and dietary supplement. Used for recovery, reducing exercise-induced oxidative stress, and immune maintenance. No anti-doping concerns.

Regulatory Status

FDA Approved

No

Compounding Legal

Yes

2026 HHS Status

Not affected by peptide compounding restrictions

Glutathione was NOT part of the Category 2 peptide ban. It remains available through compounding pharmacies using pharmaceutical-grade bulk substance. The FDA has warned against using dietary-grade glutathione for sterile injectable compounding due to impurity concerns. Available widely as an oral dietary supplement.

Last verified: 2026-04-06

Stacking Options

Glutathione is commonly stacked with the following peptides for enhanced results:

Conditions Addressed

Oxidative stressDetoxification supportImmune function optimizationAge-related GSH declineNon-alcoholic fatty liver disease (research)Parkinson's disease (research)Exercise recovery

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Frequently Asked Questions

What is Glutathione?
Glutathione is a tripeptide and the body's most abundant endogenous antioxidant, present in virtually every cell at millimolar concentrations. It regenerates other antioxidants (vitamins C and E), detoxifies drugs and carcinogens, and supports immune function. Liposomal oral forms raised whole blood GSH by 40% in 2 weeks (Sinha et al., 2018). Levels decline with age.
What are the benefits of Glutathione?
Central hub of the cellular antioxidant network (regenerates vitamins C and E). Liposomal form raised whole blood GSH by 40% and enhanced NK cell killing in 2 weeks. Essential for Phase II detoxification of drugs, toxins, and carcinogens. Supports lymphocyte proliferation and natural killer cell activity. Maintains mitochondrial membrane integrity. IV GSH showed 42% improvement in disability scores in early Parkinson's (Sechi et al., 1996). GlyNAC supplementation improved mitochondrial function in elderly subjects (Baylor research).
What is the typical dosage for Glutathione?
IV: 600-2,000 mg per session, 1-3x per week. Subcutaneous: 200-400 mg, 2-3x per week. Liposomal oral: 250-500 mg daily. Plain oral: 250-1,000 mg daily (lower absorption). NAC (as precursor): 600-1,800 mg daily oral.
What are the side effects of Glutathione?
Common side effects include Abdominal cramps, bloating, nausea (oral forms, mild), Injection site reactions (IV/SC), Allergic reactions including rare anaphylaxis (IV), Bronchospasm (rare, IV), Long-term zinc depletion (GSH interferes with zinc absorption), Potential hepatotoxicity with high-dose IV in patients with liver disease.
How much does Glutathione cost?
$20-80/month (oral/liposomal); $100-200/month (SC); $200-900/month (IV). Through a compounding pharmacy: $100-200/month for subcutaneous injection protocol.
Is Glutathione FDA approved?
Not FDA approved. Glutathione was NOT part of the Category 2 peptide ban. It remains available through compounding pharmacies using pharmaceutical-grade bulk substance. The FDA has warned against using dietary-grade glutathione for sterile injectable compounding due to impurity concerns. Available widely as an oral dietary supplement.
How strong is the evidence for Glutathione?
Glutathione's role as the body's primary antioxidant is well-established biochemistry. Clinical evidence for supplementation is moderate. Sinha et al. (Eur J Clin Nutr 2018, PMC: PMC6389332) showed liposomal GSH raised whole blood levels by 40% and enhanced NK cell killing in 2 weeks. Sechi et al. (1996, PMID: 8938817) showed 42% disability improvement in early Parkinson's with IV GSH. However, a 2009 RCT (Hauser, PMID: 19230029) found no efficacy difference versus placebo in Parkinson's.