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Resveratrol: A Double-Edged Sword in Health Benefits

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#1 sedentary

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Posted 21 November 2019 - 01:12 AM


Interesting article on resveratrol i found here; https://www.ncbi.nlm...les/PMC6164842/

what do you guys think about it.

 

On seperate note; "As of today, 92 new resveratrol compounds, including 39 dimers, 23 trimers, 13 tetramers, 6 resveratrol monomers, 6 hexamers, 4 pentamers, and 1 octamer have been reported"

can someone tell me which one of them all can be the real benefactor and could it be possible its only beneficial when is naturally bound to all its dimers, trimers and various forms rather 1 single isolate in popular pills??


Edited by sedentary, 21 November 2019 - 01:13 AM.

  • Informative x 2

#2 Castiel

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Posted 13 February 2020 - 04:13 PM

Most of the research is done with trans-resveratrol.  

 



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#3 TheCarbonGroup

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Posted 14 February 2020 - 01:07 AM

Pulsing doses is key. A natural form of resveratrol or pterostilbene are potent therapeutic polyphenols with benefits that outshine most other "antioxidants."



#4 sedentary

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Posted 21 February 2020 - 01:48 AM

a natural form? but all resveratrol on the market currently IS natural! at least, thats what the labels claim. but if you ask me, its anything but natural. its taken from a plant with hundreds of different beneficial molecules and stripped down using harsh solvents through various lab stages and repackaged with various fillers as "natural". not to mention the whole process is uncontrolled, unregulated and done in underground labs somewhere in China.

so if we really want natural resveratrol, i suppose the only true way is through consumption of plants as whole?



#5 Hermuller

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Posted 09 May 2020 - 01:59 PM

What is natural? Your phone? The Internet? The 200 ton steel bird that flies through the sky at 800km/h?

If you want a significant amount of Resv "from natural sources" you'd need to drink litres and litres and litres of red wine, then die of alcohol poison and prob something else.

 

Also most studies aren't done "on all kinds of stuff", but on Trans-Resveratrol as the poster earlier said.

 

And to assume that what it's stripped from is "hundreds of different beneficial molecules" is just that, an assumption. It could also be useless or harmful, who knows.

 

But you are right, buying from some weird ass "lab" is maybe not the best idea - for anything. Unless you test their stuff and it turns out to be amazing.



#6 TheCarbonGroup

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Posted 17 May 2020 - 04:48 PM

There is a synthetic and natural form of trans-resveratrol. I personally get the best response from Japanese Knotweed in liposomal form. This protective signalling molecule has multi-faceted properties with rewards that outweigh any risks.



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#7 mrbrightside

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Posted 25 August 2020 - 04:41 AM

There is a synthetic and natural form of trans-resveratrol. I personally get the best response from Japanese Knotweed in liposomal form. This protective signalling molecule has multi-faceted properties with rewards that outweigh any risks.


Trans-resveratrol is trans-resveratrol. I still don’t get why people dont see that a molecule is the same regardless of natural/synthetic source.
  • Agree x 2




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