Since Anthony decided against releasing a gum product, this may be the only commercial game in town for resv-gum.
Edited by rabagley, 21 October 2009 - 08:13 PM.
Posted 21 October 2009 - 08:12 PM
Edited by rabagley, 21 October 2009 - 08:13 PM.
Posted 11 January 2010 - 10:57 PM
Posted 12 January 2010 - 04:53 AM
I have tried buccal and sublingual resveratrol delivery in the past but now I mix my resveratrol with water and drink it throughout the day. I tend to believe the results of the study cited in Wikipedia, however incredible. The ease with which this could be confirmed/refuted coupled with the complete absence of evidence to the contrary leads me to believe that financial interests are to blame for the lack of replication of the effectiveness of buccal delivery. No matter what method of administration is used, the plasma half-life of resveratrol is short. Mixing it with your drinking water overcomes this problem while giving all the benefits of both oral and buccal delivery.
Obviously micronized would be better, but I am currently taking 400mg 98% powder daily along with all my other palatable powdered supplements. Mixed with 2-3L pure water results in a resveratrol suspension which I hope will be more effective than oral administration. What do you think?
Has anyone tested resveratrol plasma levels following buccal/sublingual administration? This seems like a HUGE knowledge gap that could easily be filled.
14C-resveratrol after oral and i.v.
doses in six human volunteers. The absorption of a dietary relevant
25-mg oral dose
However, only trace amounts of
unchanged resveratrol (<5 ng/ml) could be detected in plasma.
Posted 18 January 2010 - 09:46 PM
I couldn't find the article on wikipedia.
I read the article of14C-resveratrol after oral and i.v.
doses in six human volunteers. The absorption of a dietary relevant
25-mg oral dose
However, only trace amounts of
unchanged resveratrol (<5 ng/ml) could be detected in plasma.
The link that wiki has is
INHIBITION OF CANCER GROWTH BY RESVERATROL IS RELATED TO
ITS LOW BIOAVAILABILITY
This article has nothing about resveratrol and humans.
Is there a REAL reference for the correct paper?
Posted 20 January 2010 - 02:23 PM
While reading this thread I googled for "resveratrol gum" and found an announced (but not available) product. So far just a rash of press releases (so it may be complete vapor), but "Resveratrol Plus Chewing Gum" was announced on July 14, 2009 and seems to be in production as of July 29, 2009.
Since Anthony decided against releasing a gum product, this may be the only commercial game in town for resv-gum.
Posted 20 January 2010 - 05:31 PM
Edited by tonyrx7, 20 January 2010 - 05:32 PM.
Posted 08 March 2010 - 03:43 AM
Hi Anthony, I was just wondering what happened to this idea? I can't see a gum product on your website, and wondered if you're still working on it, or if the idea was dropped for some reason?We are looking at Xylitol with possibly a little Stivia... as sweeteners.
Initial consideration was around 50mg-100mg a piece... I am not sure we can add more than this.
Time frame?... 2-3 months (The packaging appears to be the holdup on this...)
I am just not sure about the flavors... and of course, you heard it here first.
I just couldn't see folks buying a $8 - $10 pack of gum...
It's still being considered, but other things have come up after our initial research into this.
Cheers
A
Posted 08 March 2010 - 01:36 PM
Edited by Anthony_Loera, 08 March 2010 - 01:37 PM.
Posted 08 March 2010 - 02:45 PM
Actually the only reason we haven't was because of the price/education factors.
1- A $10 pack of gum seems quit expensive
2- It appears that you would have the res inside the gum, you then would need to chew, then place inside of cheek. Add to that that the gum does not dissolve and leave the pure resveratrol in your mouth to be absorbed, Most of it would be in the gum.
3- Chewing naturally causes siliva, which wil likely make you swallow the unprotected res, rather than be it absorbed.
Try it out, I want to know if you can chew a piece of gum while having some powdered res in your mouth. What does the saliva do? Do you think you can stop from swallowing it?
If you can't stop from swallowing it, then it might simply become expensive gum.
Test it out, let me know.
A
Posted 08 March 2010 - 05:44 PM
Edited by peteo, 08 March 2010 - 06:05 PM.
Posted 08 March 2010 - 06:34 PM
The problem is that gum-delivery systems work best for water-soluble substances. Polar substances,not so much. Some resveratrol does get absorbed by bucal administration, and what is absorbed more efficiently spikes blood serum levels, but not enough. The rate at which the mucosa pass resveratrol into the blood, times the surface area, is not sufficient to deliver a large dose at all. It can only deliver a very small dose efficiently.Actually the only reason we haven't was because of the price/education factors.
