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SUPPLEMENT MEGATHREAD
27 Supplements — Evidence, Dosing & Rankings
by til<3D
April 2026
27 Supplements — Evidence, Dosing & Rankings
by til<3D
April 2026
DISCLAIMER | |
Read First | This guide covers supplements, not pharmaceuticals or peptides (covered in separate megathreads). Evidence grades reflect actual human data quality. A = multiple human RCTs. B = some human data. C = animal/in-vitro only. |
Age Note | Some longevity compounds (NMN, Resveratrol, CoQ10) have evidence only in elderly subjects and provide minimal benefit at 17-18 years. These are clearly flagged. |
Peptide Megathread |
QUICK REFERENCE — ALL 27 SUPPLEMENTS
Supplement | Category | Evidence | Cost | Overall |
Vitamin D3 | Foundation Nutrients & Vitamins | A | 10/10 | 9/10 |
Vitamin K2 (MK-7) | Foundation Nutrients & Vitamins | B+ | 9/10 | 8/10 |
Magnesium Glycinate | Foundation Nutrients & Vitamins | A | 9/10 | 9/10 |
Omega-3 (Fish Oil / Algae Oil) | Foundation Nutrients & Vitamins | A | 8/10 | 9/10 |
Vitamin B12 | Foundation Nutrients & Vitamins | A | 10/10 | 9/10 |
Vitamin C | Foundation Nutrients & Vitamins | A | 10/10 | 9/10 |
Zinc Bisglycinate | Foundation Nutrients & Vitamins | A | 9/10 | 8/10 |
Iron | Foundation Nutrients & Vitamins | A | 9/10 | 7/10 |
Iodine | Foundation Nutrients & Vitamins | A | 10/10 | 7/10 |
Selenium | Foundation Nutrients & Vitamins | B+ | 10/10 | 7/10 |
Creatine Monohydrate | Sport & Performance | A+ | 10/10 | 10/10 |
Whey Protein / Vegan Protein | Sport & Performance | A | 8/10 | 9/10 |
Beta-Alanine | Sport & Performance | B+ | 9/10 | 7/10 |
L-Citrulline / Citrulline Malate | Sport & Performance | B+ | 8/10 | 7/10 |
HMB (Beta-Hydroxy Beta-Methylbutyrate) | Sport & Performance | B | 6/10 | 6/10 |
Caffeine | Sport & Performance | A+ | 10/10 | 9/10 |
Electrolytes | Sport & Performance | A | 9/10 | 8/10 |
EAA / BCAA | Sport & Performance | B | 6/10 | 5/10 |
L-Glutamine | Sport & Performance | C+ | 8/10 | 4/10 |
Ashwagandha (KSM-66) | Recovery & Health | B+ | 8/10 | 7/10 |
Curcumin + Piperine | Recovery & Health | B | 8/10 | 6/10 |
Collagen Peptides | Recovery & Health | B | 7/10 | 7/10 |
Melatonin | Recovery & Health | A | 10/10 | 7/10 |
L-Theanine | Recovery & Health | B | 10/10 | 7/10 |
Probiotics | Recovery & Health | B | 7/10 | 6/10 |
CoQ10 (Ubiquinol) | Recovery & Health | B | 5/10 | 5/10 |
Rhodiola Rosea | Longevity & Nootropics | B | 8/10 | 7/10 |
Bacopa Monnieri | Longevity & Nootropics | B | 8/10 | 6/10 |
Lion's Mane (Hericium erinaceus) | Longevity & Nootropics | B- | 7/10 | 6/10 |
Astaxanthin | Longevity & Nootropics | B | 6/10 | 6/10 |
NMN / NR (NAD+ Precursors) | Longevity & Nootropics | B- | 4/10 | 2/10 |
Resveratrol | Longevity & Nootropics | C+ | 6/10 | 4/10 |
Spermidine | Longevity & Nootropics | B- | 5/10 | 5/10 |
ESSENTIAL STACK — MINIMUM EFFECTIVE SUPPLEMENTS
The Non-Negotiables | |
Tier 1 — Must Have | Vitamin D3+K2, Magnesium Glycinate, Omega-3, Vitamin B12 (I'm vegan thats why), Zinc Bisglycinate, Creatine Monohydrate, Protein Powder, Caffeine |
Tier 2 — High Value | Collagen+Vit C, Ashwagandha KSM-66, L-Citrulline, HMB (in deficit), Electrolytes, Melatonin (situational) |
Tier 3 — Optional | Curcumin, Probiotics, Beta-Alanine, L-Theanine, Astaxanthin, Rhodiola |
Skip at 17-18 | NMN/NR, CoQ10, Resveratrol, Spermidine — age-inappropriate or no evidence in young healthy subjects |
