Research quality in the supplement space varies enormously — from rigorous RCTs with hundreds of participants to single-cell studies that have never been replicated in humans. This post examines the clinical evidence for L-Tyrosine specifically, separating what the trials actually show from what manufacturers claim.
The evidence base: what we are working with
Key citations: PMID 25797188, PMID 16040026, PMID 21381854
The clinical evidence for L-Tyrosine is rated Grade B, meaning good clinical evidence from RCTs, some limitations.
How L-Tyrosine produces its effects
Tyrosine is converted to L-DOPA by tyrosine hydroxylase (the rate-limiting step in catecholamine synthesis), then
Understanding the mechanism matters because it explains both the benefits and the limitations. L-Tyrosine works through dopamine metabolites — which is why the effects appear at the timescale they do, and why consistent dosing is more important than perfect timing.
What the numbers mean in practice
The improvement data above represents the average response seen across cited trials. A few important caveats:
Baseline matters. The larger the deficit from optimal, the larger the measurable improvement. Someone with severely depleted levels will see bigger changes than someone already in the optimal range.
Consistency matters more than dose. Missing doses regularly is more damaging to outcomes than taking a slightly lower dose consistently.
Individual variation is real. Some people are genetic non-responders to specific supplements. If you have tracked relevant markers and see no movement at 12 weeks on an adequate dose, the supplement may not be the right choice for your biochemistry.
Interpreting your own blood results
The markers most relevant to L-Tyrosine are dopamine metabolites. If you have a recent blood test, upload it to the SacredBod Analyzer to see where your levels sit and whether L-Tyrosine is likely to be relevant for your specific results.
Summary of the evidence
L-Tyrosine has a clinically meaningful effect on mental fatigue in adults with relevant deficiency or suboptimal status. The evidence quality justifies its use as part of a targeted supplement protocol. It does not justify indefinite use without tracking outcomes or ignoring the safety profile outlined in the full guide.
Supplements mentioned

L-Tyrosine
amino-acid · 500-2,000 mg · 60 caps
People also ask
What does "Evidence Grade B" mean for L-Tyrosine?
How long do the benefits of L-Tyrosine last?
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