1- A $10 pack of gum seems quit expensive
2- It appears that you would have the res inside the gum, you then would need to chew, then place inside of cheek. Add to that that the gum does not dissolve and leave the pure resveratrol in your mouth to be absorbed, Most of it would be in the gum.
3- Chewing naturally causes siliva, which wil likely make you swallow the unprotected res, rather than be it absorbed.
Try it out, I want to know if you can chew a piece of gum while having some powdered res in your mouth. What does the saliva do? Do you think you can stop from swallowing it?
If you can't stop from swallowing it, then it might simply become expensive gum.
Test it out, let me know.
A
Anthony, I see too many references about chewing gum with medication in it as a good way to get the medication. There's a whole industry built around nicotene gum. There's also aspirin gum. In both cases the active ingredient has been shown to be absorbed through the gums. Lozenges also work to deliver active ingredients through the oral mucosa.
RESV dissolves very slowly in saliva. You need 1 liter of saliva to dissolve 30 mg. of RESV. There's mucosa where saliva pools, between the bottom teeth and the gum. Some of the RESV will be absorbed from the saliva there. What's absorbed will go right into the blood stream, bypassing first pass denature by the liver. For you it's $10 a pack of gum. For me, using 125 micron RESV (I see no reason to use micronized), I can make 50 pieces of gum with 100 mg. 98% RESV for $20. That's $0.40 a piece of gum. That's for the first batch. If I buy a gum refill kit, the price drops down to $8 for 50 pieces of gum containing 100 mg. RESV. That's 16 cents per piece of gum.
Posted 08 March 2010 - 11:12 PM
The problem is that gum-delivery systems work best for water-soluble substances. Polar substances,not so much. Some resveratrol does get absorbed by bucal administration, and what is absorbed more efficiently spikes blood serum levels, but not enough. The rate at which the mucosa pass resveratrol into the blood, times the surface area, is not sufficient to deliver a large dose at all. It can only deliver a very small dose efficiently.Actually the only reason we haven't was because of the price/education factors.
1- A $10 pack of gum seems quit expensive
2- It appears that you would have the res inside the gum, you then would need to chew, then place inside of cheek. Add to that that the gum does not dissolve and leave the pure resveratrol in your mouth to be absorbed, Most of it would be in the gum.
3- Chewing naturally causes siliva, which wil likely make you swallow the unprotected res, rather than be it absorbed.
Try it out, I want to know if you can chew a piece of gum while having some powdered res in your mouth. What does the saliva do? Do you think you can stop from swallowing it?
If you can't stop from swallowing it, then it might simply become expensive gum.
Test it out, let me know.
A
Anthony, I see too many references about chewing gum with medication in it as a good way to get the medication. There's a whole industry built around nicotene gum. There's also aspirin gum. In both cases the active ingredient has been shown to be absorbed through the gums. Lozenges also work to deliver active ingredients through the oral mucosa.
RESV dissolves very slowly in saliva. You need 1 liter of saliva to dissolve 30 mg. of RESV. There's mucosa where saliva pools, between the bottom teeth and the gum. Some of the RESV will be absorbed from the saliva there. What's absorbed will go right into the blood stream, bypassing first pass denature by the liver. For you it's $10 a pack of gum. For me, using 125 micron RESV (I see no reason to use micronized), I can make 50 pieces of gum with 100 mg. 98% RESV for $20. That's $0.40 a piece of gum. That's for the first batch. If I buy a gum refill kit, the price drops down to $8 for 50 pieces of gum containing 100 mg. RESV. That's 16 cents per piece of gum.
Posted 13 March 2010 - 02:39 PM
Posted 01 April 2010 - 02:49 PM
Edited by windymiller, 01 April 2010 - 03:04 PM.
Posted 13 April 2010 - 04:59 AM
Posted 13 April 2010 - 05:26 AM
When you say "How bad could it be?", are you looking for a worst-case scenario? That would probably be some form of lung disease. I don't know how likely that would be; not very I suppose. The problem is that you are snorting something that is mostly insoluble in water. What will those particles do when they are lodged in the alveoli? With luck they will slowly absorb, but I wouldn't want to count on that. At any rate, snorting is not exactly an intra-cranial route. That would involve needles. I've seen the video of those South American natives- the one where one of them uses a blowpipe to shoot the drugs up the other guy's nose? Yeah, that was pretty gross with all the stuff coming out of various orifices. I don't think those guys are into life extension. If they had LSD, I bet they'd dump the harsh stuff and never look back...What wrong with snorting it? Someone said it burns. It didn't burn me. Then again it wasn't pure extract either.
