Methylene Blue
Methylene blue is a phenothiazine dye (methylthioninium chloride) that functions as an alternative mitochondrial electron carrier, bypassing Complex I-III dysfunction via cytochrome c electron shuttling. Low-dose (0.5-5 mg) oral use shows acute cognitive and energy effects; clinical doses up to 2 mg/kg IV treat methemoglobinemia as FDA-approved indication (Clifton 2003). Catastrophic-risk floor triggered by high-dose serotonin syndrome interaction, not intrinsic low-dose toxicity.
Methylene Blue scored 6.2 / 10 (👍 Worth trying) on the BioHarmony scale as a Substance → Pharmaceutical / Drug.
What It Is
Type: Pharmaceutical (phenothiazine dye; low-dose off-label nootropic).
Methylene blue (methylthioninium chloride, MB) is a synthetic phenothiazine dye first synthesized by Heinrich Caro in 1876, making it one of the oldest continuously-used pharmaceuticals in medicine. It gained FDA approval for methemoglobinemia (a blood oxygen-carrying disorder) and has been used historically for malaria, methemoglobinemia poisoning, septic shock (vasoplegic syndrome), ifosfamide-induced encephalopathy, urinary tract antiseptic, and as a research dye for biological staining. Modern biohacker interest revolves around its off-label nootropic and mitochondrial-support applications at microdoses (0.5 to 5 mg oral, 1 to 3 times per week), far below the FDA-approved clinical range (1 to 2 mg/kg IV).
Mechanistically, methylene blue's most important property is functioning as an alternative mitochondrial electron carrier. At physiological pH, it exists in equilibrium between oxidized (blue) and reduced (colorless leucomethylene blue) forms, allowing it to accept electrons from NADH and directly transfer them to cytochrome c, effectively bypassing Complex I through III of the electron transport chain. In tissues with mitochondrial dysfunction (aging, Parkinson's, chronic fatigue, post-viral syndromes), this shortcut restores ATP production and reduces reactive oxygen species accumulation. Rojas 2012 established this mechanism and its implications for neuroprotection. Secondary effects include nitric oxide synthase inhibition (explaining vasoconstriction in septic shock treatment), monoamine oxidase-A inhibition at higher concentrations (the source of the serotonin syndrome warning), and redox cycling that hormetically upregulates endogenous antioxidant defenses at low doses.
The evidence landscape splits into three tiers. Tier 1: FDA-approved clinical use for methemoglobinemia with decades of safety data at therapeutic IV doses. Tier 2: the LMTX/TRx0237 Phase 3 Alzheimer's trials conducted by TauRx; while monotherapy failed, complex secondary analyses showed signal that remains controversial. Gauthier 2016 reported the mixed primary results; Wischik 2015 showed Phase 2 cognitive benefits. Tier 3: preclinical cognitive enhancement (Callaway 2004 rat memory; many in vitro mitochondrial rescue studies) and human anecdotal biohacker reports at microdose. A human fMRI study (Rodriguez 2016) demonstrated increased BOLD signal in memory-associated regions after single 280 mg oral dose, supporting cognitive enhancement at higher acute doses. The microdose-tier biohacker evidence is almost entirely anecdotal community signal, which the BioHarmony framework counts as tier-6 evidence but cannot credit beyond that.
Current status: Actively using at ~1x/week microdose (0.5-2 mg oral) for metabolic dysfunction recovery and cognitive demand spikes.
Terminology
- MB: Methylene Blue (methylthioninium chloride).
- USP: United States Pharmacopeia. Pharmaceutical purity standard required for human use.
- ETC: Electron Transport Chain. The mitochondrial inner-membrane protein complexes that produce ATP.
- NADH: Nicotinamide Adenine Dinucleotide (reduced form). Electron donor for the ETC.
- MAOI / MAO-A: Monoamine Oxidase Inhibitor / Monoamine Oxidase A. The enzyme inhibited by methylene blue at high doses, driving serotonin syndrome risk.
- SSRI / SNRI: Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitor / Serotonin-Norepinephrine Reuptake Inhibitor. Antidepressant classes contraindicated with methylene blue.
