Research Library

Every topic explored through three lenses

Scientific evidence. Patient experience. Honest uncertainty. We don't tell you what to do — we give you the tools to decide for yourself.

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Autoimmune
1 topic
Autoimmune
● Studies ● Anecdata ● Uncertainty

Low-Dose Naltrexone for Autoimmune Conditions

A drug designed to treat addiction is quietly changing lives for people with autoimmune disease
Low-dose naltrexone (LDN) is an off-label use of naltrexone at 1/10th the standard dose. Originally approved for opioid addiction, mounting evidence suggests it may modulate the immune system in ways that help conditions like Hashimoto's, multiple sclerosis, and Crohn's disease.
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Chronic Pain
1 topic
Chronic Pain
● Studies ● Anecdata ● Uncertainty

Cold Exposure for Chronic Pain

Ice baths went viral on social media. The science behind cold therapy is older and more nuanced than the hype suggests.
From Wim Hof breathing to clinical cryotherapy, cold exposure has gained mainstream attention for pain management. The evidence ranges from solid (acute inflammation) to speculative (central sensitization reset), with real risks that the wellness industry often glosses over.
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Mental Health
1 topic
Mental Health
● Studies ● Anecdata ● Uncertainty

Psychedelics for Treatment-Resistant Depression

After decades of prohibition, psychedelic-assisted therapy is producing the most exciting results in psychiatry in a generation
Psilocybin, MDMA, and ketamine are reshaping how we think about treatment-resistant depression. The evidence is compelling, the patient experiences are transformative, and the unknowns are significant. Here's what you need to understand.
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Metabolic Health
3 topics
Metabolic Health
● Studies ● Anecdata ● Uncertainty

Intermittent Fasting for Type 2 Diabetes

A dietary pattern older than agriculture is producing results that surprise even the endocrinologists studying it
Intermittent fasting — restricting eating to specific time windows — has moved from biohacker trend to serious metabolic research. For type 2 diabetes, the evidence suggests real improvements in insulin sensitivity, but protocols vary wildly and the risks for medicated patients are non-trivial.
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Metabolic Health
● Studies ● Anecdata ● Uncertainty

Mitochondrial Dysfunction

When your cells' power plants fail — and mainstream medicine is just beginning to understand why
Mitochondria generate over 90% of cellular energy. When they malfunction, the effects are systemic and hard to diagnose: fatigue, cognitive impairment, metabolic disruption, and accelerated aging. A growing body of research links mitochondrial dysfunction to conditions ranging from chronic fatigue syndrome to neurodegenerative disease — and a thriving biohacker culture has built an entire supplement economy around fixing it.
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Metabolic Health
● Studies ● Anecdata ● Uncertainty

Berberine

TikTok called it "nature's Ozempic" — the clinical evidence is older, more nuanced, and more interesting than the viral narrative suggests
Berberine is a plant alkaloid found in goldenseal, Oregon grape, and Chinese goldthread that has been used in traditional Chinese and Ayurvedic medicine for centuries. Modern research has demonstrated genuine effects on blood glucose, cholesterol, and gut microbiome composition through AMPK activation — the same metabolic pathway that metformin targets. The evidence for metabolic health is surprisingly robust. The "nature's Ozempic" framing is misleading. And the long-term safety data is thinner than a supplement that millions of people are taking daily deserves.
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Cognitive Health
1 topic
Cognitive Health
● Studies ● Anecdata ● Uncertainty

Lion's Mane Mushroom for Cognitive Decline

A culinary mushroom that may regenerate neurons. The science is early, the community is massive, and the supplement market is a minefield.
Hericium erinaceus — lion's mane — has been used in traditional Chinese medicine for centuries. Modern research has identified compounds (hericenones and erinacines) that stimulate nerve growth factor synthesis. The question: can eating a mushroom actually protect or restore cognitive function?
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Pain & Inflammation
1 topic
Pain & Inflammation
● Studies ● Anecdata ● Uncertainty

Red Light Therapy for Joint Pain & Inflammation

Photobiomodulation sounds like pseudoscience until you read the 5,000+ published studies. The challenge is separating real photomedicine from a $2 billion device market.
Red light therapy (photobiomodulation) uses specific wavelengths of red and near-infrared light to penetrate tissue and modulate cellular function. For joint pain and inflammation, the evidence is surprisingly robust — but the gap between clinical-grade devices and consumer products may determine whether it works for you.
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Environmental Health
1 topic
Environmental Health
● Studies ● Anecdata ● Uncertainty

Mold Toxicity & Mycotoxins

When the air you breathe makes you sick — and medicine struggles to explain why
Mycotoxin illness sits at a contested frontier of medicine. Mainstream clinicians often dismiss it; a growing body of NIH-funded research and hundreds of thousands of patient reports suggest the dismissal may be premature. This topic examines the science, the community, and the wide diagnostic grey zone.
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Nutrition
2 topics
Nutrition
● Studies ● Anecdata ● Uncertainty

Seed Oils & Linoleic Acid

126 million TikTok views, a Nature study, and one of nutrition's most heated debates
Few nutrition topics have produced more viral outrage than seed oils. The anti-seed-oil movement claims linoleic acid drives inflammation, obesity, and chronic disease. Recent peer-reviewed research says the opposite. Understanding what's actually happening — in the lab and in the culture — requires separating processing concerns from compositional ones.
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Nutrition
● Studies ● Anecdata ● Uncertainty

Oxalates

From kidney stones to gut dysbiosis — what the low-oxalate movement gets right, what it doesn't, and who actually needs to worry
Oxalates are organic compounds found in high concentrations in spinach, almonds, and many other plant foods. Mainstream medicine focuses on oxalates primarily in kidney stone prevention. But a growing community of researchers and patients argue that dietary oxalates cause systemic harm far beyond the kidney — triggering pain syndromes, gut dysfunction, and inflammatory conditions in ways conventional medicine hasn't caught up with. The evidence is more complicated than either camp admits.
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Immunology
2 topics
Immunology
● Studies ● Anecdata ● Uncertainty

Histamine Intolerance & MCAS

When your immune system overreacts to everything — and no test can confirm it
Mast Cell Activation Syndrome (MCAS) and histamine intolerance are increasingly invoked to explain a wide range of unexplained symptoms. MCAS has clear diagnostic criteria in medical literature; histamine intolerance has almost none. Both conditions sit at the intersection of legitimate immunology and significant diagnostic uncertainty.
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Immunology
● Studies ● Anecdata ● Uncertainty

Autoimmune Protocol (AIP)

The elimination diet for autoimmune disease — rigorous trial data exists, but the reintroduction phase and long-term outcomes remain poorly studied
The Autoimmune Protocol is a structured elimination diet that removes foods hypothesized to drive gut permeability and autoimmune activity, then systematically reintroduces them to identify individual triggers. It began as a theoretical framework and has since generated actual clinical trial data in IBD and Hashimoto's thyroiditis. The evidence is more robust than most dietary interventions, but critical gaps remain — particularly around reintroduction methodology, long-term nutritional adequacy, and which autoimmune conditions actually benefit.
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Microbiology
1 topic
Microbiology
● Studies ● Anecdata ● Uncertainty

Biofilm Disruption

How microbial fortresses evade antibiotics — and why your chronic infection might not be what you think
Biofilms are structured communities of microorganisms encased in self-produced matrices that render them dramatically resistant to antimicrobial treatment. NIH estimates that 65-80% of chronic infections involve biofilms. From chronic sinusitis to Lyme disease to SIBO, biofilm disruption has become the explanatory framework for conditions that don't respond to standard treatment — though the clinical evidence for consumer biofilm protocols lags far behind the basic science.
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Longevity
1 topic
Longevity
● Studies ● Anecdata ● Uncertainty

Taurine

The 2023 Science paper changed everything — but most of the longevity hype is getting ahead of the data
Taurine is a sulfur-containing amino acid present in high concentrations in the brain, heart, and skeletal muscle. A landmark 2023 paper in Science found that taurine supplementation extended lifespan in mice and improved multiple health markers in middle-aged monkeys. The longevity community moved fast. The data is genuinely exciting. The translation to human supplementation recommendations involves more uncertainty than the headlines suggested.
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Recovery / Inflammation
1 topic
Recovery / Inflammation
● Studies ● Anecdata ● Uncertainty

Cold Exposure Therapy

Cold plunges went from biohacker niche to mainstream wellness trend — the dopamine data is real, the recovery claims are complicated, and the safety conversation is overdue
Cold exposure therapy — cold plunges, cold showers, winter swimming, whole-body cryotherapy — has exploded in popularity driven by Huberman Lab clips and Wim Hof Method evangelists. The core science is legitimate: cold water immersion reliably triggers massive catecholamine release, activates brown adipose tissue, and produces measurable anti-inflammatory effects. But the gap between what the studies actually show and what Instagram influencers claim is wide enough to drown in. The dopamine data is striking. The recovery science is more nuanced. And the cardiac risk conversation is barely happening.
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Recovery / Pain
1 topic
Recovery / Pain
● Studies ● Anecdata ● Uncertainty

