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Isn't Silymarin one of the herbs that you take for bad Liver ?? my Liver function is only slightly elevated like 2X normal. My doctor doesn't know if this is caused by Motrin + Coffee i use before tennis like 3 X per week or caused by RES ?? We don't know. He told me to stop RES and Motrin and see if it improves to figure out what the cause is.
Ok then with Curcumin, Luteolin, and Silymarin,,,,Which one should i take ?? Or should i take ALL three ?? would that be over-kill ? and is there a pill that has ALL three ingredients in ONE ?
Silymarin for the liver then. I would have thought resveratrol would be similarly beneficial for the liver, but it's not been studied.
Curcumin is well documented for an herbal substance, to reduce inflammation and pain. Together they should be complementary. Best taken in the morning so as not to interfere with circadian rhythms.
Luteolin is something of a wild card, and I am still evaluating and studying it. Like resveratrol it activates SIRT1, by some assays even more powerfully than resveratrol. It also reduces inflammation, and it inhibits PDE4, and so activates dopamine D2 receptors in the hippocampus which may function as an antidepressant. It has been found to protect hippocampal neurons from the effects of sleep deprivation, improving memory, including spatial memory (in rodents, but I don't see why this would not apply to other mammals.) Luteolin glycosides are abundant in the herb rosemary, which has been a folk remedy to improve memory for centuries. I can't unequivocally recommend it as a supplement for long term use, as long term effects haven't been studied, but I also believe it is safe enough, that I've no problem taking half a gram a day.
AFAIK, no single supplement contains only two or three of these.
Where do i buy Luteolin ? and other 2. I think Silymarin is sold at "Vitamin Shoppe" but Curcumin and Luteolin not so sure..
Vitamin Shoppe sells several brands of Curcumin pills. However the most cost effective is to buy powder and weigh out or measure your dose. Beyond-a-century.com carries powdered curcumin, as well as powdered luteolin. Kingherbs.com has carried luteolin powder in the past, and may do so again.
Curcumin is generally not very bioavailable. The most comprehensive description of taking it to increase absorption comes from multiple myeloma patients (see Margaret's Corner, a blog by such a patient.) She takes four grams or more daily, (I don't think healthy people need so much) and gently heats it in coconut oil, and drinks it or takes with food. Some sources recommend a little turmeric in the mix to increae absorption, but I do not know if this works. Coconut oil tastes yucky to drink in quantity. I've dispersed or disolved up to 600 mg in a teaspoon or two of food grade glycerin, and stirred this into water. It's faintly sweet, goes down easily. Some yellow clumps stay in the glass, but I think I absorb most of it. I observed reduced inflammation of the joints, about as effective as resveratrol, but this is hard to confirm, I did not do this long enough to be certain. Arthritic pain comes and goes which is why almost anything cab be found to help, for some people, for a while. But the medical literature is full of studies showing a reduction in inflammation.
Revgenetics sold, for a while, a supposedly more bioavailable form of Curcumin, dissolved in MCT oil in gelatin caps. MCT oil is derived from coconut oil. In theory it is or was a good product, but I've not used it and do not know how well it worked or if they are still marketing it.
I think if you take a C3-type curcumin powder, half a gram to a gram (1/4 tsp to 1/2 tsp) and just wash it down with water or milk (for the fat), then eat something for breakfast so as avoid stomach upset (toast and butter? a little fat of somekind) it will probably work for you purposes. It worked for me, or seemed to for the month I used it, both with and without resveratrol.
One more note on Silymarin: two Japanese papers, same researcher, claimed it activates SIRT1. I'd like to see this confirmed. I suspect it does.