- G6PD: Glucose-6-Phosphate Dehydrogenase. Enzyme deficient in G6PD deficiency, creating hemolysis risk with oxidant drugs.
- ROS: Reactive Oxygen Species.
- IV: Intravenous.
- LMTX / TRx0237: Methylene blue derivative (methylthioninium mesylate) developed by TauRx for Alzheimer's Phase 3 trials.
- ETC Complex I: Mitochondrial respiratory chain complex dysfunctional in Parkinson's, aging, metabolic disease.
- NO: Nitric Oxide. Signaling gas modulated by methylene blue.
- 503A: Compounding pharmacy classification for patient-specific prescription compounds.
- fMRI: functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging.
- BOLD: Blood Oxygen Level Dependent. fMRI signal proxy for neural activity.
- FDA: U.S. Food and Drug Administration.
Dosing & Protocols
Dosing information is summarized from published research and community reports. This is not a prescribing guide. Consult a healthcare provider before starting any protocol.
View 3 routes and 6 protocols
Routes & Forms
| Route | Form | Clinical Range | Community Range |
|---|---|---|---|
| oral | Liquid (1% USP, 10 mg/mL) | 0.5-4 mg/kg for clinical indications | 0.5-50 mg for nootropic/metabolic use |
| sublingual | Buccal strip (Troscriptions) or drops held under tongue 30 sec | N/A approved | 0.5-5 mg |
| intravenous | 1% USP solution | 1-2 mg/kg (max 4 mg/kg) | N/A |
Protocols
Nootropic microdose Anecdotal
- Dose
- 0.5-5 mg oral
- Frequency
- 1-3x/week
- Duration
- Indefinite
Nick's protocol. Morning-afternoon timing. Pair with 660-680 nm red light for mitochondrial synergy
Metabolic/cognitive support Anecdotal
- Dose
- 5-15 mg oral
- Frequency
- Daily or 5 days on/2 off
- Duration
- 4-12 week cycles
Chronic fatigue, metabolic dysfunction, post-viral recovery community use
Depression adjunct (research context) Mixed
- Dose
- 15-300 mg oral, doses vary widely in trials
- Frequency
- Daily
- Duration
- 6-8 weeks
Not standard clinical care. Requires psychiatric supervision and SSRI washout
Methemoglobinemia (clinical) Clinical
- Dose
- 1-2 mg/kg IV over 5 min
- Frequency
- One dose; repeat once if needed
- Duration
- Acute
FDA-approved indication. Hospital setting only
Alzheimer's research (LMTX derivative) Clinical
- Dose
- 100-250 mg methylthioninium derivative
- Frequency
- Daily
- Duration
- Long-term in trials
Phase 3 trials showed mixed results; not approved; research context
Photobiomodulation synergy stack Anecdotal
- Dose
- 1-2 mg oral 30 min pre-session
- Frequency
- Per RLT session
- Duration
- Acute
MB absorbs 660-680 nm; red light session boosts mitochondrial ATP vs either alone
How this score is calculated →
Upside (1.68 / 5.00)
| Dimension | Weight | Score | Visual | Weighted |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Efficacy | 25% | 2.5 | 0.625 | |
| Breadth of Benefits | 15% | 3.0 | 0.450 | |
| Evidence Quality | 25% | 2.0 | 0.500 | |
| Speed of Onset | 10% | 4.0 | 0.400 | |
| Durability | 10% | 2.5 | 0.250 | |
| Bioindividuality Upside | 15% | 3.0 | 0.450 | |
| Total | 2.675 |
Upside Rationale
Efficacy (2.5/5.0): Moderate effect sizes for the approved clinical indication (methemoglobinemia reversal) and preclinical cognitive-enhancement endpoints. Rodriguez 2016 showed increased BOLD response in memory regions at single oral 280 mg dose in humans (n=26). Callaway 2004 demonstrated memory consolidation in rats at 1 to 4 mg/kg. Naylor 1986 bipolar maintenance trial showed signal but small n. The LMTX Phase 3 Alzheimer's trials (Gauthier 2016) had mixed results with complex interpretation. For nootropic microdose (0.5 to 5 mg), no formal human RCT exists; the evidence base is community N=many anecdotal. Efficacy is therefore moderate at best for clinical indications, weak for nootropic indications as measured by Cohen's d, but reliably positive in subjective user reporting.