Red Light Therapy

Photobiomodulation went from NASA wound-healing research to $500 home panels — the mitochondrial mechanism is legitimate science, but the clinical translation is messier than the marketing suggests
Red light therapy — also called photobiomodulation (PBM) or low-level laser therapy (LLLT) — uses specific wavelengths of red and near-infrared light (typically 630–850nm) to stimulate cellular processes at the mitochondrial level. The foundational research is real: cytochrome c oxidase absorbs these wavelengths and increases ATP production, reduces oxidative stress, and modulates inflammatory signaling. NASA studied it for wound healing in space. Hamblin at Harvard has published extensively on the mechanisms. But the gap between mechanistic plausibility and clinical proof is vast, and the home-device industry has run far ahead of the science. The wavelength and dosing parameter space is enormous, most studies are small and short, and the same device marketed for skin aging is also marketed for chronic pain, hair loss, depression, and athletic recovery.
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Neurological / Supplements
1 topic
Neurological / Supplements
● Studies ● Anecdata ● Uncertainty

Lion's Mane Mushroom

The NGF-stimulating mushroom with real in vitro data, one landmark clinical trial, and a supplement industry that has run the story much further than the human evidence supports
Lion's Mane (Hericium erinaceus) is an edible mushroom that has attracted serious scientific attention for its unusual neurological activity. The mushroom contains hericenones (in the fruiting body) and erinacines (in the mycelium) — compounds that stimulate Nerve Growth Factor (NGF) synthesis both in vitro and in animal models. NGF is critical for the survival, growth, and maintenance of neurons; the therapeutic logic of stimulating it is sound. The Mori 2009 RCT showed cognitive improvements in mild cognitive impairment patients. Paul Stamets's advocacy and the nootropics community have made Lion's Mane one of the best-selling supplements in the brain health category. But the human clinical trial database consists of a handful of small studies, the NGF mechanism faces a blood-brain barrier penetration problem, and the dosing and extraction standardization situation is a mess.
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Neurological / Recovery
1 topic
Neurological / Recovery
● Studies ● Anecdata ● Uncertainty

Vagus Nerve Stimulation

FDA-approved clinical VNS for epilepsy and depression exists alongside a TikTok trend of "vagus nerve resets" — they are completely different interventions, and conflating them is how wellness culture works at its most misleading
Vagus nerve stimulation (VNS) is two completely different things depending on who is talking about it. Clinical VNS involves a surgically implanted device delivering electrical pulses to the cervical vagus nerve — FDA-approved for drug-resistant epilepsy since 1997 and treatment-resistant depression since 2005, with a growing body of evidence for inflammatory diseases. Non-invasive transcutaneous VNS (tVNS) delivers electrical stimulation to auricular or cervical branches of the vagus nerve through skin electrodes and is being studied in clinical trials for migraine, cluster headache, and inflammatory conditions. Consumer "vagus nerve exercises" — the gargling, humming, cold-water face immersion, and diaphragmatic breathing protocols flooding TikTok and wellness blogs — activate the vagal pathway through physiological reflexes and may genuinely affect heart rate variability, but have no established clinical outcomes for any disease. The mechanisms connecting all three are real. The leap from "stimulating the vagus nerve changes physiology" to "gargling will cure your autoimmune disease" is where the science ends and wellness marketing begins.
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Recovery / Biohacking
1 topic
Recovery / Biohacking
● Studies ● Anecdata ● Uncertainty

Grounding / Earthing

The hypothesis that direct contact with the earth's electron field has measurable health effects has real pilot data, a plausible electrochemical mechanism, and a research base almost entirely funded by the people selling grounding mats
Grounding — also called earthing — is the practice of maintaining direct physical contact with the earth's surface (bare feet on soil, grass, or sand; swimming in natural water) or with conductive systems indoors (grounding mats, sheets, or patches connected via wire to the earth's ground port of an electrical outlet). The core hypothesis: the earth carries a negative electric charge and a reservoir of free electrons, and the human body is electrically isolated from this reservoir by insulating footwear and flooring. Direct contact allows electron transfer from earth to body, which proponents argue neutralizes free radicals (reactive species that carry unpaired electrons), reduces inflammation, and normalizes cortisol and circadian rhythms. The electrochemical hypothesis is physically coherent — the earth does carry a negative charge, free radicals are positively charged, and electron transfer is a real phenomenon. The clinical evidence is a series of small pilot studies, most published in journals with low impact factors, most conducted by the same small group of researchers, and most funded by or conducted in collaboration with the Earthing Institute, which has commercial interests in grounding products.
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Supplements / Anti-inflammatory
2 topics
Supplements / Anti-inflammatory
● Studies ● Anecdata ● Uncertainty

Black Seed Oil (Nigella Sativa)

A hadith declaring it "a cure for every disease except death" has driven a millennium of traditional use — and enough modern RCT data to show real metabolic effects, while simultaneously exposing how small trials and cultural funding patterns can make a supplement appear more proven than it is
Black seed oil — pressed from the seeds of Nigella sativa, a flowering plant native to Southwest Asia and the Mediterranean — is among the most commercially successful supplements in the global alternative medicine market, driven by a combination of Islamic traditional medicine, a growing body of small clinical trials, and aggressive social media marketing. The bioactive most studied is thymoquinone (TQ), a monoterpene found at 20–48% concentration in the volatile oil fraction, with documented anti-inflammatory, antioxidant, and immunomodulatory effects in cellular and animal models. Human RCT data exists for type 2 diabetes glycemic control, lipid profile modification, blood pressure, and inflammation markers — but the trials are almost universally small (20–80 participants), short in duration (8–12 weeks), and predominantly conducted by research groups in Middle Eastern countries where cultural and religious motivation to validate the supplement is strong. The thymoquinone bioavailability problem — significant first-pass hepatic metabolism and poor aqueous solubility limiting systemic exposure — is rarely discussed in community-facing content, yet it is the key reason that animal study dose-effect relationships cannot be directly extrapolated to human supplementation.
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Supplements / Anti-inflammatory
● Studies ● Anecdata ● Uncertainty

Turmeric / Curcumin

The anti-inflammatory supplement with a fabrication scandal at its foundation — Aggarwal retracted 30+ papers at MD Anderson, oral curcumin absorbs at less than 1% without specialized delivery systems, and the patented formulations with actual evidence are all manufacturer-funded
Turmeric (Curcuma longa) is a rhizomatous plant in the ginger family, used for millennia in South and Southeast Asian cooking and Ayurvedic medicine. Curcumin is the most studied polyphenolic compound in turmeric, comprising roughly 2–5% of dried turmeric root by weight. The modern supplement industry extracts and concentrates curcumin, typically to 95% standardized curcuminoids, on the premise that higher curcumin concentration delivers greater therapeutic benefit than dietary turmeric. The clinical evidence base for curcumin is complicated by three intersecting problems. First, Bharat Aggarwal, a professor of cancer medicine at MD Anderson Cancer Center and the most prolific curcumin researcher in the world, had more than 30 papers retracted between 2012 and 2021 after investigations found evidence of data fabrication and image manipulation. Many of these retracted papers established foundational claims about curcumin's anti-cancer and anti-inflammatory mechanisms that the supplement industry built its marketing upon. Second, oral curcumin has notoriously poor bioavailability — absorption from standard capsules is below 1% due to rapid metabolism, poor aqueous solubility, and limited intestinal uptake. The body eliminates most ingested curcumin before it can exert systemic effects. Third, the formulations that have addressed the bioavailability problem — Meriva (phospholipid complex), Longvida (SLCP technology), Theracurmin (colloidal dispersion) — are proprietary, patented, and the clinical trials supporting them were funded by their manufacturers. The 2016 Cochrane-adjacent meta-analyses and position papers reviewing curcumin for pain and inflammation find a positive signal, but the evidence quality is consistently rated low-to-moderate, and the Aggarwal retractions have destabilized the mechanistic foundation of the field.
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Brain Health / Supplements
1 topic
Brain Health / Supplements
● Studies ● Anecdata ● Uncertainty

Magnesium Threonate (Magtein)

