Rejuvant?
Has anyone heard of this?
The speaker presented a talk indicating that users got substantial drop in DNA methylation age results - I seem to recall an average of 8 years after 6 months usage
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I bought 180 500 mg AKG capsules for $15 on Amazon. Rejuvant's $110 monthly subscription price seems steep to me. I know my AKG from Amazon is not time release but in testing did the worms and mice get time release AKG? I think not.
The Rejuvant people say that they have a patent but on exactly what? For better or for worse, I expect to see copy-cat type extended release AKG hitting the market.
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AKG researcher, Dr. Gordon Lithgow was recently interviewed by Modern Healthspan. He doesn't seem to think that the CA from of AKG is superior. Another AKG researcher, Dr. Brian Kennedy was recently interviewed by the Skeekey Science Show. He stated that he saw no advantage of the CA form of AKG.
Kennedy has said that maybe the time release form is superior but tests are still being run to determine that.
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I'm on my last 5miligrams of rapamycin and have just become aware of AKG. Anyone know if they can be taken together? Just out of caution I thought I'd wait until my 1.25 month rapamycin cycle is through before tanking AKG. Also, my wife had a horrible case of ocular shingles after supplementing with arginine. She worries that AKG might set it off again but it seems that would be AAKG not AKG? Comments.
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Fred Cloud said:
Its the ca-akg that creates the sustained release,This is incorrect. Ca-AKG is just an AKG salt; it has negligible effects on pharmacokinetics. Rejuvant was formulated for extended-release characteristics.
Fred Cloud said:
AKG has been found to work also, so I think they just want something unique that they can patent so they can mark the price way up,This is fairly obviously not correct: I'm sure they "want something unique that they can patent so they can mark the price way up," but there's nothing unique about Ca-AKG, and it's certainly not patentable: lots of other people sell it at much lower prices. Rejuvant is more expensive in small part because of the additional cost of formulating an extended-release tablet, but also because the formula includes the additional ingredients (which are researched and patented based on mouse lifespan and frailty studies), the branding, the scientific affiliations, and the fact that it's being used in clinical trials.