Breadth of Benefits (3.0/5.0): Mitochondrial support (central mechanism), cognitive function (acute clarity, memory consolidation), methemoglobinemia (clinical), potential depression (mixed evidence), metabolic dysfunction recovery (anecdotal), photobiomodulation synergy (novel stacking benefit), antiviral (historical, in vitro), and vasoplegic shock reversal (clinical). Fewer clean indications than wholesale systemic compounds like creatine or taurine, but the mitochondrial bypass mechanism has plausible reach across energy-demanding tissues (brain, muscle, liver, heart).
Evidence Quality (2.0/5.0): Strong for methemoglobinemia (FDA approved), moderate for vasoplegic shock, weak for Alzheimer's (Phase 3 mixed), very weak for cognitive enhancement (human fMRI only), and anecdotal for nootropic microdose tier. No meta-analyses for nootropic use. No Cochrane reviews. LMTX Phase 3 failure weighs negatively. Community N=many signal is meaningful but cannot substitute for RCT. Evidence tier sits at 2 (mechanistic + case/observational) with some tier-3 support from small trials.
Speed of Onset (4.0/5.0): Acute effect within 30 to 60 minutes of oral dose, peak at 2 to 4 hours. Sublingual/buccal formulations onset within 10 to 20 minutes. Full clearance 24 to 72 hours depending on dose. Subjective effects typically last 4 to 8 hours. Among the faster-acting mitochondrial support interventions; comparable to caffeine or nicotine in onset speed but without stimulant activation.
Durability (2.5/5.0): Acute effects wash out with pharmacokinetic half-life (approximately 5 to 6 hours). No chronic accumulation at microdoses. Chronic tolerance develops minimally at community doses. Cycling (5 on / 2 off, or 1 to 3x/week) maintains response. The intervention is on-drug effective, no off-drug reset; repeat dosing required to sustain benefit.
Bioindividuality Upside (3.0/5.0): Responds strongly in metabolic dysfunction, chronic fatigue, post-viral recovery, and cognitively-demanding individuals. Poor responders include those without underlying mitochondrial dysfunction (healthy young adults often report minimal effect), G6PD-deficient individuals (contraindicated), and those on serotonergic medications (contraindicated). Sex and ethnicity differences are primarily driven by G6PD prevalence (higher in Mediterranean, African, Southeast Asian ancestry). Age-response correlation: older adults with age-related mitochondrial dysfunction often report bigger subjective effects than healthy young adults.
Downside (1.27 / 5.00)
| Dimension | Weight | Score | Visual | Weighted |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Safety Risk | 30% | 3.0 | 0.900 | |
| Side Effect Profile | 15% | 2.5 | 0.375 | |
| Financial Cost | 5% | 1.5 | 0.075 | |
| Time/Effort Burden | 5% | 1.0 | 0.050 | |
| Opportunity Cost | 5% | 1.6 | 0.080 | |
| Dependency / Withdrawal | 15% | 1.3 | 0.195 | |
| Reversibility | 25% | 1.0 | 0.250 | |
| Total | 1.925 | |||
| Harm subtotal × 1.4 | 2.408 | |||
| Opportunity subtotal × 1.0 | 0.205 | |||
| Combined downside | 2.613 | |||
| Baseline offset (constant) | −1.340 | |||
| Effective downside penalty | 1.273 |
Downside Rationale
Safety Risk (3.0/5.0): Catastrophic-risk floor triggered by serotonin syndrome interaction potential when combined with SSRIs, SNRIs, MAOIs, or other serotonergic drugs (Ramsay 2007 mechanism; Stanford 2010 clinical cases). The 2011 FDA Drug Safety Communication formalized this warning; however, clinical cases cluster almost exclusively at high-dose IV perioperative use (1 to 2 mg/kg) in SSRI-medicated patients. Community nootropic doses (0.5 to 5 mg oral) are roughly 100x below the threshold and carry far lower practical risk than the warning implies. G6PD deficiency absolute contraindication (hemolytic anemia). Methemoglobinemia paradox at doses above 7 mg/kg. Renal dysfunction with chronic high dosing. Pregnancy contraindicated. Scored 3.0 reflecting the FDA warning class but not the full 4.0 floor because the serotonin syndrome cases are almost entirely dose- and route-specific (high IV + concurrent SSRI), not a general intrinsic toxicity at community doses.