SUPPLEMENT PROFILES BY CATEGORY
── FOUNDATION NUTRIENTS & VITAMINS ──
── FOUNDATION NUTRIENTS & VITAMINS ──
VITAMIN D3 | |
Category | Foundation Nutrients & Vitamins |
Intro | The most common micronutrient deficiency in the Western world. Synthesized in skin from UVB exposure indoor lifestyles and SPF use make supplementation necessary for most people year-round. Functions as a steroid hormone, not just a vitamin. |
Mechanism | Converted to calcitriol (active form) in liver and kidneys. Calcitriol binds VDR (vitamin D receptor) in virtually every cell type — regulates >1000 genes. Stimulates calcium absorption in the gut. Modulates immune cell function. |
Benefits | Testosterone support (VDR expression in Leydig cells). Immune regulation. Bone density. Mood and depression reduction. Muscle function. Reduced all-cause mortality at optimal levels. |
Negatives | Toxicity above 10,000 IU/day long-term without K2 co-supplementation. Most people won't hit toxicity at 2,000-4,000 IU. |
Dosage | 2,000–5,000 IU/day with a fatty meal. Test serum 25(OH)D — target 100-150 nmol/L. |
Timing | Morning or midday with fats. |
Cost | Very cheap. €5-10 for 6+ months supply. |
Evidence Grade | A — Extensive RCT data. One of the most studied micronutrients. |
Synergies | Always combine with Vitamin K2 to direct calcium to bones rather than arteries. |
Warnings | Take with K2. Test levels before and after. |
Ratings:
Effectiveness | Ease of Use | Evidence | Cost | Overall |
9/10 | 10/10 | 9/10 | 10/10 | 9/10 |
VITAMIN K2 (MK-7) | |
Category | Foundation Nutrients & Vitamins |
Intro | K2 is distinct from K1 (leafy greens, blood clotting) — MK-7 form has long half-life and superior bioavailability. Essential partner to D3 supplementation. Carboxylates osteocalcin and matrix Gla protein. |
Mechanism | Activates osteocalcin (directs calcium into bone matrix) and MGP (prevents arterial calcification). Without K2, D3-driven calcium absorption can deposit in arteries rather than bones. |
Benefits | Prevents arterial calcification from high-dose D3. Bone density improvement. Cardiovascular protection. Potentially improves insulin sensitivity via osteocalcin. |
Negatives | Minimal. Theoretical interaction with warfarin (avoid with blood thinners). |
Dosage | 100–200mcg MK-7/day with D3. |
Timing | With D3 and fatty meal. |
Cost | €8-15 for 3 months. |
Evidence Grade | B+ — Strong mechanistic data. Good observational studies. RCT evidence for bone/CVD growing. |
Synergies | D3 (essential pairing). Magnesium (activates D3). |
Warnings | Avoid with anticoagulants. Use MK-7 form — MK-4 has poor bioavailability. |
Ratings:
Effectiveness | Ease of Use | Evidence | Cost | Overall |
8/10 | 10/10 | 7/10 | 9/10 | 8/10 |
MAGNESIUM GLYCINATE | |
Category | Foundation Nutrients & Vitamins |
Intro | Magnesium is the fourth most abundant mineral in the body and cofactor for 300+ enzymatic reactions. Deficiency is extremely common — soil depletion, processed foods, and sweating through training all contribute. Glycinate form has superior GI tolerance vs oxide/citrate. |
Mechanism | ATP requires magnesium for stability (Mg-ATP complex). Regulates NMDA glutamate receptors (sleep/anxiety). Cofactor for vitamin D activation. Involved in protein synthesis, DNA repair, and muscle contraction/relaxation. |
Benefits | Sleep quality improvement (reduces sleep onset latency). Reduced muscle cramps. Anxiety reduction via GABA/NMDA modulation. Cardiovascular health. Testosterone support. |
