I've just joined this topic, this forum, and this site (as you can see) and in fact just discovered this topic last night when I searched the web for "resveratrol dosage". It was just what I was looking for, so I read all 39 pages of discussion last night. (So I guess I can report increased mental stamina. Just kidding; that's not unheard of for me.)
I've been taking about 1.5mg/kg and was thinking of increasing it if I saw objective evidence of any kind of improvement in my annual blood work (or if human trials reported reported positive results). Then I started getting impatient and thinking that if I'm not yet taking enough to make a difference in my next blood test, another year is a long time to wait for feedback on an increased dose. So I was hoping to find some anecdotal reports of individual improvement from people who have already had their blood tested before and after -- the most solid evidence I can hope for until a scientific study reports its results. It looks like I've come to the right place. I admire the level-headed, scientifically grounded discussion here, and how the wishful thinking is tempered by caution and scholarship.
Of course, even objective blood tests are no substitute for a scientific study, even an uncontrolled Phase I study. For one thing, this is a self-selected group that pays a lot of attention to their health and is always trying other supplements as well as diet and exercise improvements. For another, there may be a built-in bias toward reporting positive results and not negative ones. (A scientific study may choose not to publish anything, but won't withhold data selectively.) What if 500mg causes, say, paralysis of the fingers so you can no longer type? Memory problems so that you forget your password? A fantastic sex life so that you no longer spend so much time in online discussions? We'd never hear from those people again! For example, what ever happened to makoss (see page 1 of this topic)? (Or, more realistically, people who get no results may lose interest in the topic faster than people who get dramatic improvements.)
I'm grateful to those who were willing to post their results so far. I plan to post mine when I get them.
I'm a 47-year-old male, 180cm, 80kg. My last blood test was in August 2006, and I started taking resveratrol in December 2006. Various brands, mostly NSI and Longevinex. I've recently increased my dosage modestly: For the past several weeks I've been alternating between one NSI (probably 50 to 90 mg depending on how you interpret the label) and one Longevinex (100mg) in the morning, and then later in the day I take one or more of the old Longvinex formulations I bought a four-month supply of in January (15mg I think), because no one seems to know how it's metabolized and whether the half life is 15 minutes or 9 hours. I never took anything labeled as resveratrol before December, but for three years before I took grape seed and skin powder.
At this moderate dosage, and especially on days when I took more, I might possibly have experienced some of the positive subjective effects that various people have mentioned here, but I thought they might be placebo effects, since I wouldn't expect gene regulation have immediate effects or mitochondria to grow that fast.
[Firefox 2.0 thinks mitochondria don't exist by the way, and suggests "hypochondriac".] No effect on weight-lifting strength. Possibly increased stamina, not sure. My blood pressure has been all over the place, systolic ranging from 118 to 139 within an hour even when I've been sitting down, and I haven't noticed any change. My VO2 max, as measured by an automated treadmill at the gym, has always been absurdly high, like in the 50's (averages 90th percentile -- if I were a teenager) since I started measuring it in 2004, and I think it's been a little higher recently, ranging from 56 to 71. But then, I've always walked or biked for transportation.
I don't know if there's any point in posting just my pre-resveratrol numbers from August 2006, but: Cholesterol = 126, Triglyceride = 130, HDL = 44, LDL calculated = 56, Glucose fasting = 86. (Cholesterol dropped from 158 in 2002 to 115 in 2004. The main difference was a temporary shift in diet due to a different location -- I attribute a lot of it to daily fruit smoothies including blueberries and/or bottled açai juice. I've been a vegetarian for 23 years and my diet has gradually become more healthful.)
Want to hear something
really anecdotal? Not just one person, but one
whisker out of hundreds. I dye my beard, because parts of it have been slowly going gray since I about 40. I don't dye it often, and you might expect the whiskers to have gray roots. I saw something really odd one day after trimming it: one whisker was light brown on one end, dark brown on the other, and gray in the
middle! A fluke of the dye flow? I haven't seen any other signs of melanocyte stem cells on individual whiskers kicking in, and I've looked. But that alone tempts me to increase my dosage and see what happens, because it's such an obvious and easily checkable marker. Of the few silver threads in my hair, I haven't been able to find any with brown roots. Anyone else catch one in the act of turning back? Or does it not work that way? Maybe a strand of hair doesn't change color in mid-strand, only when it falls out and the follicle starts a new anagen cycle.
Edited by unglued, 07 May 2007 - 02:45 AM.