Side Effect Profile (2.5/5.0): Low-dose oral use: mild GI upset (1 to 5 percent), transient headache, blue-green urine and minor tongue/skin staining (cosmetic only), and mild sympathetic activation in sensitive users. At higher doses (>25 mg): more prominent staining, nausea, occasional dizziness, elevated blood pressure. Interference with pulse oximetry (false low SpO2) for up to 6 hours post-dose; critical to flag before surgical procedures. Rare allergic/hypersensitivity reactions. Chronic high-dose: limited long-term safety data. Most users at microdose tier report minimal side effects.
Financial Cost (1.5/5.0): Pharmaceutical-grade 1 percent USP solution (10 mg/mL) $40 to $120 per 30 mL vial; lasts months at microdose. Per-dose cost under $1. Buccal strips (Troscriptions) more expensive but convenient. Negligible ongoing financial burden compared to most biohacking interventions.
Time/Effort Burden (1.0/5.0): Single oral or sublingual dose; under 30 seconds to administer. No meal timing required. No cycling monitoring. Minimal effort.
Opportunity Cost (1.6/5.0): Does not meaningfully interfere with other protocols. Stacks synergistically with red light therapy and NAD+ precursors (NMN, NR). Small opportunity cost from SSRI/serotonergic drug incompatibility: cannot be used by users requiring those medications. Does not support hypertrophy or caloric-restriction protocols differently than baseline. Crowds out nothing meaningful for most biohacker profiles.
Dependency/Withdrawal (1.3/5.0): No physiological dependency documented. No withdrawal syndrome. Mild psychological habituation possible in daily chronic users (subjective "feels off" without dose), but no rebound worse than baseline. Reversible with cessation.
Reversibility (1.0/5.0): Fully reversible. Pharmacokinetic clearance within 24 to 72 hours. No permanent tissue changes at therapeutic doses. Blue-green tinting fades within 1 to 3 days. No documented lasting effects from discontinuation at microdose tier.
Verdict
✅ Best for: Adults with suspected mitochondrial dysfunction, chronic fatigue, post-viral syndromes (long COVID, post-infectious fatigue), or metabolic dysfunction seeking a mechanism-aligned intervention. Cognitively-demanding knowledge workers using microdose as acute mental-clarity tool 1 to 3 times per week. Biohackers pairing methylene blue with red light therapy for mitochondrial synergy, where methylene blue's 660 to 680 nm absorption spectrum directly layers with red light's photobiomodulation. Adults over 50 addressing age-related mitochondrial decline alongside NAD+ precursors (NMN, NR). Emerging clinical use in treatment-resistant depression under specialist psychiatric supervision. Adults with documented methemoglobinemia risk (certain occupational exposures) for therapeutic use under medical guidance.
❌ Avoid if: Currently taking any SSRI, SNRI, MAOI, bupropion, tramadol, dextromethorphan, or high-dose 5-HTP without serotonergic drug washout and clinical guidance (serotonin syndrome risk). G6PD-deficient or untested with Mediterranean, African, or Southeast Asian ancestry (hemolytic anemia risk; test first). Pregnancy or planned pregnancy (teratogenic animal data). Severe renal insufficiency (impaired clearance). Recent methemoglobinemia requiring repeat treatment (paradox risk). Phenothiazine hypersensitivity. Anyone sourcing aquarium-grade, dye-grade, or non-USP methylene blue given heavy metal and solvent contamination risk. Upcoming surgical procedures where pulse oximetry accuracy matters without 24-hour drug-free window pre-op.