Negatives | Loose stools at high doses — glycinate form minimizes this. Overdose rare with supplemental doses. |
Dosage | 300–400mg elemental magnesium/day. Glycinate typically 300mg elemental from 2 capsules. |
Timing | Evening — promotes relaxation and sleep. |
Cost | €10-20/month for quality glycinate. |
Evidence Grade | A — Extremely well-studied. One of the most important supplements for athletes. |
Synergies | D3+K2 (activates D3). Zinc (complementary electrolyte). Sleep stack with DSIP/melatonin. |
Warnings | Separate from zinc by 2+ hours (compete for absorption at high doses). Diarrhea at >600mg/day. |
Ratings:
Effectiveness | Ease of Use | Evidence | Cost | Overall |
8/10 | 90/10 | 9/10 | 9/10 | 9/10 |
OMEGA-3 (FISH OIL / ALGAE OIL) | |
Category | Foundation Nutrients & Vitamins |
Intro | EPA and DHA are essential long-chain omega-3 fatty acids. Western diets are massively omega-6 dominant, creating chronic pro-inflammatory imbalance. Algae oil is the vegan source — fish actually get their omega-3 from algae. Higher bioavailability in triglyceride vs ethyl ester form. |
Mechanism | EPA/DHA incorporated into cell membranes → alters eicosanoid production toward anti-inflammatory prostaglandins. EPA competes with arachidonic acid for COX/LOX enzymes. DHA critical for brain cell membrane fluidity. |
Benefits | Anti-inflammatory. Cardiovascular protection. Cognitive function support. Reduced DOMS and muscle inflammation post-training. Triglyceride reduction. Depression/mood improvement. |
Negatives | Fish taste/burping with low-quality products. Blood thinning at very high doses (>5g EPA+DHA/day). |
Dosage | 2–3g combined EPA+DHA/day minimum. Optimally test Omega-3 Index — target >8%. |
Timing | With fatty meal to improve absorption. |
Cost | €15-30/month for quality product (Omega-3 Index tested brand). |
Evidence Grade | A — Thousands of RCTs. One of the most evidence-backed supplements globally. |
Synergies | Anti-inflammatory stack with Curcumin. Training recovery with Creatine. |
Warnings | Check for ethyl ester vs triglyceride form. High doses may increase bleeding time. |
Ratings:
Effectiveness | Ease of Use | Evidence | Cost | Overall |
9/10 | 9/10 | 9/10 | 8/10 | 9/10 |
VITAMIN B12 | |
Category | Foundation Nutrients & Vitamins |
Intro | Essential for nervous system function, red blood cell formation, and DNA synthesis. Only found naturally in animal products — vegans and vegetarians are at significant deficiency risk. Deficiency develops slowly (liver stores last 2-7 years) but causes irreversible neurological damage if untreated. |
Mechanism | Methylcobalamin form: methyl group donor in methionine cycle. Adenosylcobalamin: cofactor in mitochondrial energy metabolism. Required for myelin sheath synthesis. |
Benefits | Prevents megaloblastic anemia. Maintains neurological function. Energy metabolism support. DNA synthesis. Essential for vegans/vegetarians. |
Negatives | Excess excreted in urine — extremely difficult to overdose. Upper limit not established. |
Dosage | 500–1000mcg/day cyanocobalamin OR 250–500mcg methylcobalamin. Every other day at 500mcg if levels already optimal. |
Timing | Morning with food. |
Cost | Very cheap. €5-10 for months supply. |
Evidence Grade | A — Essential nutrient with extensive evidence. |
Synergies | Folate (B9) — works synergistically in methionine cycle. B-Complex. |