A single human RCT with 44 participants is the entire clinical evidence base for a $500 million supplement market — and the patent holder funds most of the research
Magnesium L-threonate — branded as Magtein by Magceutics, the MIT-spun company that holds the patents — is marketed as the only form of magnesium that effectively crosses the blood-brain barrier and increases brain magnesium concentrations. The supplement has become one of the fastest-growing products in the cognitive health category, driven primarily by a Huberman Lab podcast appearance that introduced it to millions of listeners and by active community discussion on r/Nootropics and r/Supplements. The scientific origin is a 2010 paper from MIT researcher Inna Slutsky showing that Mg-threonate increased synaptic density and improved cognitive function in rats. The human evidence base consists of exactly one published RCT: a 2016 study in Biogerontology with 44 participants showing cognitive improvements in older adults. The patent on magnesium threonate is held by MIT and licensed to Magceutics/NBTY, creating a funding dynamic where the entity with the most resources to conduct research has a direct financial interest in positive outcomes. The "best form for brain" claim — which drives the $30–50/month premium over the $5/month cost of magnesium glycinate — rests on demonstrated BBB crossing in rats, inferred BBB crossing in humans, and one small human trial that has not been independently replicated.
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Adaptogens / Stress
1 topic
Adaptogens / Stress
● Studies ● Anecdata ● Uncertainty

Ashwagandha

One of the most clinically studied adaptogen supplements — with genuine RCT evidence for cortisol reduction, sleep quality, and testosterone in specific populations — and a growing safety controversy including liver toxicity case reports, nearly complete funder capture of the research literature, and a poorly understood thyroid stimulation signal
Ashwagandha (Withania somnifera) is a root extract from Ayurvedic medicine with one of the largest bodies of randomized controlled trial evidence among adaptogen supplements. The compound is sold in multiple branded extract forms — most prominently KSM-66 (standardized to 5% withanolides from root-only extract) and Sensoril (standardized to 10% withanolides from root and leaf) — with meaningfully different pharmacological profiles, evidence bases, and safety signals. Human RCTs have demonstrated statistically significant reductions in cortisol and stress scores, improvements in sleep latency and quality, testosterone and DHEA-S elevations in specific male populations, and strength improvements in resistance-trained men. By the standards of the adaptogen category, this is a relatively substantial clinical evidence base. The complications begin when you examine who funded the research — the vast majority of positive RCTs were sponsored by Ixoreal Biomed, the manufacturer of KSM-66 — making independent replication rare and industry-independent effect estimation difficult. The adaptogen also carries a thyroid stimulation signal documented in a small RCT of subclinical hypothyroid patients, creating a potentially serious contraindication for people with hyperthyroidism or autoimmune thyroid conditions. And liver toxicity case reports — most notably a 2024 case series from Iceland — have prompted a formal USP herb safety review, adding a hepatotoxicity concern that was absent from the conversation even three years ago.
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Sleep / Flavonoids
1 topic
Sleep / Flavonoids
● Studies ● Anecdata ● Uncertainty

Apigenin

A flavone found in chamomile tea that became a $50M+ supplement market through a single podcast recommendation — with zero human RCTs on isolated supplementation, an arbitrary dose pulled from nowhere, and an entire industry built on the extrapolation from chamomile extract research to a compound that may not survive oral digestion intact
Apigenin (4',5,7-trihydroxyflavone) is a flavone found at high concentrations in chamomile flowers, parsley, celery, and certain herbs, and at lower concentrations throughout the plant kingdom. In the research literature, apigenin has documented GABA-A receptor modulating activity, anxiolytic effects in rodent models, anti-inflammatory properties through NF-κB inhibition, and a range of mechanistic activities in cell culture. The transition from research curiosity to mainstream supplement was not gradual — it was triggered by a single podcast episode in which Andrew Huberman described taking apigenin (50mg at bedtime) as part of his sleep optimization stack, citing its GABA-A receptor activity and potential effects on sleep latency. That recommendation, reaching millions of listeners, created a supplement category essentially overnight. The market response was immediate: dozens of apigenin products launched in 2021–2022, Amazon listings proliferated, and search volume for "apigenin supplement" increased by orders of magnitude. The fundamental problem with this market: the entire human evidence base for apigenin's anxiolytic and sleep-promoting effects derives from chamomile extract studies — not isolated apigenin. Whether oral apigenin supplements deliver bioavailable apigenin to the brain in amounts sufficient to modulate GABA-A receptors is unstudied. The 50mg dose is arbitrary. And CYP enzyme interactions at supplement doses have not been characterized in any published human study.
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Supplements / Flavonoids
1 topic
Supplements / Flavonoids
● Studies ● Anecdata ● Uncertainty

Quercetin

A flavonoid with genuine anti-inflammatory and cardiovascular RCT data that became a COVID-era viral sensation through the zinc ionophore hypothesis — a claim extrapolated from one in vitro study to industrial-scale supplement marketing without a single validating human trial
Quercetin is a polyphenolic flavonoid found naturally in onions, capers, apples, and buckwheat — one of the most abundant dietary antioxidants in the human food supply. It has been studied in clinical trials for blood pressure reduction, immune modulation, exercise performance, and allergy symptom management, with a body of RCT evidence that, while limited, is more substantial than most flavonoid supplements. The compound became dramatically more prominent during the COVID-19 pandemic as part of viral "immune stacks" built around the zinc ionophore hypothesis: the idea that quercetin, like hydroxychloroquine, facilitates cellular zinc uptake, and that intracellular zinc inhibits viral RNA replication. This claim was extrapolated from a single 2014 in vitro study by Dabbagh-Bazarbachi and colleagues and rapidly scaled into mass-market supplement protocols with no clinical trial validation. The bioavailability problem compounds the uncertainty: standard quercetin capsules using quercetin aglycone have approximately 1–2% oral bioavailability without lipid carriers or phytosome formulations, meaning that the products most commonly purchased by consumers are likely delivering a small fraction of the doses that produce effects in clinical research. The gap between the legitimate evidence base — real but modest blood pressure and anti-inflammatory effects in specific populations — and the community's COVID-era expectations is one of the more instructive case studies in how a supplement can be simultaneously partially validated by research and dramatically overclaimed by marketing.
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Supplements / Detox / Mental Health
1 topic
Supplements / Detox / Mental Health
● Studies ● Anecdata ● Uncertainty

NAC (N-Acetyl Cysteine)

A hospital-grade antidote repurposed as a supplement — with 6–9% oral bioavailability and an FDA identity crisis
N-acetyl cysteine (NAC) has one of the most unusual histories in the supplement world: it started as an FDA-approved drug in 1963 (as a mucolytic for cystic fibrosis and COPD), became the definitive hospital antidote for acetaminophen overdose in the 1970s, and somehow ended up as a widely sold wellness supplement marketed for "detox," glutathione support, and mental health. The IV form that saves lives in emergency rooms is not the same pharmacokinetic reality as the oral capsule sold on Amazon. Oral bioavailability of NAC is 6–9% — meaning roughly 91–94% of a typical dose is degraded before it reaches systemic circulation. The psychiatric research base, which spans OCD, trichotillomania, addiction, and depression, is real and promising — but nearly all trials used samples under 100 participants and most results remain unreplicated. The "glutathione precursor" marketing angle is technically accurate in a narrow sense but implies a deficiency that most healthy people do not have. And in 2020, the FDA attempted to reclassify NAC as a drug-only compound (because it was approved as a drug before being sold as a supplement), creating a regulatory cloud that briefly caused major retailers to delist it before the agency quietly backed down. NAC sits at the intersection of legitimate emergency medicine, promising but preliminary psychiatry research, and wellness marketing that overstates both the mechanism and the oral-dose effect.
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Gut Health / Immune / Recovery
1 topic
Gut Health / Immune / Recovery
● Studies ● Anecdata ● Uncertainty

Colostrum (Bovine)

TikTok's favorite gut supplement — a $100M+ market built on five small RCTs and a condition that isn't a medical diagnosis
Bovine colostrum is the first milk produced by cows in the 24–72 hours after calving, rich in immunoglobulins (predominantly IgG), lactoferrin, growth factors (IGF-1, TGF-β), and proline-rich polypeptides. As a supplement, it has been positioned primarily around "leaky gut" and immune support — two claims with very different evidentiary bases. The evidence that exists is largely drawn from athletes experiencing exercise-induced gut permeability increases and NSAID users with drug-induced intestinal damage. These are real, specific findings. The leap from "helps athletes with exercise-damaged gut lining" to "heals everyone's leaky gut" is not supported by that evidence. ARMRA, the brand that drove the 2024–2026 TikTok explosion, built a $100M+ business on the back of those five small RCTs plus an extraordinary influencer campaign that made premium-priced colostrum powder a status supplement. The immunoglobulin content that makes colostrum theoretically appealing — bovine IgG, bovine IgA — is species-specific. Whether intact bovine antibodies survive human digestion and confer meaningful immune benefit remains scientifically unresolved. And the condition most marketing claims colostrum fixes — "leaky gut" or "intestinal hyperpermeability" — is not a recognized medical diagnosis in gastroenterology, though intestinal permeability as a measurable phenomenon does exist. The gap between the measurement and the clinical syndrome being marketed is the central honest tension in this space.
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Immune / Oncology Support / Mushrooms
1 topic
Immune / Oncology Support / Mushrooms
● Studies ● Anecdata ● Uncertainty

