2000 mg Club
tayo
27 Jul 2007
Looking for increased strength while weightlifting and physique change (from mitochondria increase), more energy and faster recovery.
Other supplements... 6-OXO extreme, 6 caps per day (3 in morning, 3 before bed) to increase natural testosterone
nettle root 6 x 500mg caps (3 in morning, 3 before bed)
inhibit 5-alpha-reductase to stop conversion of testosterone to dihydrotestosterone
pygeum 6 x 500mg caps (3 in morning, 3 before bed)
to inihibit SHBG (Sex Hormone Binding Globulin) to allow for more free, non-bound testosterone
Routines..
Lifting heavy for mass building 3x a week (full body.. upper, core, legs) 1.5 hours.
Playing soccer for 2 hours, 3 times a week.
I do not drink alcohol.
I may consider going beyond the 5 gram dose if there are no/little emodin side effects.
What do you guys think?
Edited by tayo, 27 July 2007 - 02:35 AM.
ortcloud
27 Jul 2007
tintinet
27 Jul 2007
electric buddha
28 Jul 2007
Someone should merge this thread with the 500 Club... Maybe rename the result as the High Dose Resveratrol Club or something of that nature
Make sense? Easier to read and at least one know where to post updates.
As a semi-lurker, semi-sporatic reader, I have to say that the current post count in that thread already makes it tedious to find any information there. It's already like a subforum was mashed into a single post. Any additions seem as if it'd make it less easy, not more, to read.
with all of these side effects at various doses for people, how is sirtris ever going to be able to come up with a dose for the masses without problems ?
That's making a very large assumption that most aren't placebo effects.
ortcloud
08 Aug 2007
maxwatt
08 Aug 2007
Huh ? This is a very odd statement. If the person is taking resveratrol then they arent taking a placebo. placebo is a noun, you are using it in a different fashion. placebo refers to a suggested consequence or effect before taking it. Since this discussion about effects people are experiencing is post consumption, it wouldnt be a placebo effect. Regardless, side effects either generated by the drug or the mind are nevertheless just as real to the person taking it and if these side effects are too great, compliance will be affected.
Placebo effect also refers to a mental effects of a drug, caused by expectations rather than by actual physological effects of the drug. Whatever you give to subjects in trials, about 33% of them will claim to have a positive effect; this is why we need double blind studies to sort things out.
kenj
09 Aug 2007
Cudos to Maxwatt, Tintinet et al for suggesting a pure extract to eliminate any possible, unfortunate, "edgy" mood effects from less pure extracts. Works.
And realy interesting to read about peoples experiences w/resveratrol.
I must say, -- ISTM, the appetite suppression is staggering...
stephen_b
11 Oct 2007
<table border="1">
<tr><th>Date<td>2006-06-06<td>2007-04-04<td>2007-10-02
<tr><th>Triglycerides<td>61<td>86<td>104
<tr><th>Cholesterol<td>143<td>138<td>174
<tr><th>Chol/HDL<td>3.4<td>3.5<td>4.24
<tr><th>HDL<td>42<td>39<td>41
<tr><th>LDL<td>89<td>82<td>112
<tr><th>Glucose<td>79<td>86<td>83
</table>
I'm not claiming that resveratrol raised my LDL. In the past few months I've been taking raw cocoa powder, which has 4 mg per 2 tablespoons, along with vitamin C. My iron this month came in at a high 214 ug/dL. Maybe high iron raises LDL? In any case, the action of resveratrol IMO isn't demonstrated by these numbers. One marker that might be revealing the effects of resveratrol supplementation was a very low C-reactive protein measurement of 0.33 mg/L. On the other hand, my homocysteine came in at 11.6 umol/L, not high but not very low either.
So, I'm not sure what to attribute to resveratrol. Any other markers people might think important?
Stephen
resveratrol
11 Oct 2007
It seems like people are trying to get "high" of this stuff rather than take it for life-extending reasons. Everyone is looking for an acute effect whilst not keeping their eye on the prize of ultimate longevity.
Seeking a buzz from resv is ridiculous.
I have yet to hear anyone say they're trying to get any sort of "high" from resveratrol.
stephen_b
11 Oct 2007
Maybe it only works in mice.