This method would make it pass the blood brain barrier slowing delivery to the liver. Analgesic effect of Resveratrol via inter cranial administration in rats has been reported.
I've seen south americans natives snort some pretty harsh shit that will make you drool like a fool for hours. How bad could it be?
Posted 13 April 2010 - 12:26 PM
When you say "How bad could it be?", are you looking for a worst-case scenario? That would probably be some form of lung disease. I don't know how likely that would be; not very I suppose. The problem is that you are snorting something that is mostly insoluble in water. What will those particles do when they are lodged in the alveoli? With luck they will slowly absorb, but I wouldn't want to count on that. At any rate, snorting is not exactly an intra-cranial route. That would involve needles. I've seen the video of those South American natives- the one where one of them uses a blowpipe to shoot the drugs up the other guy's nose? Yeah, that was pretty gross with all the stuff coming out of various orifices. I don't think those guys are into life extension. If they had LSD, I bet they'd dump the harsh stuff and never look back...What wrong with snorting it? Someone said it burns. It didn't burn me. Then again it wasn't pure extract either.
This method would make it pass the blood brain barrier slowing delivery to the liver. Analgesic effect of Resveratrol via inter cranial administration in rats has been reported.
I've seen south americans natives snort some pretty harsh shit that will make you drool like a fool for hours. How bad could it be?
Posted 13 April 2010 - 09:19 PM
When you say "How bad could it be?", are you looking for a worst-case scenario? That would probably be some form of lung disease. I don't know how likely that would be; not very I suppose. The problem is that you are snorting something that is mostly insoluble in water. What will those particles do when they are lodged in the alveoli? With luck they will slowly absorb, but I wouldn't want to count on that. At any rate, snorting is not exactly an intra-cranial route. That would involve needles. I've seen the video of those South American natives- the one where one of them uses a blowpipe to shoot the drugs up the other guy's nose? Yeah, that was pretty gross with all the stuff coming out of various orifices. I don't think those guys are into life extension. If they had LSD, I bet they'd dump the harsh stuff and never look back...What wrong with snorting it? Someone said it burns. It didn't burn me. Then again it wasn't pure extract either.
This method would make it pass the blood brain barrier slowing delivery to the liver. Analgesic effect of Resveratrol via inter cranial administration in rats has been reported.
I've seen south americans natives snort some pretty harsh shit that will make you drool like a fool for hours. How bad could it be?
Edited by 2tender, 13 April 2010 - 09:21 PM.
Posted 26 April 2010 - 10:47 PM
Posted 26 April 2010 - 11:31 PM
Edited by Anthony_Loera, 26 April 2010 - 11:48 PM.
Posted 27 April 2010 - 03:23 AM
Yikes! 50%?? Have you smelled that in it's raw form?
We used to sell 50% micronized powder for about 2-3 months... never saw such a slow moving product... but then again the taste alone was something that made you wince once... then, you had a hard time considering doing THAT again... (yes from personal experience).
Definitely need to have one of those old clothespins when you try it out...
Or one of these new fangled types if you want a pretty nose:
Posted 27 April 2010 - 03:36 AM
Hi, I've been lurking around here for a while and am interested in trying buccal as well as oral resveratrol.
I'm just wondering, is it possible to use 50% powder for buccal delivery? I'm most worried about whether emodin also gets absorbed transdermally.
Posted 27 April 2010 - 08:20 AM
Yikes! 50%?? Have you smelled that in it's raw form?
We used to sell 50% micronized powder for about 2-3 months... never saw such a slow moving product... but then again the taste alone was something that made you wince once... then, you had a hard time considering doing THAT again... (yes from personal experience).
Definitely need to have one of those old clothespins when you try it out...
Or one of these new fangled types if you want a pretty nose:
Lol. Yeah, I agree, the smell and taste is quite horrid, but I can manage to keep it in my mouth for 5 minutes provided I get that resveratrol blood spike. My only worry is if it's safe or not. Does emodin have any toxic effects when absorbed directly into the blood stream?