Turkey Tail Mushroom

Japan approved a turkey tail extract for cancer adjuvant therapy in 1984. The US supplement market sells dried mushroom powder as if it is the same thing — it is not.
Turkey Tail Mushroom (Trametes versicolor) is one of the most researched medicinal mushrooms, with one unique distinction: PSK (polysaccharide-K), a hot water extract derived from Turkey Tail mycelium, was approved as a prescription adjuvant for cancer treatment by Japan's Ministry of Health in 1984 and remains in wide clinical use in Japan, covered by national health insurance. Decades of Japanese clinical data showed improved survival and reduced recurrence in post-surgical cancer patients given PSK alongside chemotherapy. But PSK is a pharmaceutical-grade hot water extract with standardized polysaccharide content — it is not the same thing as a capsule of ground dried Turkey Tail mushroom, which is what the US supplement market sells. The extraction matters enormously, and almost no consumer product matches the clinical form. Paul Stamets built a significant portion of the Western medicinal mushroom market on advocacy rooted in his mother's experience combining turkey tail with conventional cancer treatment — while his company Fungi Perfecti sells products (Host Defense, which uses mycelium-on-grain rather than fruiting body, and is 60-70% rice starch by independent testing) that are pharmacologically different from the extracts used in the research. Turkey Tail is simultaneously one of the better-supported medicinal mushrooms in the literature and one of the most systematically misrepresented products in the supplement market.
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Adaptogens / Energy / Ayurvedic
1 topic
Adaptogens / Energy / Ayurvedic
● Studies ● Anecdata ● Uncertainty

Shilajit

An ancient Ayurvedic resin built a $200M+ testosterone supplement market on a single manufacturer-funded RCT — while independent tests keep finding heavy metals
Shilajit is a thick, tar-like resin that oozes from high-altitude rock formations across the Himalayas, Altai, Caucasus, and other mountain ranges during warmer months. It is composed primarily of decomposed plant organic matter — predominantly fulvic acid (typically 15–20% of composition), humic acids, dibenzo-α-pyrones (DBPs), and dozens of trace minerals. In Ayurvedic tradition, shilajit (Sanskrit: "conqueror of mountains and destroyer of weakness") has been used for thousands of years as a rasayana — a rejuvenating compound prescribed for fatigue, sexual dysfunction, cognitive decline, and high-altitude acclimatization. The modern supplement market has repackaged this ancient usage into a contemporary testosterone optimization narrative. The primary fuel for that narrative is a single randomized controlled trial published in 2010 by Biswas et al., funded by Natreon Inc., the company that markets PrimaVie branded shilajit. The trial found a 23.5% increase in testosterone in healthy men over 90 days — and that one finding, from 75 subjects with a manufacturer-paid protocol, is the evidentiary foundation of a supplement category generating hundreds of millions in annual revenue. The fulvic acid content, widely cited as the key bioactive, varies 5–10-fold between commercial products and is not standardized. Independent heavy metal testing has found lead, arsenic, and mercury in commercial shilajit products at levels that can exceed established safety thresholds. None of the foundational clinical claims — testosterone support, mitochondrial function, cognitive enhancement — have been replicated in large, independent, well-powered trials. What shilajit represents is a real traditional medicine compound with genuine Ayurvedic history, a plausible but unconfirmed mechanism, one deeply compromised clinical trial, serious contamination risk in commercial forms, and a marketing apparatus that has run far ahead of the science.
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Supplements / Hormonal / Adaptogens
1 topic
Supplements / Hormonal / Adaptogens
● Studies ● Anecdata ● Uncertainty

Tongkat Ali

Every positive RCT has been funded by the two companies that hold the LJ100 and Physta patents — and the research still only shows testosterone restoration to normal range, not supraphysiological elevation
Tongkat Ali (Eurycoma longifolia), also called Malaysian ginseng or longjack, is a flowering tree native to Southeast Asia whose root has been used in traditional Malay medicine for centuries as a tonic for fatigue, sexual dysfunction, and male vitality. The modern supplement market has narrowed that traditional application to a single claim: testosterone booster. The primary clinical evidence consists of two proprietary extract forms — LJ100 (standardized to eurycomanone, produced by HP Ingredients) and Physta (freeze-dried extract, produced by Biotropics Malaysia) — each with a small body of manufacturer-funded randomized controlled trials. Talbott et al. (2013, n=63) found reductions in cortisol and stress with LJ100 in a moderately stressed population. Henkel et al. (2014, n=76) found testosterone normalization in men with late-onset hypogonadism using LJ100. Both trials were funded by HP Ingredients, which holds the LJ100 patent. A second body of research on Physta, conducted largely by Tambi et al. and also manufacturer-funded, found similar patterns: testosterone and LH increases in men with low baseline testosterone, improved sexual function questionnaire scores. The honest summary of the evidence: tongkat ali extracts appear to increase testosterone in men with low or borderline-low baseline levels, normalizing toward the reference range — but the claimed effect of elevating testosterone supraphysiologically in men with normal levels is not supported. Eurycomanone standardization varies enormously across commercial products. No data exists beyond 12 weeks of use. All positive RCTs were funded by the two companies that hold the IP.
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Supplements / Gut Health / Minerals
1 topic
Supplements / Gut Health / Minerals
● Studies ● Anecdata ● Uncertainty

Sea Moss

A $500M+ market built on zero human RCTs — the "92 minerals" claim has no scientific basis, carrageenan (derived from the same plant) was removed from organic certifications over inflammation concerns, and iodine content varies 10–100× between products
Sea moss is the common marketing name for two distinct seaweed species frequently sold interchangeably: Chondrus crispus, a red algae native to the North Atlantic coast of Europe and North America, and Gracilaria, a tropical red algae grown primarily in Saint Lucia, Jamaica, and other Caribbean islands. The distinction matters because their nutritional profiles, carrageenan content, heavy metal risk, and iodine levels differ substantially — yet they are sold under identical branding. The "92 minerals" claim that anchors sea moss marketing across TikTok, Instagram, and influencer content has no traceable scientific basis; the human body requires approximately 20 essential minerals, and no peer-reviewed analysis of either species shows 92 bioavailable minerals. The Dr. Sebi legacy — an Honduran herbalist who promoted sea moss extensively before his death in 2016 — is the ideological foundation of sea moss's popularity in Black wellness communities. Kim Kardashian's 2021 Instagram posts and a wave of TikTok content in 2020–2022 created a second demand surge in mainstream markets. Carrageenan — a thickening agent derived from Chondrus crispus and used extensively in processed food — has been the subject of a prolonged controversy: Tobacman 2001 and subsequent animal and in-vitro research raised inflammation and gut permeability concerns serious enough that carrageenan was removed from the USDA National Organic Program's approved list in 2018 before being reinstated after industry lobbying. Sea moss contains carrageenan as a structural component of the plant. The whole plant is marketed as anti-inflammatory while its extracted derivative is under active scientific debate for inflammatory effects. Heavy metal contamination (arsenic, cadmium, lead) is documented in algae products across species. Iodine content varies 10–100× between products. No human randomized controlled trial has evaluated sea moss for any health endpoint. The supplement category represents the most extreme evidence gap in this library: a $500M+ market with zero clinical validation.
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Sports Performance / Cognitive
1 topic
Sports Performance / Cognitive
● Studies ● Anecdata ● Uncertainty

Creatine

The most-studied performance supplement in existence — 500+ peer-reviewed papers, monohydrate is the gold standard, cognitive benefits are real but modest in well-nourished populations, and the DHT/hair loss fear traces entirely to a single n=20 study that has never been replicated
Creatine is a naturally occurring compound synthesized in the liver, kidneys, and pancreas from the amino acids glycine, arginine, and methionine. It is also obtained directly from meat and fish in the diet — omnivores typically consume 1–2g daily from food. Creatine monohydrate is the most-studied sports nutrition supplement in history, with over 500 peer-reviewed publications examining its effects on muscle strength, power output, body composition, and increasingly, brain function. The International Society of Sports Nutrition declared creatine monohydrate the most effective ergogenic nutritional supplement available for increasing high-intensity exercise capacity and lean body mass in 2017, a position reaffirmed in their 2021 updated position stand. The mechanism is well-understood: creatine increases intramuscular phosphocreatine stores, accelerating ATP resynthesis during high-intensity efforts lasting 1–30 seconds, enabling more work in each training session over time. Despite this unusually strong evidence base, creatine has accumulated a set of persistent myths — water retention causing "bloat," a kidney damage risk (repeatedly disproven in healthy individuals), and most prominently, the DHT/hair loss fear that traces to a single 2009 South African rugby study of 20 men that has never been independently replicated. The cognitive benefits are real but modest in healthy well-nourished populations, meaningful in vegetarians and vegans (who have lower baseline muscle creatine stores), and potentially more significant in older adults and during sleep deprivation or mental stress.
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Peptides / Regeneration / Gray Market
1 topic
Peptides / Regeneration / Gray Market
● Studies ● Anecdata ● Uncertainty

