Side-by-side comparison of mechanisms, dosing, interactions, and stacking potential.
| L-Carnitine (ALCAR / Acetyl-L-Carnitine) | L-Glutamine | |
|---|---|---|
| Category | Amino Acids | Amino Acids |
| Standard Dose | 500-2000mg ALCAR daily or 1000-3000mg L-Carnitine L-Tartrate (for exercise performance) | 5-10g daily |
| Timing | Morning on empty stomach for cognitive effects. Pre-workout for fat oxidation/performance. ALCAR for brain; L-Carnitine L-Tartrate for muscle/exercise. | On empty stomach for gut healing. Post-workout for muscle recovery. Dissolves easily in water. |
| Cycle Duration | ongoing | 8-12 weeks for gut healing; ongoing for maintenance |
| Evidence Level | strong_human | strong_human |
L-Carnitine's primary function is transporting long-chain fatty acids across the inner mitochondrial membrane via the carnitine shuttle (CPT-I/CPT-II system) for beta-oxidation. Acetyl-L-Carnitine (ALCAR) additionally donates its acetyl group to form acetyl-CoA (bypassing pyruvate dehydrogenase) and serves as a precursor for acetylcholine synthesis. ALCAR crosses the blood-brain barrier, providing neuroprotective effects through mitochondrial energetics, reduction of lipofuscin accumulation, enhancement of NGF receptor sensitivity, and modulation of synaptic plasticity. It also reduces oxidative stress via upregulation of heme oxygenase-1.
500-2000mg ALCAR daily or 1000-3000mg L-Carnitine L-Tartrate (for exercise performance)
Morning on empty stomach for cognitive effects. Pre-workout for fat oxidation/performance. ALCAR for brain; L-Carnitine L-Tartrate for muscle/exercise.
ongoing
L-Glutamine is the most abundant amino acid in plasma and skeletal muscle. It is the primary fuel source for enterocytes (intestinal epithelial cells) and rapidly dividing immune cells (lymphocytes, neutrophils). Glutamine maintains intestinal tight junction integrity by modulating tight junction proteins (occludin, claudin-1, ZO-1), preventing intestinal hyperpermeability ('leaky gut'). It serves as a nitrogen shuttle between tissues, is a precursor for nucleotide synthesis (purines and pyrimidines), contributes to gluconeogenesis, and buffers ammonia via glutamine synthetase. During catabolic stress (illness, surgery, intense exercise), glutamine becomes conditionally essential.
5-10g daily
On empty stomach for gut healing. Post-workout for muscle recovery. Dissolves easily in water.
8-12 weeks for gut healing; ongoing for maintenance
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