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- An amino acid and precursor to dopamine, norepinephrine, and epinephrine (catecholamines).
- Plays a role in cognitive performance, stress resilience, and mood regulation, especially under demanding conditions.
š Evidence from Studies
1. Cognitive Performance Under Stress
- Multiple studies show tyrosine can improve cognitive performance when the brain is under stress (e.g., cold, sleep deprivation, multitasking).
- Deijen & Orlebeke (1994): Tyrosine improved working memory and tracking tasks in young adults during stress.
- Neri et al. (1995, U.S. Army): Tyrosine improved alertness and reduced fatigue during extended wakefulness in military personnel.
- Mahoney et al. (2007): Showed tyrosine preserved working memory during multitasking under psychological stress.
Takeaway ā Works best when catecholamine levels are taxed, like during stress or fatigueānot as much under normal conditions.
2. Mood & Stress
- Some evidence tyrosine reduces perceived stress and improves mood in acutely stressful environments.
- Shurtleff et al. (1994): Improved mood and performance during a demanding cognitive battery.
- Banderet & Lieberman (1989): Tyrosine improved mood and reduced stress in cadets during cold exposure.
3. Sleep Deprivation & Fatigue
- Neri et al. (1995): Military personnel stayed more alert with tyrosine despite sleep loss.
- Magill et al. (2003): Reported improved vigilance under sleep deprivation.
4. Physical Performance
- Results are mixed.
- Struder et al. (1998): No consistent improvement in endurance or exercise performance.
- Some trials suggest tyrosine may help with thermoregulation in heat or cold exposure.
5. ADHD, Depression, and Clinical Use
- Tyrosine is a dopamine precursor, so researchers looked at psychiatric conditions.
- Depression ā No strong benefit in general populations; may help in dopamine-related subtypes.
- ADHD ā Small trials showed inconsistent results; stimulants are much more effective.
- Parkinsonās disease ā Limited and weak evidence as a supportive adjunct, not a treatment.
š Dosing in Studies
- Typical dose range: 100ā300 mg/kg body weight daily in divided doses.
- Example: ~7ā20 g/day for a 70 kg adult in research trials.
- Over-the-counter supplements usually: 500 mg ā 2 g per serving.
- Often taken before stress, exams, or sleep-deprivation tasks.
ā ļø Safety
- Generally well tolerated.
- High doses may cause GI upset, headache, or restlessness.
- Should be used cautiously in people on thyroid medication or MAO inhibitors (can affect catecholamine metabolism).
ā Bottom Line
- Best evidence: Tyrosine helps maintain cognitive performance and mood under stress, fatigue, and sleep deprivation.
- Limited evidence: Everyday use for mood, focus, ADHD, or exercise performance.
- Safe in typical doses, but more effective as a situational enhancer than a daily ānootropic.ā