BPC-157

A synthetic peptide fragment with striking regenerative results in animal models and zero published human randomized controlled trials — sourced in a legal gray zone, self-injected by thousands, and the subject of a Phase II trial that was registered and then never published
BPC-157 (Body Protection Compound-157) is a synthetic 15-amino-acid peptide derived from a partial sequence of human gastric juice protein BPC. It does not occur in this form naturally — the "Body Protection Compound" designation comes from the research group of Dr. Predrag Sikiric at the University of Zagreb, which has published extensively on its effects in animal models since the 1990s. The compound has demonstrated striking regenerative and cytoprotective properties in rodent studies across a remarkable range of injury types: gastric ulcers, tendon and ligament injuries, bone healing, nerve regeneration, inflammatory bowel models, and traumatic brain injury. The Sikiric lab and collaborating researchers have accumulated hundreds of animal studies over three decades. Despite this, BPC-157 has never completed a Phase II or Phase III human clinical trial with published results. A Phase II trial registered by Diagen in the early 2010s was never completed or published. BPC-157 exists in a regulatory gray zone — it is not FDA-approved, has received FDA warning letters when marketed for human use, has no USP pharmacopeial monograph, and is technically legal to purchase as a "research chemical" under the fiction that it is for laboratory use only. This has not stopped an active self-experimentation community from injecting it subcutaneously, with thousands of reported experiences across Reddit, biohacking forums, and bodybuilding communities — and essentially no controlled data on what it is doing in human tissue.
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Antioxidant / Cancer Prevention
1 topic
Antioxidant / Cancer Prevention
● Studies ● Anecdata ● Uncertainty

Sulforaphane

A Johns Hopkins-researched broccoli compound with genuine Nrf2-pathway cancer prevention biology — but a supplement market selling standardized extracts that may lack the myrosinase enzyme required to produce the active compound, cancer-prevention claims built on biomarker endpoints rather than actual cancer incidence, and a 5-7x bioavailability variation that makes dose meaningless without individual measurement
Sulforaphane is an isothiocyanate compound produced when glucoraphanin (present in cruciferous vegetables, particularly broccoli and broccoli sprouts) is hydrolyzed by the enzyme myrosinase. This enzymatic reaction occurs when plant cell walls are broken by chewing or chopping — myrosinase contacts glucoraphanin and converts it to sulforaphane. The compound has genuine research credibility: Paul Talalay and Jed Fahey at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health have been studying sulforaphane since the early 1990s, establishing it as an inducer of Phase 2 detoxification enzymes through Nrf2 pathway activation. The Egner 2014 trial in Qidong, China (n=291) demonstrated that broccoli sprout beverages significantly increased urinary excretion of aflatoxin and benzene metabolites — actual carcinogen biomarkers, measured in a high-exposure population. This is the strongest human evidence for sulforaphane bioactivity. The cancer prevention claims, however, rest primarily on biomarker endpoints and cell culture data rather than cancer incidence outcomes. Most commercial sulforaphane supplements face a fundamental problem: glucoraphanin without myrosinase produces little or no sulforaphane — and many products contain one but not both. Bioavailability varies 5–7-fold across individuals, making standard doses pharmacologically meaningless without individual testing.
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Antioxidants / Detox
1 topic
Antioxidants / Detox
● Studies ● Anecdata ● Uncertainty

Glutathione

The "master antioxidant" that healthy livers make continuously — with a supplement market selling $150 IV drips and $2/day liposomal capsules to people who probably do not have a clinically meaningful deficiency, oral bioavailability now confirmed (Richie 2015) but "must be IV" narrative still driving the drip bar industry, a skin-lightening market worth $8 billion running ahead of its melanoma risk evidence, and NAC available for $0.10/day that your body converts to glutathione anyway
Glutathione is a tripeptide — glutamate, cysteine, glycine — synthesized endogenously in virtually all human cells, with the liver being the primary production site. It is the cell's primary antioxidant defense system, serving as a cofactor for glutathione peroxidase (which neutralizes hydrogen peroxide and lipid peroxides), glutathione S-transferase (which conjugates electrophilic carcinogens and xenobiotics to facilitate excretion), and glutaredoxin (which reduces oxidized protein thiols). The "master antioxidant" label is not marketing invention — it reflects glutathione's central position in the cellular redox network. The clinical relevance is in the diseases where glutathione depletion is documented: HIV/AIDS, sepsis, certain inborn errors of metabolism, advanced liver disease, and some chemotherapy protocols. Whether a supplement company's IV drip or liposomal capsule meaningfully raises glutathione in a healthy person whose liver is functioning normally is a different question entirely.
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Controversial / Thyroid / Minerals
1 topic
Controversial / Thyroid / Minerals
● Studies ● Anecdata ● Uncertainty

Iodine (Lugol's / High-Dose Protocol)

The RDA is 150 mcg. The Abraham protocol recommends 12.5–50 mg — 83 to 333 times that dose — based on research published in a journal the researcher founded and controlled, a fibrocystic breast disease trial that has never been replicated, and a theory that the entire Western medical establishment has suppressed knowledge of iodine sufficiency for a century
Iodine is an essential trace element with a genuinely important public health history: widespread iodine deficiency, before mandatory salt iodization programs, caused endemic goiter and cretinism across broad swaths of the global population. The WHO and UNICEF consider salt iodization one of the most successful and cost-effective public health interventions ever implemented. The RDA for iodine in healthy adults is 150 mcg/day — an amount easily supplied by iodized salt and modest seafood consumption. Against this settled public health background sits a movement, originating almost entirely from the work of one retired UCLA endocrinologist publishing in a journal he controlled, arguing that the optimal intake is not 150 mcg but 12.5–50 mg — 83 to 333 times the established RDA — and that mainstream medicine has suppressed this knowledge. The Abraham "Iodine Project" papers, David Brownstein's book "Iodine: Why You Need It, Why You Can't Live Without It," and the communities organized around the iodine loading test and Lugol's solution protocols have created one of the most polarized supplement debates online, with thyroid patient communities split between true believers and people who experienced Hashimoto's flares after following the protocols.
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Supplements / Immune / Hormonal
1 topic
Supplements / Immune / Hormonal
● Studies ● Anecdata ● Uncertainty

Vitamin D (High-Dose Protocol)

The IOM says 600 IU/day. The Coimbra Protocol prescribes 40,000–100,000 IU/day. Between them sits the largest vitamin D RCT ever conducted — 25,871 participants, 5 years, 2,000 IU/day — which found no cancer or cardiovascular benefit. The supplement industry never mentioned that.
Vitamin D is the most-tested supplement in modern clinical research — and the results are substantially more disappointing than the market would suggest. After decades of observational epidemiology showing strong correlations between low vitamin D levels and virtually every serious disease (cancer, cardiovascular disease, diabetes, autoimmune conditions, depression), large randomized controlled trials have consistently failed to convert those correlations into demonstrated causal benefits. The VITAL trial — 25,871 participants, five years, 2,000 IU/day — found no significant reduction in cancer incidence or cardiovascular events. Bolland's systematic reviews found that calcium plus vitamin D supplements do not reduce fracture risk. Autier's 2014 Lancet review advanced the reverse causation hypothesis: low vitamin D may be a consequence of inflammation and illness, not a cause of it, which would explain why sick people have low levels without meaning that supplementation fixes the illness. Against this evidence landscape sits the Coimbra Protocol — a Brazilian single-practitioner regimen prescribing 40,000–100,000 IU/day for autoimmune diseases, zero controlled trials, a mandatory calcium-restricted diet to prevent hypercalcemia, and a community of tens of thousands of patients taking doses 67–167 times the IOM's tolerable upper intake level.
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Gut Health / Supplements / Microbiome
1 topic
Gut Health / Supplements / Microbiome
● Studies ● Anecdata ● Uncertainty

Probiotics

The AGA recommends probiotics for exactly 3 conditions. Most commercial probiotics are marketed for dozens. Two landmark 2018 Cell papers found probiotics may delay gut microbiome recovery after antibiotics and don't reliably colonize at all — findings that an $80 billion industry has largely ignored.
Probiotics are the most commercially successful microbiome intervention in history — an $80 billion global market built on the intuition that more beneficial bacteria equals better health. The scientific literature has not kept pace with this intuition. The American Gastroenterological Association's 2020 clinical practice guidelines recommend probiotics for only three specific conditions: prevention of C. difficile infection in patients on antibiotics, prevention of necrotizing enterocolitis in preterm infants, and management of pouchitis. They recommend against probiotics for most other GI conditions the market sells them for — including IBS, Crohn's disease, and ulcerative colitis. Two landmark 2018 papers in Cell from Eran Segal and Eran Elinav's lab at the Weizmann Institute found something more provocative: probiotics may actively delay gut microbiome recovery after antibiotics, and colonization of commercial probiotic strains is highly individualized — most strains passed through study participants without establishing. The market sells "100 billion CFU" as a benefit. The research asks whether those bacteria colonize, and in most healthy adults, the answer appears to be: probably not.
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Topical / Detox / Traditional Medicine
1 topic
Topical / Detox / Traditional Medicine
● Studies ● Anecdata ● Uncertainty