Stephen
health_nutty
11 Oct 2007
What I was offering is that if there is a blood parameter that you think resveratrol might effect, then I can check and see whether it's on the long list of things that were tested. With the possible exception of c-reactive protein, I'm tentatively concluding that resveratrol doesn't effect blood test results much.
Maybe it only works in mice.
Stephen
Or the blood tests don't measure what we are taking resveratrol for.
malbecman
11 Oct 2007
With the possible exception of c-reactive protein, I'm tentatively concluding that resveratrol doesn't effect blood test results much.
Stephen
I'm right with you on that thought, Stephen. The typical battery of tests and blood parameters just arent testing the right biomarker for resveratrol's effects....
craigb527
11 Oct 2007
wydell
12 Oct 2007
Or the quantities of Resveratrol taken are not sufficient enough to alter biomarkers.
Or maybe it does not alter biomarkers and maybe it has no positive effect on humans. Who knows?
Though, ordinary stuff like pomegranate alters bio-markers in humans (or at least it is reported as such in some studies)
stephen_b
06 Jan 2008
Stephen
Alien65
06 Jan 2008
Edited by Alien65, 06 January 2008 - 03:09 AM.
sUper GeNius
06 Jan 2008
The February issue of Life Extension magazine has a good article "How much resveratrol do you need?". It looks like 200 - 500 mg might be a reasonable dose depending on your weight and goal.
Upped my dose to 2200mg last night, up from 1,200 mg. am crawling out of my skin today, thinking that the t-res isn't reacting too well with Paxil. I wonder if the Paxil metabolism is being slowed? I have some screwy enzymes to begin with I think, as I was first on Zoloft, a dose so small that the doctor said she starts children on it, and I could not tolerate it at all.
missminni
07 Jan 2008
I remember the first time I took 400 mg, it was noticeable to me. Before that I had been taking 200 mg andThe February issue of Life Extension magazine has a good article "How much resveratrol do you need?". It looks like 200 - 500 mg might be a reasonable dose depending on your weight and goal.
didn't notice anything. Now I am doing anywhere between 1 to 2 g. a day. I feel fine, but who's to say 500mg wouldn't be enough.
I am thinking that the idea is to take as much as it takes to feel a difference, and stop at that amount. Going higher is a waste
of the product and might cause unpleasant reactions. Maybe your body takes what it needs and once you feel a bad reaction, it's your bodies way of saying you are taking too much. We have to judge the appropriate amount for ourselves.
missminni
07 Jan 2008
have you read this thread yet?The February issue of Life Extension magazine has a good article "How much resveratrol do you need?". It looks like 200 - 500 mg might be a reasonable dose depending on your weight and goal.
Upped my dose to 2200mg last night, up from 1,200 mg. am crawling out of my skin today, thinking that the t-res isn't reacting too well with Paxil. I wonder if the Paxil metabolism is being slowed? I have some screwy enzymes to begin with I think, as I was first on Zoloft, a dose so small that the doctor said she starts children on it, and I could not tolerate it at all.
It might have some answers.
niner
07 Jan 2008
How on Earth did they decide this?The February issue of Life Extension magazine has a good article "How much resveratrol do you need?". It looks like 200 - 500 mg might be a reasonable dose depending on your weight and goal.
maxwatt
07 Jan 2008
They had a lot of 200 and 500 mg capsules they needed to sell.How on Earth did they decide this?The February issue of Life Extension magazine has a good article "How much resveratrol do you need?". It looks like 200 - 500 mg might be a reasonable dose depending on your weight and goal.
stephen_b
07 Jan 2008
You are assuming that they did. In the article, they survey different studies using differing amounts and looking at different results. They even mentioned some people taking over 1500 mg/day. They noted some concerns about interactions with certain drugs. (This is all from memory.) The message I took home was that the jury is still out.How on Earth did they decide this?The February issue of Life Extension magazine has a good article "How much resveratrol do you need?". It looks like 200 - 500 mg might be a reasonable dose depending on your weight and goal.