Use Case Breakdown
The overall BioHarmony score reflects the intervention's primary evidence profile. These subratings are independent assessments per use case.
| Use Case | Score | Summary |
|---|---|---|
| ✅ Mitochondrial | 8.0 | Alternative electron carrier bypassing Complex I-III; direct ATP restoration in dysfunctional mitochondria |
| 👍 Cognition / Focus | 6.8 | Acute cognitive clarity within 30-60 min; community consistent reporting |
| 👍 Energy / Fatigue | 6.8 | Subjective energy boost within 1-2 hours; mechanism supports chronic fatigue use |
| 👍 Memory | 6.5 | Callaway 2004 rat memory consolidation; Rodriguez 2016 human fMRI BOLD response |
| 👍 Neuroprotection | 6.5 | Mitochondrial rescue mechanism relevant to neurodegenerative; LMTX Alzheimer's Phase 3 mixed |
| 👍 Metabolic Health | 6.5 | Mitochondrial ATP restoration supports metabolic dysfunction recovery |
| 👍 Healthspan | 6.5 | Cross-system mitochondrial benefits support functional aging |
| 👍 Antioxidant / Oxidative Stress | 6.0 | Low-dose redox cycling upregulates endogenous antioxidant systems; biphasic |
| 👍 Longevity / Lifespan | 6.0 | Mitochondrial mechanism consistent with geroscience; no longevity RCTs |
| 👍 Recovery / Repair | 5.8 | Post-viral and chronic fatigue recovery use; mechanism supports cellular stress |
| ⚖️ Mood / Emotional Regulation | 5.5 | Naylor 1986 bipolar trial; anecdotal depression signal; mixed clinical data |
| ⚖️ Depression | 5.5 | Historical and mixed modern clinical evidence; not standard care |
| ⚖️ Anti-Inflammatory | 5.5 | Nitric oxide modulation; mild anti-inflammatory effects |
| ⚖️ Sleep Quality | 5.5 | Mitochondrial support indirect; avoid late-day dosing |
| ⚖️ Immune Function | 5.5 | Historical antimalarial/antiviral; methylene blue inactivates viruses in vitro |
| ⚖️ Cellular Senescence | 5.5 | Mitochondrial rescue in senescent cells preclinical |
| ⚖️ Stress / Resilience | 5.5 | Mild sympathomimetic effect may support acute stress coping |
| ⚖️ Blood Sugar / Glycemic Control | 5.5 | Mitochondrial mechanism supports insulin sensitivity; limited direct RCTs |
| ⚖️ Endurance / Cardio | 5.5 | ATP restoration supports endurance; no athletic RCTs |
| ⚖️ Skin / Beauty | 5.0 | Topical antimicrobial historical use; emerging anti-aging research |
| ⚖️ Autophagy | 5.0 | Mitochondrial stress indirectly activates autophagy; limited direct evidence |
| ○ Telomere / DNA Repair | 4.5 | Some preclinical evidence for telomerase activation at low doses |
| ○ Chronic Pain Management | 4.5 | Fibromyalgia anecdotal; mitochondrial mechanism rationale |
| ○ HRV / Vagal Tone / Autonomic Balance | 4.5 | No direct HRV studies; mitochondrial mechanism indirect |
| ○ Strength / Power | 4.5 | Indirect via mitochondrial support; not primary use |
| ○ Acute Pain Relief | 4.0 | Limited direct evidence; neuropathic pain emerging signal |
| ○ Body Composition / Fat Loss | 4.0 | No direct body-composition evidence |
| ○ Anxiety | 3.5 | MAO-A inhibition at higher doses could worsen anxiety; variable response |
Frequently Asked Questions
How does methylene blue actually work in mitochondria?