Castor Oil Packs

The entire modern castor oil pack protocol traces to Edgar Cayce's 1930s psychic readings — not medical research. The one immunological study (Grady 1993, n=36, no placebo) has never been replicated in 30 years. Queen of Thrones built a $10M+ brand on it. 500 million TikTok views later, the evidence base has not changed.
Castor oil packs — wool flannel soaked in castor oil, placed on the abdomen, often with a heating pad — occupy a strange position in the wellness landscape: they are ancient in feel, TikTok-viral in reach, and essentially un-researched in clinical science. The practice in its modern form originates not from traditional herbal medicine or Ayurvedic tradition, but from the psychic readings of Edgar Cayce, a 20th-century American clairvoyant who prescribed the packs for liver detoxification during sessions conducted between the 1920s and 1940s. Cayce had no medical training and his readings were given while in a self-induced trance. The A.R.E. (Association for Research and Enlightenment), the organization that preserved his readings, promoted the packs through the latter half of the 20th century, and naturopathic practitioners adopted them as part of detoxification protocols without independent verification of the mechanism or efficacy. The pharmacological interest in castor oil derives from ricinoleic acid, its primary fatty acid, which binds the EP3 prostanoid receptor and produces genuine anti-inflammatory and smooth-muscle-stimulating effects — established in topical and oral applications, not through fabric packs placed on skin. The gap between "ricinoleic acid has real pharmacology" and "applying a cloth soaked in castor oil to your abdomen detoxifies your liver" is the distance between a legitimate mechanism and an unverified delivery hypothesis. Zero randomized controlled trials have been conducted on castor oil packs specifically. The market has not waited for them.
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Alternative Medicine / Oxidative Therapies / Chronic Illness
1 topic
Alternative Medicine / Oxidative Therapies / Chronic Illness
● Studies ● Anecdata ● Uncertainty

Ozone Therapy

Ozone therapy has a 100-year clinical tradition in Germany and Cuba, an estimated 10 million+ treatments administered, and zero Phase III randomized controlled trials for any indication. The longest-running clinical tradition in alternative medicine has the thinnest published evidence base. The gap between "100 years of use" and "zero Phase III trials" is the story.
Ozone therapy — the medical use of ozone gas (O₃) to treat disease — occupies one of the most contradictory positions in all of medicine: a practice with over a century of clinical use, national programs in multiple countries, an estimated 10 million treatments administered in Germany alone, and essentially no Phase III randomized controlled trial evidence for any indication. The contradiction is not because ozone lacks plausible biological mechanisms — Bocci's decades of research at the University of Siena documented credible mechanistic pathways involving NF-κB modulation, Nrf2 activation, and improved oxygen metabolism. The contradiction exists because plausible mechanisms were never followed through to the rigorous controlled trials required to establish efficacy in humans. Instead, an enormous clinical tradition developed in parallel with the evidence base, generating extensive observational experience that is largely invisible to PubMed because much of it was published in German and Spanish. The result is a therapy used by practitioners who believe in it based on clinical experience, rejected by regulators who require evidence they were never given, and adopted by patients navigating chronic conditions that evidence-based medicine has failed to resolve. Dental ozone has the strongest regulatory foothold — FDA clearance for cavity treatment — but even there the evidence base is thin by pharmaceutical standards. For the systemic applications that dominate the alternative medicine market — Lyme disease, chronic fatigue, autoimmune conditions, cancer adjunct — the evidence is thinner still.
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Antioxidant / Oxidative Stress / Longevity
1 topic
Antioxidant / Oxidative Stress / Longevity
● Studies ● Anecdata ● Uncertainty

Molecular Hydrogen (H₂)

A 2007 Nature Medicine paper launched a field that produced 2,000+ peer-reviewed studies across 30 years — and zero Phase III randomized controlled trials for any condition. Only one regulatory approval exists anywhere in the world: Japan, for inhaled hydrogen after cardiac arrest, at hospital concentrations no consumer product delivers. The most studied alternative therapy in modern medicine has the most peculiar evidence gap.
Molecular hydrogen (H₂) — the lightest molecule in the universe, dissolved in water or inhaled as gas — entered mainstream scientific discussion with a single 2007 paper in Nature Medicine by Ikuroh Ohsawa and colleagues at Tokyo's Nippon Medical School. Ohsawa demonstrated that inhaled hydrogen gas reduced ischemia-reperfusion injury in a rat stroke model by selectively neutralizing hydroxyl radical, the most reactive and damaging of the reactive oxygen species. The finding was arresting because it proposed a specific mechanistic selectivity — hydrogen targets the hydroxyl radical (·OH) and peroxynitrite (ONOO⁻), arguably the most harmful ROS, while leaving signaling ROS like hydrogen peroxide and superoxide largely intact. This "selective antioxidant" property, if real, would solve the core problem that sank antioxidant supplementation: generic antioxidants that neutralize all ROS simultaneously impair cellular signaling as well as oxidative damage. The Ohsawa paper was cited more than 2,000 times. It launched a research program that by 2015 had catalogued 321 peer-reviewed papers across 166 disease models. By 2020, the count exceeded 2,000 published studies. The consumer market responded before the clinical evidence did: $400–2,000 hydrogen water generators, $1–3 dissolved hydrogen tablets, Japanese vending machines selling hydrogen water, and a global market estimated at over $2 billion. What makes molecular hydrogen's evidence story genuinely unusual is not the gap between consumer market and clinical evidence — that gap characterizes most supplements. What is unusual is the scale and duration of the scientific research effort combined with the complete absence of definitive clinical trials. Two thousand papers in 30 years. Zero Phase III trials. One regulatory approval, for one specific indication, for inhaled gas at concentrations consumers cannot replicate. The hydrogen water bottle you buy on Amazon has 2,000 studies behind it and not a single Phase III RCT proving it does anything in humans.
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Alternative Medicine / Regenerative Medicine / Neurological
1 topic
Alternative Medicine / Regenerative Medicine / Neurological
● Studies ● Anecdata ● Uncertainty

Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT)

FDA approved HBOT for 14 conditions with strong evidence — decompression sickness, carbon monoxide poisoning, diabetic foot ulcers, radiation injury. The same technology is marketed for traumatic brain injury, autism, anti-aging, and long COVID with almost no Phase III trial support. The regulatory split is unusually clean: when the evidence is strong, HBOT works. When it isn't, it's a $10B+ off-label industry operating on hope and a $6,000-12,000 treatment course.
Hyperbaric oxygen therapy places patients in a pressurized chamber — typically 2.0 to 3.0 atmospheres absolute (ATA) — breathing 100% oxygen. At elevated pressure, oxygen dissolves directly into blood plasma beyond what hemoglobin can carry, achieving tissue oxygen concentrations roughly 10–15 times higher than breathing room air at sea level. The principle has been understood since the 17th century; the clinical application dates to the 1930s for decompression sickness in divers. By the late 20th century, the Undersea and Hyperbaric Medical Society (UHMS) had established 14 approved indications — conditions for which the evidence base meets the standard for clinical recommendation. The list is specific: arterial gas embolism, carbon monoxide poisoning, clostridial myositis and myonecrosis, crush injury, decompression sickness, arterial insufficiency, severe anemia, intracranial abscess, necrotizing soft tissue infections, osteomyelitis (refractory), delayed radiation injury, skin grafts and flaps (compromised), thermal burns, and selected problem wounds including diabetic foot ulcers. These approvals are well-earned: for the core indications, randomized controlled trial evidence exists, mechanisms are established, and the intervention changes outcomes in measurable ways. The off-label market is the other story. An estimated 1,000+ HBOT clinics in the United States operate a cash-pay business — insurance typically covers only UHMS-approved indications — charging $150-300 per session and selling 40-session protocols at $6,000-12,000 total. The primary off-label markets are traumatic brain injury (TBI), especially in military veteran communities; autism spectrum disorder; COVID-19 and long COVID; anti-aging and longevity; and general wellness. For the two most commercially active off-label indications — mild TBI and autism — the controlled trial evidence is either null or never replicated. The Department of Defense funded two rigorous TBI trials (Miller 2015 and Wolf 2012) that found no significant difference between HBOT and sham. The autism RCT landscape peaked with Rossignol 2009 (n=62) and was never followed by a larger confirmatory trial. The longevity market rests primarily on two papers from the Efrati lab in Tel Aviv — the same lab that runs a commercial HBOT longevity program.
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Alternative Cancer Treatment / Orthomolecular Medicine / Integrative Oncology
1 topic
Alternative Cancer Treatment / Orthomolecular Medicine / Integrative Oncology
● Studies ● Anecdata ● Uncertainty