Posted 27 May 2010 - 05:28 AM
The problem is that gum-delivery systems work best for water-soluble substances. Polar substances,not so much. Some resveratrol does get absorbed by bucal administration, and what is absorbed more efficiently spikes blood serum levels, but not enough. The rate at which the mucosa pass resveratrol into the blood, times the surface area, is not sufficient to deliver a large dose at all. It can only deliver a very small dose efficiently.Anthony, I see too many references about chewing gum with medication in it as a good way to get the medication. There's a whole industry built around nicotene gum. There's also aspirin gum. In both cases the active ingredient has been shown to be absorbed through the gums. Lozenges also work to deliver active ingredients through the oral mucosa.
RESV dissolves very slowly in saliva. You need 1 liter of saliva to dissolve 30 mg. of RESV. There's mucosa where saliva pools, between the bottom teeth and the gum. Some of the RESV will be absorbed from the saliva there. What's absorbed will go right into the blood stream, bypassing first pass denature by the liver. For you it's $10 a pack of gum. For me, using 125 micron RESV (I see no reason to use micronized), I can make 50 pieces of gum with 100 mg. 98% RESV for $20. That's $0.40 a piece of gum. That's for the first batch. If I buy a gum refill kit, the price drops down to $8 for 50 pieces of gum containing 100 mg. RESV. That's 16 cents per piece of gum.
Edited by John Barleycorn, 27 May 2010 - 05:30 AM.
Posted 27 May 2010 - 01:15 PM
The problem is that gum-delivery systems work best for water-soluble substances. Polar substances,not so much. Some resveratrol does get absorbed by bucal administration, and what is absorbed more efficiently spikes blood serum levels, but not enough. The rate at which the mucosa pass resveratrol into the blood, times the surface area, is not sufficient to deliver a large dose at all. It can only deliver a very small dose efficiently.Anthony, I see too many references about chewing gum with medication in it as a good way to get the medication. There's a whole industry built around nicotene gum. There's also aspirin gum. In both cases the active ingredient has been shown to be absorbed through the gums. Lozenges also work to deliver active ingredients through the oral mucosa.
RESV dissolves very slowly in saliva. You need 1 liter of saliva to dissolve 30 mg. of RESV. There's mucosa where saliva pools, between the bottom teeth and the gum. Some of the RESV will be absorbed from the saliva there. What's absorbed will go right into the blood stream, bypassing first pass denature by the liver. For you it's $10 a pack of gum. For me, using 125 micron RESV (I see no reason to use micronized), I can make 50 pieces of gum with 100 mg. 98% RESV for $20. That's $0.40 a piece of gum. That's for the first batch. If I buy a gum refill kit, the price drops down to $8 for 50 pieces of gum containing 100 mg. RESV. That's 16 cents per piece of gum.
The problem is that this contradicts a large amount of ethnobotanical and indeed conventional medical practice, in which non-polar, poorly water-soluble alkaloids are absorbed sub-lingually or buccally in a quite efficient manner. Plant substances are often chewed with some alkali like CaCO3 in order to ensure that the base has been liberated and to promote absorption. For smallish amounts, the saliva is often alkaline enough to do the job by itself. For example, 5 mg of selegiline.HCl tastes progressively more amine-like with contact time. 500 mg of phenylethylamine.HCl is pushing it (or so I have been told).
Nasal delivery is where water-solubility seems to work. Anything more than about 300 mg is probably overload in practice. Anything that is more than mildly acidic burns and does damage.
So what has all this got to do with polyphenols like resveratrol? They're the opposite of alkaloids, so tend to be poorly water-soluble at acidic pH and soluble under alkaline conditions, where they form a polar, phenolate salt. I assume the pure substance is not supplied in salt form, so one issue with with buccal routes is whether the saliva is alkaline enough to defeat the absorption process. Probably not, and that would seem to correspond with some experience reported around here. It also calls into question the need to dissolve resveratrol in water, water + emulsifier, or alcohol before going the buccal route. Dunno, haven't tried it, I'm playing with chrysin at the moment.
Posted 27 May 2010 - 01:44 PM
I doubt it, DMT administered that way is far more potent than LSD and I'm sure the the effects differ qualitatively too.I've seen the video of those South American natives- the one where one of them uses a blowpipe to shoot the drugs up the other guy's nose? Yeah, that was pretty gross with all the stuff coming out of various orifices. I don't think those guys are into life extension. If they had LSD, I bet they'd dump the harsh stuff and never look back...
Posted 28 May 2010 - 03:12 AM
This does not contradict the point that the amount of resveratrol that can be absorbed bucally is limited by the mucosal surface area; though smallish amounts are absorbed quite efficiently, there is a limit beyond which it is futile t take more. The amount has been estimated in earlier posts to be quite low. 500 mg would indeed be pushing it, but a 25 mg dose would probable be efficiently absorbed, perhaps equivalent to a 100 mg dose?