Methylene blue functions as an alternative electron carrier that shuttles electrons from NADH directly to cytochrome c, bypassing Complex I through III of the mitochondrial electron transport chain. This is the key insight behind its metabolic rescue properties: when the normal ETC has dysfunction at Complex I (common in aging, Parkinson's, and metabolic disease), methylene blue restores electron flow and ATP production. Rojas 2012 demonstrated ATP restoration in complex-I-deficient cells at micromolar concentrations. Secondary mechanisms include nitric oxide synthase inhibition (explaining vasoconstriction and reversal of vasoplegic shock at clinical doses), monoamine oxidase-A inhibition at high concentrations (explaining the serotonin syndrome warning), reactive oxygen species scavenging at low doses, and redox cycling that upregulates endogenous antioxidant systems. The redox activity is hormetically dose-dependent: low concentrations reduce oxidative stress, high concentrations can generate it.
What's a safe nootropic dose of methylene blue?
The community-standard nootropic microdose is 0.5 to 5 mg oral or sublingual, 1 to 3 times per week, delivered from a 1 percent USP pharmaceutical-grade solution (10 mg/mL). This range is supported by preclinical cognitive-enhancement work (Callaway 2004 in rats showed memory consolidation at 1 to 4 mg/kg) and extensive community N=many biohacker use. Higher doses (25 to 100 mg/day) are used off-label for treatment-resistant depression and metabolic dysfunction but shift the risk profile meaningfully as MAOI activity increases nonlinearly above ~5 mg/kg. The FDA-approved clinical range for methemoglobinemia is 1 to 2 mg/kg IV (roughly 75 to 150 mg for a 75 kg adult), with 4 mg/kg as maximum. Always use pharmaceutical or USP grade; aquarium/dye-industry methylene blue contains heavy metal and solvent contaminants.
Is methylene blue safe? What are the real risks?
Methylene blue is FDA-approved for methemoglobinemia and has an extensive clinical safety record at proper doses, but carries a catastrophic-risk floor at 3.0/5.0 due to serotonin syndrome risk when combined with SSRIs, SNRIs, MAOIs, or other serotonergic drugs. The 2011 FDA Drug Safety Communication was triggered by case reports in surgical patients receiving high-dose IV methylene blue (1-2 mg/kg) concurrently with SSRIs. Community nootropic doses (0.5-5 mg oral) are far below this threshold but the warning is real. G6PD deficiency is an absolute contraindication: methylene blue can precipitate severe hemolytic anemia in G6PD-deficient individuals (most common in Mediterranean, African, and Southeast Asian ancestry). Other risks include methemoglobinemia paradox at doses above 7 mg/kg, renal toxicity at chronic high dose, and blue-green discoloration of urine, sweat, and skin (cosmetic only). Nick's take: most serotonin syndrome concerns in the nootropic community are overblown and cluster at high-dose IV perioperative use.
Who should absolutely avoid methylene blue?
Six populations should avoid methylene blue. G6PD deficiency is an absolute contraindication due to hemolytic anemia risk; test before use, especially with Mediterranean, African, or Southeast Asian ancestry. Concurrent SSRI, SNRI, MAOI, or any serotonergic medication raises serotonin syndrome risk, particularly at doses above 5 mg. Pregnancy (teratogenic animal data; FDA Category X for intra-amniotic use). Severe renal insufficiency (impaired clearance). Recent history of methemoglobinemia requiring repeat treatment (paradox risk above 7 mg/kg). Hypersensitivity to phenothiazines. Also caution with concurrent bupropion, dextromethorphan, tramadol, and certain migraine triptans. Relative caution with high-dose chronic use due to limited long-term safety data at nootropic tier; most human evidence is acute/short-term clinical or anecdotal.
Does methylene blue help with ADHD or cognitive function?
Preclinical and small-human evidence suggests cognitive enhancement, but no FDA-approved ADHD indication. Rodriguez 2016 functional MRI study in humans showed increased BOLD response in memory-related brain regions after single oral 280 mg dose. Callaway 2004 rat memory consolidation evidence. Anecdotal biohacker reports consistently describe acute mental clarity, reduced fatigue, and improved focus within 30-60 minutes of microdose. Mechanism likely combines mitochondrial ATP restoration with nitric oxide modulation affecting cerebral blood flow. Clinical depression trials at higher doses (15-300 mg) show mixed results; LMTX (a methylene blue derivative TRx0237) failed Phase 3 Alzheimer's trials for monotherapy but showed signal in complex secondary analyses. No head-to-head vs stimulants for ADHD-specific use.