IV Vitamin C (High-Dose)

NIH pharmacokinetics genuinely rehabilitated Linus Pauling's mechanism — IV achieves 100–400x higher plasma concentrations than oral, and those concentrations are cytotoxic to cancer cells in vitro. That's real science. The Mayo Clinic null trials that buried Pauling for 30 years tested oral vitamin C, not IV. What NIH vindicated was the mechanism, not the clinical claim. Fifty years after Pauling, there is still no Phase III RCT.
Intravenous vitamin C at high doses — typically 25 to 100 grams per infusion — has been used in integrative oncology for five decades, but its scientific history is more complicated than either its proponents or critics typically acknowledge. Linus Pauling, the only person to win two unshared Nobel Prizes, spent the last two decades of his life arguing that high-dose vitamin C could extend cancer survival. The Mayo Clinic ran two randomized trials that found no benefit and dismissed Pauling publicly. Pauling died in 1994 arguing the Mayo trials had tested the wrong route of administration. In 2004, NIH pharmacokineticist Mark Levine published data showing that Pauling was pharmacologically correct: oral vitamin C is tightly regulated by intestinal absorption and renal excretion, capping plasma concentrations at roughly 200 micromoles per liter regardless of dose, while intravenous administration bypasses both regulatory mechanisms and achieves plasma concentrations of 20,000+ micromoles per liter — levels that are selectively cytotoxic to many cancer cell lines in vitro through hydrogen peroxide generation. NIH vindicated the mechanism. The clinical question — does that mechanism translate to tumor reduction or survival benefit in human cancer patients — remains unanswered by any Phase III randomized controlled trial, fifty years after Pauling first proposed it.
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Longevity / Cardiovascular / Recovery / Biohacking
1 topic
Longevity / Cardiovascular / Recovery / Biohacking
● Studies ● Anecdata ● Uncertainty

Sauna Therapy (Heat Therapy / Hyperthermic Conditioning)

The Finnish epidemiological evidence for sauna is genuinely impressive — 40% reduced cardiovascular death at 4-7x/week in a 20-year cohort is not a weak signal. The problem is everything downstream of it: observational design, healthy user bias, zero RCTs at Finnish frequency, heat shock protein extrapolation, and an infrared industry appropriating Finnish data for devices operating at a fraction of the temperature.
Sauna therapy (dry heat, 80-100C Finnish, 5-20 min with rapid cooling) is one of the oldest continuously practiced wellness interventions. Laukkanen et al. 2015 (JAMA Internal Medicine, n=2,315, 20-year follow-up): 2-3x/week = 24% lower mortality; 4-7x/week = 40% lower cardiovascular death. 2018 follow-up (BMC Medicine) found inverse associations with Alzheimer disease. The infrared industry markets Finnish data for 45-65C devices, but the studies used 80-100C.
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Regenerative Medicine / Performance / Anti-Aging
1 topic
Regenerative Medicine / Performance / Anti-Aging
● Studies ● Anecdata ● Uncertainty

Peptide Therapy (BPC-157, Thymosin Beta-4, PT-141)

The peptide therapy field has one FDA-approved compound (PT-141, for HSDD), one compound with 30 years of animal data and zero human RCTs (BPC-157), and a $2B+ clinic market operating on animal-to-human extrapolation. The FDA crackdown on compounding pharmacies in 2023-2024 specifically targeted BPC-157 — while 300,000 members of r/Peptides continue self-dosing from gray-market supply chains.
Peptide therapy refers to the therapeutic use of short amino acid chains (peptides) to target specific biological processes: tissue regeneration, hormonal signaling, immune modulation, and sexual function. The field spans compounds with sharply different evidence profiles. PT-141 (bremelanotide) is FDA-approved for hypoactive sexual desire disorder in premenopausal women — it completed Phase III RECONNECT trials and is sold commercially as Vyleesi. BPC-157 (Body Protection Compound) has 30 years of animal model data primarily from a single Croatian research group (Sikiric et al., University of Zagreb) and zero published human RCTs. Thymosin Beta-4 has broader independent research on wound healing and corneal repair but no approved therapeutic applications. GH secretagogues (ipamorelin, CJC-1295) occupy a middle ground — better understood mechanisms, some human data, no FDA approval for most applications. The entire category operates in a regulatory environment where compounds are compounded, prescribed off-label, or sold as research chemicals — and the 2023-2024 FDA crackdown on compounding pharmacies specifically targeted BPC-157 as an unproven compound being prescribed without clinical evidence.
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Anti-Inflammatory / Topical / Underground Medicine
1 topic
Anti-Inflammatory / Topical / Underground Medicine
● Studies ● Anecdata ● Uncertainty

DMSO (Dimethyl Sulfoxide)

DMSO is FDA-approved for one condition (interstitial cystitis), derived from paper manufacturing waste, penetrates skin in seconds, and carries dissolved compounds with it — making it both the most promising and most dangerous topical delivery mechanism in amateur medicine. Six decades of advocacy by Stanley Jacob at OHSU produced congressional hearings but never a Phase III breakthrough.
DMSO (dimethyl sulfoxide) is an industrial solvent derived as a byproduct of paper manufacturing that became one of the most controversial compounds in 20th century alternative medicine. It is FDA-approved for one indication — interstitial cystitis (bladder pain syndrome) as Rimso-50 — and has been used off-label as a topical anti-inflammatory, pain reliever, and transdermal carrier for decades. Its primary pharmacological property is its exceptional ability to penetrate biological membranes within seconds of skin contact, carrying dissolved compounds with it. This carrier mechanism is both its therapeutic promise and its central safety concern. Stanley Jacob at Oregon Health & Science University championed DMSO from the 1960s through the 2000s, generating congressional hearings, a 60 Minutes segment in 1980, and an enduring underground following in sports medicine and alternative health communities. The compound remains widely sold as a topical product on Amazon and farm supply stores despite its ambiguous regulatory status for most off-label uses.
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Longevity / Anti-Aging / Metabolic Optimization
1 topic
Longevity / Anti-Aging / Metabolic Optimization
● Studies ● Anecdata ● Uncertainty

NAD+ Therapy (NMN / Nicotinamide Riboside)

NAD+ is a coenzyme in every living cell that declines measurably with age. NMN and NR are the precursors that raise it. David Sinclair made NMN a $1B+ supplement market. The FDA declared NMN an investigational drug in 2022. Human trial results are modest. The animal model data is compelling. The gap between those two facts is where the entire debate lives.
NAD+ (nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide) is a coenzyme essential to cellular energy metabolism, DNA repair, and sirtuin activation — and it declines substantially with age in human tissue. NMN (nicotinamide mononucleotide) and NR (nicotinamide riboside) are the two leading oral precursors claimed to raise NAD+ levels, with a $1B+ annual supplement market built primarily on David Sinclair's Harvard research and his bestselling book Lifespan (2019). The science is genuinely interesting: NAD+ decline is real and measurable, sirtuin pathways (SIRT1, SIRT3) have strong evidence in model organisms for longevity effects, and precursor supplementation demonstrably raises blood NAD+ levels in humans. The human evidence for downstream health benefits — the part that matters — is thin. Key trials show modest effects on insulin sensitivity and muscle function in specific populations. The animal model results, including dramatically extended lifespan in mice, have not translated to comparable human trial outcomes. In 2022, the FDA excluded NMN from the dietary supplement category by treating it as an investigational new drug, creating regulatory chaos while sales continued through gray market channels. The Sinclair-Brenner rivalry — NMN vs. NR, Harvard vs. ChromaDex — is the supplement industry's most prominent scientific proxy war.
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Nootropics / Mitochondrial
1 topic
Nootropics / Mitochondrial
● Studies ● Anecdata ● Uncertainty