Stephen
mikeinnaples
07 Jan 2008
Don't take you C when you take your Cocoa. The cocoa that I take has some levels of iron in it. Vitamin C greatly enhances iron absorption. I am guessing this is why your Iron is high. Try separating the two and adding IP6 into your supplement mix.
edward
07 Jan 2008
They had a lot of 200 and 500 mg capsules they needed to sell.How on Earth did they decide this?The February issue of Life Extension magazine has a good article "How much resveratrol do you need?". It looks like 200 - 500 mg might be a reasonable dose depending on your weight and goal.
I read that also this past weekend during my weekly trip to the bookstore (where I try to read everything of interest in every science magazine I can get a hold of... including LEF magazine which I consider part science part marketing)
I actually laughed when I read the above quote, only partly because of the dosage which to any reader of these forums seems low, mainly I laughed because of the conviction with which they stated that 200 - 500 mg is all you need... um says who, what study are they using, what scaling factors to scale up from rats to humans, what is the objective of the supplementation, etc etc etc... My conclusion was like Maxwatt that they couldn't at this time offer their members a cost effective solution at the 1000 mg + dosage range (or else, if they could, then they would have to reformulate many of their products to include higher dosages, adjust prices etc etc.). God bless the LEF for getting me started with life extension but I always read them with a grain of salt... and at present the only product I have from them are some vitamin D capsules.
Edited by edward, 07 January 2008 - 08:46 PM.
stephen_b
08 Jan 2008
Thanks. I've come to the same conclusion. I gave my second pint of blood in 4 months yesterday.Stephen -
Don't take you C when you take your Cocoa. The cocoa that I take has some levels of iron in it. Vitamin C greatly enhances iron absorption. I am guessing this is why your Iron is high. Try separating the two and adding IP6 into your supplement mix.

I've been taking AOR ortho-core between meals, cocoa in the morning along with 500 mg resveratrol into cod liver oil, and at night vitamin C with apolactoferrin and a probiotic.
Stephen
tintinet
09 Jan 2008
Just an update on my 2000 mg a day oral routine -- lately, after supplementing at this level for about 3-4 months, I've been having back pain, mostly between my shoulder blades. Often I get pain due to spending a lot of time in front of the computer during the course of the day, but the pain seems to have been made worse by 2000 mg of t-res. I stopped taking it for a few days now and the pain went away. I've decided to back down to 500 mg/day.
Stephen
Hmmm....I have 'tennis elbow' now, for the first time. Seems to be due to playing guitar obsessively. Don't know if my 5+ grams/day t-resv. has anything to do with it.
TianZi
10 Jan 2008
This contradicts anecdotal accounts in this forum of joint pains, etc. caused by taking high does of resveratrol. It would be interesting to discover how many of the people reporting these symptoms would have done so if they had not first read other accounts of such side effects here. Is there any scientific basis for concluding that resveratrol consumption above a certain threshold causes joint pain? Animal studies with which I'm familiar point to the exact opposite conclusion.
One lesson learned from comparing the discussions in this thread dating back almost a year to the published results in the human study is that it is very difficult for layman to judge an appropriate dosage for resveratrol consumption. And that's not surprising.
However, it is worth noting that this study was only conducted over a 28 day period.
Edited by TianZi, 10 January 2008 - 05:54 AM.
VP.
10 Jan 2008
Actually more than a few forum members are taking 2000 mg or more a day. I've taken as much as 10-15g a day for 4 days. Now I'm down to 2 to 2.5 g a day mixed in a SRT501 type formulation. I agree about joint pain. How many people over 40 are not feeling some joint pain from time to time?As announced 7 January 2008, the Sirtris Phase 1b clinical study in human patients with Type 2 Diabetes was conducted using a daily dosage of 2,500-5,000 mg resveratrol (proprietary formulation) per day. That's more than anyone in this thread discussed taking. No significant adverse effects were reported.
This contradicts anecdotal accounts in this forum of joint pains, etc. caused by taking high does of resveratrol. It would be interesting to discover how many of the people reporting these symptoms would have done so if they had not first read other accounts of such side effects here. Is there any scientific basis for concluding that resveratrol consumption above a certain threshold causes joint pain? Animal studies with which I'm familiar point to the exact opposite conclusion.
One lesson learned from comparing the discussions in this thread dating back almost a year to the published results in the human study is that it is very difficult for layman to judge an appropriate dosage for resveratrol consumption. And that's not surprising.
However, it is worth noting that this study was only conducted over a 28 day period.