Pharmaceutical vs aquarium vs research-grade methylene blue: which?
Pharmaceutical-grade USP is the only acceptable source. Compounded pharmacies (503A) produce 1 percent USP methylene blue solution (10 mg/mL) for medical and legitimate research use; $40 to $120 per 30 mL vial. Aquarium-grade methylene blue (sold for fish fungal infections) typically contains heavy metal contaminants including mercury and cadmium at levels hundreds of times above acceptable human intake, plus industrial solvents from manufacturing. Dye/stain-grade carries similar impurity profile plus biological fixatives. Research-chemical suppliers occasionally offer acceptable-purity product but require independent third-party COA verification. Lookup: RxList methylene blue USP, compounding pharmacies carrying blue-mag or similar USP formulations, or Troscriptions buccal strips (FDA-compliant). Never source from generic Amazon or eBay vendors without USP certification and third-party heavy metal testing.
Will methylene blue turn my urine blue?
Yes, at doses above approximately 10 mg. Urine turns blue-green within 2 to 6 hours of oral dose and the color persists 12 to 36 hours depending on dose and hydration; this is harmless and reflects renal excretion. Skin and sclera (whites of eyes) may develop faint blue tinge at higher doses (50+ mg), resolving within 1 to 3 days. Tongue staining from oral or sublingual administration is immediate and often visible for 30 minutes to a few hours. Sweat can also carry faint blue pigment at high doses. These are cosmetic effects only, not toxicity markers. At the microdose tier (0.5 to 5 mg) used for most nootropic applications, urine color change is typically subtle or absent. Warn surgical teams before any procedure: methylene blue interferes with pulse oximetry readings for up to 6 hours, causing false low SpO2 measurements.
How should I time and combine methylene blue with other protocols?
Optimal timing is mid-morning to early afternoon with a light meal, avoiding late-day dosing due to subtle sympathetic activation. Methylene blue stacks synergistically with red light therapy (methylene blue absorbs 660 to 680 nm light; timing a 20-minute red light panel session 30 minutes post-dose amplifies mitochondrial ATP production beyond either alone, per mechanism). It pairs well with NAD+ precursors (NMN, NR) where methylene blue supplies electrons and NAD precursors provide the carrier substrate. Does NOT stack with SSRI, SNRI, MAOI, tramadol, or high-dose 5-HTP (serotonin syndrome risk). Caffeine stacks neutrally. Do not combine with other nitric oxide modulators (L-citrulline, beetroot, sildenafil) at high doses due to additive vasomotor effects. Cycling is optional but community practice trends toward 5 days on, 2 days off, or 1-3 uses per week to prevent tolerance buildup.
How This Score Could Change
BioHarmony scores are living assessments. New research, regulatory changes, or personal context can shift the score up or down. These are the most likely scenarios that would change this intervention's rating.