Warnings | Check serum B12 — optimal range 300-600 pg/ml. Reduce to every other day if >800. |
Ratings:
Effectiveness | Ease of Use | Evidence | Cost | Overall |
9/10 | 10/10 | 9/10 | 10/10 | 9/10 |
VITAMIN C | |
Category | Foundation Nutrients & Vitamins |
Intro | Ascorbic acid. Water-soluble antioxidant and enzymatic cofactor. Cannot be synthesized by humans (due to GLO gene mutation). Highest concentration in adrenal glands and anterior pituitary. Essential for collagen hydroxylation. |
Mechanism | Cofactor for prolyl and lysyl hydroxylase → required for collagen cross-linking. Antioxidant: electron donor, regenerates vitamin E. Supports immune cell function. Enhances non-heme iron absorption. |
Benefits | Collagen synthesis (skin, tendon, cartilage). Immune support. Antioxidant protection. Non-heme iron absorption enhancement (take with iron supplements). Cortisol regulation. |
Negatives | GI distress at high doses (>2g/day). Kidney stone risk theoretically increased at very high doses in predisposed individuals. |
Dosage | 500–1000mg/day. Split dosing for higher amounts. |
Timing | With meals to reduce GI upset. |
Cost | Extremely cheap. €3-8/month. |
Evidence Grade | A — Essential nutrient. Collagen and immune evidence very strong. |
Synergies | Iron (take together). Collagen peptides (required for collagen synthesis). |
Warnings | Avoid >2g/day long-term without medical reason. Liposomal form for better absorption if needed. |
Ratings:
Effectiveness | Ease of Use | Evidence | Cost | Overall |
8/10 | 10/10 | 9/10 | 10/10 | 9/10 |
ZINC BISGLYCINATE | |
Category | Foundation Nutrients & Vitamins |
Intro | Zinc is an essential trace mineral involved in 300+ enzymatic reactions. Severely underconsumed in vegan/vegetarian diets due to phytate binding reducing bioavailability. Bisglycinate form has 2-3x better absorption than zinc oxide (most multivitamins). |
Mechanism | Cofactor for testosterone biosynthesis enzymes. Required for 5-alpha reductase activity. DNA replication and protein synthesis. Wound healing and immune cell proliferation. Antioxidant via SOD enzyme. |
Benefits | Testosterone optimization (prevents deficiency-driven low T). Immune function. Skin healing and acne reduction (inhibits P. acnes and reduces sebum). Wound healing. Taste and smell function. |
Negatives | Nausea on empty stomach. Copper depletion with long-term high doses (>40mg/day) — supplement copper alongside. |
Dosage | 25–40mg elemental zinc/day. Bisglycinate preferred. |
Timing | Evening with food. Separate from copper by 2+ hours. |
Cost | €8-15/month. |
Evidence Grade | A — Essential nutrient with strong RCT evidence for deficiency correction. |
Synergies | Copper (must supplement alongside at 1:8 copper:zinc ratio). Magnesium. Vitamin A. |
Warnings | Never exceed 40mg/day without monitoring. Copper supplementation essential with chronic zinc use. Separate from iron and calcium. |
Ratings:
Effectiveness | Ease of Use | Evidence | Cost | Overall |
8/10 | 9/10 | 8/10 | 9/10 | 8/10 |
IRON | |
Category | Foundation Nutrients & Vitamins |
Intro | Most common micronutrient deficiency globally. Critical for hemoglobin (oxygen transport) and myoglobin (muscle oxygen storage). Particularly important for athletes (foot-strike hemolysis in runners) and vegans (non-heme iron has low bioavailability). |