Methylene Blue

An 1886 synthetic dye that became the world's first synthetic pharmaceutical drug, used for methemoglobinemia for over a century, and is now a biohacker nootropic based almost entirely on one 26-person fMRI study — with a genuinely dangerous serotonin syndrome interaction buried under the marketing
Methylene blue (3,7-bis(dimethylamino)phenothiazin-5-ium chloride) occupies a singular position in pharmaceutical history: approved by the FDA for methemoglobinemia in 1886, it is one of the oldest synthetic drugs still in clinical use. In the brain, methylene blue functions as a redox cycling electron carrier that can bypass dysfunctional mitochondrial Complex I–III in the electron transport chain, donating electrons directly and potentially enhancing ATP production in tissues with compromised mitochondrial function. This mechanism underpins its investigation in neurological conditions including Alzheimer's disease, traumatic brain injury, and Parkinson's disease. The nootropic market for methylene blue is built primarily on a 2017 fMRI study by Rodriguez et al. that showed increased task-related brain activation and approximately 7% improvement on short-term memory tests in 26 healthy adults. A biohacker community that prizes unusual compounds, blue tongues as compliance humor, and mitochondrial optimization rhetoric adopted methylene blue enthusiastically — amplified by Andrew Huberman and Dave Asprey mentions that reached millions of listeners. The genuinely dangerous clinical reality — serotonin syndrome risk through MAO-A inhibition when combined with SSRIs, SNRIs, or other serotonergic medications — is consistently underemphasized in supplement marketing. The industrial-grade versus pharmaceutical-grade sourcing problem creates a real heavy metal contamination risk. And the cognitive enhancement evidence rests on a single trial that has not been independently replicated.
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Repurposed Pharmaceuticals / Autoimmune / Pain Management
1 topic
Repurposed Pharmaceuticals / Autoimmune / Pain Management
● Studies ● Anecdata ● Uncertainty

Low-Dose Naltrexone (LDN)

Naltrexone is FDA-approved at 50mg for opioid and alcohol use disorders. Low-dose naltrexone uses 1.5-4.5mg — one-tenth the dose — for autoimmune disease, fibromyalgia, and multiple sclerosis. Small RCTs show genuine benefit. The mechanism is plausible. The trials will likely never be funded, because naltrexone is generic.
Low-dose naltrexone (LDN) is one of the most emblematic examples of a promising off-label drug use that cannot attract the clinical investment needed to validate it. Naltrexone is FDA-approved at 50mg for treating opioid use disorder (ReVia) and alcohol use disorder (Vivitrol) — blocking opioid receptors to prevent the euphoric effects of opioids and alcohol. LDN uses 1.5-4.5mg — roughly one-tenth the standard dose — for a completely different mechanism and entirely different conditions: fibromyalgia, multiple sclerosis, Crohn's disease, and a range of other autoimmune and pain conditions. At low doses, naltrexone transiently blocks opioid receptors for only a few hours, which paradoxically triggers a rebound increase in endogenous opioid production — particularly beta-endorphin and met-enkephalin — through the OGF-OGFr (opioid growth factor-opioid growth factor receptor) axis characterized by Ian Zagon and Patricia McLaughlin at Penn State over more than 30 years. A secondary proposed mechanism involves TLR4 (Toll-like receptor 4) antagonism — modulation of glial cell inflammatory signaling — which may explain anti-neuroinflammatory effects independent of the endorphin pathway. Dr. Bernard Bihari, an NYC physician working with AIDS patients in 1985, first observed immune enhancement effects at low doses and began prescribing LDN to his patients, launching the grassroots movement. Multiple small RCTs have since shown genuine benefit across fibromyalgia, MS, and Crohn's. The safety profile is excellent — naltrexone is a well-characterized drug with decades of human safety data. Yet no Phase III trial has ever been funded for any LDN indication, because the drug is off-patent and generic, compounded for $30-60/month, and represents a structural commercial dead end for any pharmaceutical company that would fund pivotal trials. LDN is the poster child for the generic drug evidence gap.
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Traditional Botanicals / Pain Management / Opioid Harm Reduction
1 topic
Traditional Botanicals / Pain Management / Opioid Harm Reduction
● Studies ● Anecdata ● Uncertainty

Kratom (Mitragyna speciosa)

A Southeast Asian tree leaf with dose-dependent pharmacology — low doses are adrenergic (stimulant), high doses are opioidergic (partial mu-opioid agonist). Used for centuries by laborers, now used by millions of Americans for pain and opioid withdrawal. Zero FDA-approved trials.
Kratom (Mitragyna speciosa) is one of the most pharmacologically complex and politically contested substances in the wellness supplement space. A tropical tree native to Southeast Asia, Mitragyna speciosa has been used for centuries in Thailand, Malaysia, and Indonesia as a stimulant (at low doses) and analgesic (at high doses). The active compounds — primarily mitragynine (approximately 66% of total alkaloid content) and 7-hydroxymitragynine (2% of alkaloid content but 13x more potent at mu-opioid receptors than morphine) — produce dose-dependent pharmacology that is genuinely dual: low doses activate adrenergic and serotonergic systems (producing stimulant effects), while high doses activate mu-opioid receptors (producing opioid-like analgesia and sedation). This partial agonist profile at mu-opioid receptors is mechanistically distinct from full agonists like heroin and fentanyl — it produces less respiratory depression and a lower ceiling on euphoric effect, which is the pharmacological basis for the harm reduction argument. The regulatory history is central to understanding Kratoms current legal status: in August 2016, the DEA announced a Notice of Intent to schedule Kratom as a Schedule I substance, triggering an unprecedented public comment period that produced 23,000+ comments — the largest in DEA history at that time. The DEA withdrew the scheduling notice and referred the matter to the FDA. The FDA subsequently issued import alerts and published an 8-Factor Analysis classifying Kratom as an opioid with abuse potential. The American Kratom Association (AKA) mounted a significant lobbying campaign, and as of 2024, Kratom remains legal at the federal level but banned in six states (Alabama, Arkansas, Indiana, Rhode Island, Vermont, Wisconsin) and subject to local restrictions. The evidence base is structurally limited: Grundmann et al. (2017) conducted a large online survey (n=8,049, 68% using for pain, 35% for opioid withdrawal) demonstrating widespread use and self-reported benefit; Swogger (2015) provided qualitative evidence of self-treatment patterns; Boyer et al. (2008) documented case series on addiction and withdrawal; Singh et al. (2016) studied long-term users in Malaysia. The FDAs 44 attributed deaths list — the foundation of the regulatory case against Kratom — is contested because virtually all cases involved poly-drug use, and the most rigorous analysis of poison control data (Eggleston et al., 2019) found no deaths attributable to Kratom alone in the NPDS dataset. The central tension is this: millions of Americans are using Kratom with genuine pharmacological basis (partial mu-opioid agonism, dose-dependent analgesia), real self-reported benefit for pain and opioid withdrawal, and a plausible harm reduction argument relative to full-agonist opioids — while simultaneously facing zero FDA-approved clinical trials, documented dependency potential, a contaminated unregulated supply chain, and a regulatory status that is unstable and politically driven rather than science-driven.
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Traditional Medicine / Anti-inflammatory / Metabolic
1 topic
Traditional Medicine / Anti-inflammatory / Metabolic
● Studies ● Anecdata ● Uncertainty

Black Seed Oil (Nigella Sativa)

Nigella sativa seed — "the remedy for everything except death" in Islamic prophetic medicine — has 1,400 years of cross-cultural use (Unani, Ayurvedic, North African). The active compound thymoquinone has 1,000+ PubMed studies. Multiple positive metabolic RCTs. No Phase III cancer trials. And the supplement market has no standardization, so the compound in your bottle might be 10x stronger or weaker than the one in the research.
Black Seed Oil (Nigella sativa) is one of the most unusual supplements in the evidence landscape: a compound with 1,400 years of continuous documented use, over 1,000 published studies on PubMed, multiple positive randomized controlled trials in metabolic conditions and Hashimoto's thyroiditis, and extensive in vitro cancer research — yet almost no Phase III human clinical trials, massive product quality variation, and a cross-cultural endorsement pattern (Islamic, Ayurvedic, North African traditional medicine all independently valuing the same seed) that is genuinely rare in the supplement world. The active compound, thymoquinone (TQ), has been characterized mechanistically: NF-kappaB inhibition (anti-inflammatory), glutathione pathway support (antioxidant), and immunomodulatory effects through multiple pathways. The diabetes evidence is particularly notable: Bamosa et al. (2010), an RCT in 94 patients, found 2g/day of black seed oil reduced HbA1c by 1.52% — a clinically significant result for a natural compound. Kaatabi et al. (2015) expanded this with a dose-response study in 114 patients. The Hashimoto's evidence (Farhangi et al., 2016, n=40, RCT) showed thyroid function improvement and anti-TPO antibody reduction — one of the few natural substances with thyroid-specific RCT data. The cancer research is extensive in vitro (breast, colon, pancreatic, lung cell lines) but the translation gap to clinical benefit is enormous; no completed Phase III trials in cancer patients. The supplement market problem is severe: cold-pressed vs. CO2 extracted vs. solvent extracted produces thymoquinone content ranging from 0.5% to 5% across products, with no industry standardization. The central tension is that Black Seed Oil has more documented research and cross-cultural endorsement than almost any other natural compound, yet the evidence base is structurally incomplete: small positive RCTs in specific conditions, massive preclinical literature, no Phase III trials, and no quality control standards.
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