| Scenario | Dimension shifts | New Score |
|---|---|---|
| Large RCT (n>500) shows cognitive enhancement at microdose in healthy adults | Efficacy 2.5→3.5, Evidence 2.0→3.0 | 7.1 / 10 💪 Strong recommend |
| LMTX-style Phase 3 Alzheimer's success with clean primary endpoint | Efficacy 2.5→3.5, Evidence 2.0→3.2, Breadth 3.0→3.5 | 7.4 / 10 💪 Strong recommend |
| Published real-world SSRI-interaction fatality at low oral dose in community user | Safety 3.0→4.0, Side Effects 2.5→3.2 | 5.3 / 10 ⚖️ Neutral |
| Independent non-industry Phase 2 RCT for chronic fatigue or long-COVID confirms benefit | Efficacy 2.5→3.2, Evidence 2.0→3.0 | 7.0 / 10 💪 Strong recommend |
| FDA revisits 2011 warning and narrows to high-dose IV use only | Safety 3.0→2.2 | 6.8 / 10 👍 Worth trying (near Strong) |
| Post-marketing renal or hepatic safety signal emerges at chronic high dose | Safety 3.0→3.5, Reversibility 1.0→2.0 | 5.6 / 10 ⚖️ Neutral |
Key Evidence Sources
- Rojas JC, Bruchey AK, Gonzalez-Lima F. 2012, Progress in Neurobiology. Neurometabolic mechanisms for memory enhancement and neuroprotection of methylene blue.. Core mechanism review
- Callaway NL, Riha PD, Bruchey AK et al. 2004, Pharmacology Biochemistry and Behavior. Methylene blue improves brain oxidative metabolism and memory retention in rats.. Memory enhancement preclinical
- Rodriguez P, Zhou W, Barrett DW et al. 2016, Radiology. Multimodal randomized functional MR imaging of methylene blue cerebrometabolic effects in humans.. Human fMRI cognitive evidence
- Clifton J, Leikin JB. 2003, American Journal of Therapeutics. Methylene blue (methylthioninium chloride) clinical review.. Clinical review; methemoglobinemia indication
- Gauthier S, Feldman HH, Schneider LS et al. 2016, Lancet. Efficacy and safety of tau-aggregation inhibitor therapy (LMTX) in mild to moderate Alzheimer's disease: a randomised, controlled, double-blind, parallel-arm, phase 3 trial.. LMTX Alzheimer's Phase 3
- Wischik CM, Staff RT, Wischik DJ et al. 2015, Journal of Alzheimer's Disease. Tau aggregation inhibitor therapy: an exploratory phase 2 study in mild or moderate Alzheimer's disease.. LMTX Phase 2 Alzheimer's
- Ramsay RR, Dunford C, Gillman PK. 2007, British Journal of Pharmacology. Methylene blue and serotonin toxicity: inhibition of monoamine oxidase A (MAO A) confirms a theoretical prediction.. Serotonin syndrome mechanism paper
- Stanford SC, Stanford BJ, Gillman PK. 2010, Journal of Psychopharmacology. Risk of severe serotonin toxicity following co-administration of methylene blue and serotonin reuptake inhibitors: an update on a case report of post-operative delirium.. SSRI interaction clinical case
- Schirmer RH, Adler H, Pickhardt M, Mandelkow E. 2011, Neurobiology of Aging. Lest we forget you: methylene blue.. Historical and pharmacological overview
- Wen Y, Li W, Poteet EC et al. 2011, Journal of Biological Chemistry. Alternative mitochondrial electron transfer as a novel strategy for neuroprotection.. Neuroprotection mechanism paper
- Naylor GJ, Martin B, Hopwood SE, Watson Y. 1986, Biological Psychiatry. A two-year double-blind crossover trial of the prophylactic effect of methylene blue in manic-depressive psychosis.. Bipolar maintenance RCT (historical)
- FDA Drug Safety Communication. 2011. Serious CNS reactions possible when methylene blue is given to patients taking certain psychiatric medications.. FDA warning source
Other interventions for Mitochondrial
See all ratings →📊 How BioHarmony scoring works
BioHarmony translates a weighted expected-value calculation into a reader-facing 0–10 score. 5.0 is neutral (benefits and risks balance). Above 5 = benefits outweigh risks; below 5 = risks outweigh benefits.
Harm-type downsides (safety risk, side effects, reversibility, dependency) carry a 1.4× precautionary multiplier. Harm weighs more than benefit. Opportunity-type downsides (financial cost, time/effort, opportunity cost) are subtracted at face value.
Use case subratings are independent assessments of how well the intervention addresses specific health goals. They are not components of the overall score. Each subrating reflects the scorer's judgment based on use-case-specific evidence, safety, and effect sizes.
Every dimension is evaluated on a 1–5 scale, and the baseline (1) is subtracted before weighting. A perfect intervention with zero downsides contributes zero penalty rather than a residual floor, so top-tier scores are actually reachable.
EV = Upside − Downside
EV = 1.675 − 1.273 = 0.402
EV ranges from −5 to +5. Adding 7 shifts to 2–12, dividing by 12 normalizes to 0–1, then ×10 gives the 0–10 score.
Score = ((0.402 + 7) / 12) × 10 = 6.2 / 10
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