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🧬 Elevate your mind, fuel your future with Doctor's Best Fisetin!
Doctor's Best Fisetin with Novusetin™ delivers a clean, vegan-friendly 100 mg dose of Fisetin per capsule, designed to support antioxidant activity, cognitive function, and memory. Free from gluten, soy, and GMOs, this 30-count supplement fits seamlessly into a health-conscious lifestyle, backed by a trusted brand with strong customer satisfaction.





| ASIN | B0081NXW1C |
| Age Range Description | Adult |
| Allergen Information | Gluten Free |
| Best Sellers Rank | #48,943 in Health ( See Top 100 in Health ) #1,183 in Multivitamins Nutritional Supplements |
| Brand | Doctor's Best |
| Brand Name | Doctor's Best |
| Color | multi |
| Container Type | Bottle |
| Customer Reviews | 4.4 out of 5 stars 782 Reviews |
| Diet Type | Gluten Free |
| Dosage Form | 1-500 |
| Flavor | Unflavored |
| Flavour | Unflavored |
| Global Trade Identification Number | 00753950002272 |
| Item Dimensions | 5.4 x 5.4 x 9.5 centimeters |
| Item Form | Capsule |
| Item Weight | 0.04 Pounds |
| Item form | Capsule |
| Item weight | 0.04 Pounds |
| Manufacturer | Doctor's Best |
| Manufacturer Part Number | DRB-00227 |
| Material Features | GMO Free, Vegan, Vegetarian |
| Material Type Free | en_AE |
| Model Name | Doctor ' S Best Non Gmo Vegan Gluten Free Mg |
| Model Number | DRB-00227 |
| Number of Items | 1 |
| Primary Supplement Type | multivitamin |
| Primary supplement type | multivitamin |
| Product Benefits | Antioxidant |
| Special Ingredients | Fisetin 100 mg (from Rhus succedanea ext. 95%, stem)(Novusetin™) |
| Specific Uses For Product | Antioxidant Activity, Cognitive Function, Memory |
| Total Servings Per Container | 30 |
| UPC | 753950002272 |
| Unit Count | 30 Count |
| Unit count | 30 Count |
M**O
cuestion de probar
es un antioxidante que permite o vectoriza la autofagia de células senescentes promoviendo el antienvejecimiento, tiene ademas efecto cognitivo positivo aun en edad avanzada, es un flavonoide de tipo senolitico (antianging) que proviene principalmente de fresas y manzanas, no se siente el efecto pero este seria a nivel celular, seria cosa de hacerse exámenes para comprobar el efecto antioxidante, por mi parte lo estuve tomando por varias semanas y me sentí bien
V**O
Top top top
me atendeu as expectativas, tudo satisfatoriamente.
F**O
Everyone taking should know... 500mg once a day, for five days, once a year
Animal Data Shows Fisetin to be a Surprisingly Effective Senolytic It is exciting to see animal data arrive for some of the potentially senolytic compounds that may turn out to destroy enough senescent cells in mammals to be worth using as first generation rejuvenation therapies. As a reminder, the accumulation of senescent cells is one of the causes of aging; countless cells become senescent every day in our bodies, but near all are destroyed. A tiny fraction linger to cause significant harm through the inflammatory signal molecules that they secrete. If these errant cells can be removed, then inflammatory diseases and numerous aspects of aging can be turned back to some degree. The results in mice stand head and shoulders above all of the other approaches to aging in terms of reliability and breadth of benefits. Some senolytic compounds have been tested in animals, but a larger body of candidate senolytic drugs are presently only accompanied by cell study data. The ability to selectively destroy senescent cells in a petri dish does little more than indicate potential; there is a significant rate of failure in medical research and development for compounds with promising cell data, and any number of reasons as to why they may not work well enough in tissues or otherwise turn out to be infeasible for use in animals and humans. Fisetin was one such senolytic candidate with cell study data only, and I had not viewed it as a likely prospect. It is a flavonoid, and the one other well-known possibly senolytic flavonoid turned out not to be useful on its own - though it is helpful as a part of a combination treatment. Given that, results from the recent animal study of fisetin noted here greatly exceed expectations, surprisingly so. Fisetin appears about as effective in mice as any of the current top senolytics, such as the chemotherapeutics dasatinib and navitoclax. Per the data in the open access paper below, dosing with fisetin destroys 25-50% of senescent cells depending on organ and method of measurement. The dose level is large in absolute terms, as one might expect for a flavonoid. For aged mice and a one-time treatment, the researchers used 100 mg/kg daily for five days. The usual approach to scale up estimated doses from mouse studies to initial human trials leads to 500 mg per day for five days for a 60kg human. Given the wealth of new results emerging these days, it seems to me that people focused on self-experimentation, open human trials, and investigative mouse studies in this field should be moving to focus on combination therapies. Consider a combination of fisetin, dasatinib, quercetin, piperlongumine, and FOXO4-DRI - multiple different mechanisms to provoke apoptosis that are all hitting senescent cells at the same time. The goal would be to see if it is possible to engineer a significantly higher level of clearance of senescent cells than any of these senolytics can achieve on their own. This seems like a plausible goal, and may turn out to present meaningful competition to efforts such as those of Oisin Biotechnologies and other groups developing more sophisticated senolytic therapies that should have high rates of clearance. Researchers Have Discovered How to Slow Aging Quote: As people age, they accumulate damaged cells. When the cells get to a certain level of damage they go through an aging process of their own, called cellular senescence. The cells also release inflammatory factors that tell the immune system to clear those damaged cells. A younger person's immune system is healthy and is able to clear the damaged cells. But as people age, they aren't cleared as effectively. Thus they begin to accumulate, cause low-level inflammation and release enzymes that can degrade the tissue. Researchers found a natural product, called fisetin, reduces the level of these damaged cells in the body. They found this by treating mice towards the end of life with this compound and see improvement in health and lifespan. "These results suggest that we can extend the period of health, termed healthspan, even towards the end of life. But there are still many questions to address, including the right dosage, for example." One question they can now answer, however, is why haven't they done this before? There were always key limitations when it came to figuring out how a drug will act on different tissues, different cells in an aging body. Researchers didn't have a way to identify if a treatment was actually attacking the particular cells that are senescent, until now.
Z**R
No change
No change observed. Waste of money
H**N
Good quality
It's hard to say if it did anything. Expensive for not doing anything. It might be great if you can afford several bottles.
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5 days ago
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