I do have an unpublished paper on oral administration of various drugs and substances I've based my estimates on. If you want, I'll see if I can get you a copy..
Posted 28 May 2010 - 06:06 AM
So what about opening resv caps and sticking the stuff on your gums? Better or worse than just taking the caps orally?
Posted 29 May 2010 - 05:14 AM
Resveratrol and other polyphenols can form a phenolate at high enough pH, but it would be too high (ten-ish, I think) to use biologically. Rapid conjugation of polyphenols remains the bugaboo.So what has all this got to do with polyphenols like resveratrol? They're the opposite of alkaloids, so tend to be poorly water-soluble at acidic pH and soluble under alkaline conditions, where they form a polar, phenolate salt. I assume the pure substance is not supplied in salt form, so one issue with with buccal routes is whether the saliva is alkaline enough to defeat the absorption process. Probably not, and that would seem to correspond with some experience reported around here. It also calls into question the need to dissolve resveratrol in water, water + emulsifier, or alcohol before going the buccal route. Dunno, haven't tried it, I'm playing with chrysin at the moment.
Posted 29 May 2010 - 04:46 PM
The problem is that gum-delivery systems work best for water-soluble substances. Polar substances,not so much. Some resveratrol does get absorbed by bucal administration, and what is absorbed more efficiently spikes blood serum levels, but not enough. The rate at which the mucosa pass resveratrol into the blood, times the surface area, is not sufficient to deliver a large dose at all. It can only deliver a very small dose efficiently.Anthony, I see too many references about chewing gum with medication in it as a good way to get the medication. There's a whole industry built around nicotene gum. There's also aspirin gum. In both cases the active ingredient has been shown to be absorbed through the gums. Lozenges also work to deliver active ingredients through the oral mucosa.
RESV dissolves very slowly in saliva. You need 1 liter of saliva to dissolve 30 mg. of RESV. There's mucosa where saliva pools, between the bottom teeth and the gum. Some of the RESV will be absorbed from the saliva there. What's absorbed will go right into the blood stream, bypassing first pass denature by the liver. For you it's $10 a pack of gum. For me, using 125 micron RESV (I see no reason to use micronized), I can make 50 pieces of gum with 100 mg. 98% RESV for $20. That's $0.40 a piece of gum. That's for the first batch. If I buy a gum refill kit, the price drops down to $8 for 50 pieces of gum containing 100 mg. RESV. That's 16 cents per piece of gum.
The problem is that this contradicts a large amount of ethnobotanical and indeed conventional medical practice, in which non-polar, poorly water-soluble alkaloids are absorbed sub-lingually or buccally in a quite efficient manner. Plant substances are often chewed with some alkali like CaCO3 in order to ensure that the base has been liberated and to promote absorption. For smallish amounts, the saliva is often alkaline enough to do the job by itself. For example, 5 mg of selegiline.HCl tastes progressively more amine-like with contact time. 500 mg of phenylethylamine.HCl is pushing it (or so I have been told).
Nasal delivery is where water-solubility seems to work. Anything more than about 300 mg is probably overload in practice. Anything that is more than mildly acidic burns and does damage.
So what has all this got to do with polyphenols like resveratrol? They're the opposite of alkaloids, so tend to be poorly water-soluble at acidic pH and soluble under alkaline conditions, where they form a polar, phenolate salt. I assume the pure substance is not supplied in salt form, so one issue with with buccal routes is whether the saliva is alkaline enough to defeat the absorption process. Probably not, and that would seem to correspond with some experience reported around here. It also calls into question the need to dissolve resveratrol in water, water + emulsifier, or alcohol before going the buccal route. Dunno, haven't tried it, I'm playing with chrysin at the moment.
This does not contradict the point that the amount of resveratrol that can be absorbed bucally is limited by the mucosal surface area; though smallish amounts are absorbed quite efficiently, there is a limit beyond which it is futile t take more. The amount has been estimated in earlier posts to be quite low. 500 mg would indeed be pushing it, but a 25 mg dose would probable be efficiently absorbed, perhaps equivalent to a 100 mg dose? I too am guessing. I would like to see some pharmokinetic studies. We have Boococks paper measuring blood serum levels with oral administration. If someone wants to buy ah HPLC column and a standard sample. Hedgehog might be persuaded to take some blood samples and measure the efficiency.
I do have an unpublished paper on oral administration of various drugs and substances I've based my estimates on. If you want, I'll see if I can get you a copy..
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