Submitted by pixeleos t3_10fiepu in askscience
Scientists like david sinclaire have been taking it for many years but research I've read seems inconclusive.
Submitted by pixeleos t3_10fiepu in askscience
Scientists like david sinclaire have been taking it for many years but research I've read seems inconclusive.
magicfeistybitcoin t1_j4yqtid wrote
Eh. ConsumerLab calls the claims "exaggerated" and "even contradictory." Resveratrol activates the SIRT1 "longevity gene" associated with cellular metabolism, cellular repair, and lifespan. That's where the hype comes from.
The German study they cite re: longevity was small and involved obese mice "on an extremely high fat diet. Whether normally fed mice also show life extension by resveratrol remains unanswered." The high-fat diet mice had a 15% longer lifespan.
A 2017 Denmark study with humans is where the contradictory part comes in. High doses of resveratrol can lead to high total and "bad" LDL cholesterol levels and atherosclerosis. It inhibits an enzyme that metabolizes statins (which affect heart health). Low doses didn't have this effect, but no positive effect was found, either.
The website notes that many clinical studies are currently underway, but their comprehensive examination convinced me not to bother with it right now.