Mechanism | Component of heme group in hemoglobin and myoglobin. Required for cytochrome enzymes in electron transport chain. Cofactor for ribonucleotide reductase (DNA synthesis). |
Benefits | Prevents iron-deficiency anemia. Athletic endurance and VO2max. Cognitive function. Energy levels. Hair health. |
Negatives | Constipation with ferrous sulfate (use ferrous bisglycinate). Iron overload in hemochromatosis. Never supplement without confirmed deficiency — iron excess is pro-oxidant. |
Dosage | Only supplement if serum ferritin <30 µg/L. Ferrous bisglycinate 14-25mg elemental iron/day. |
Timing | Morning on empty stomach OR with Vitamin C for enhanced absorption. |
Cost | €5-15/month. |
Evidence Grade | A — Essential nutrient. Test before supplementing. |
Synergies | Vitamin C (enhances absorption 2-3x). Avoid taking with calcium, zinc, or coffee. |
Warnings | ALWAYS test ferritin first. Iron overload is dangerous. Do not supplement without confirmed deficiency. |
Ratings:
Effectiveness | Ease of Use | Evidence | Cost | Overall |
8/10 | 7/10 | 9/10 | 9/10 | 7/10 |
IODINE | |
Category | Foundation Nutrients & Vitamins |
Intro | Essential for thyroid hormone synthesis (T3 and T4). Severe deficiency causes goiter and hypothyroidism. Western countries have adequate iodine from iodized salt and dairy — vegans avoiding these sources may be deficient. |
Mechanism | Required for iodination of tyrosine residues in thyroglobulin → T4/T3 synthesis. T3 is the active thyroid hormone regulating metabolic rate, protein synthesis, and development. |
Benefits | Thyroid function normalization. Metabolic rate. Cognitive function. Fetal development (critical during pregnancy). |
Negatives | Excess iodine can paradoxically suppress thyroid function (Wolff-Chaikoff effect). Avoid supplementing if thyroid disease without medical guidance. |
Dosage | 150mcg/day (RDA). Vegans may need 250mcg. Check serum TSH before supplementing. |
Timing | With food. |
Cost | Extremely cheap. Often in multivitamins. |
Evidence Grade | A — Essential nutrient. |
Synergies | Selenium (required for iodine metabolism and T4→T3 conversion). |
Warnings | Do not over-supplement. Check thyroid function first. Seaweed is variable and can deliver excessive iodine. |
Ratings:
Effectiveness | Ease of Use | Evidence | Cost | Overall |
7/10 | 9/10 | 9/10 | 10/10 | 7/10 |
SELENIUM | |
Category | Foundation Nutrients & Vitamins |
Intro | Essential trace mineral with powerful antioxidant function via selenoproteins. Critical for thyroid hormone metabolism (T4→T3 conversion). Brazil nuts provide ~70-90mcg per nut — 2-3 nuts covers daily requirement. |
Mechanism | Component of glutathione peroxidase (GPx) — master antioxidant enzyme. Required for deiodinase enzymes (T4→T3 conversion). Selenoprotein P protects endothelium. Sperm motility. |
Benefits | Thyroid function optimization. Antioxidant protection. Immune function. Male fertility. Cancer risk reduction (observational). |
Negatives | Narrow therapeutic window — toxicity above 400mcg/day causes selenosis (garlic breath, hair loss, nail abnormalities). |
Dosage | 100–200mcg/day. 2-3 Brazil nuts covers this without supplementation. |
Timing | With food. |
Cost | Extremely cheap. Or just eat Brazil nuts. |
Evidence Grade | B+ — Strong mechanistic data. Some RCT evidence. |
Synergies | Iodine (required for thyroid function together). Vitamin E (synergistic antioxidant). |
Warnings | Do not exceed 400mcg/day. Easy to overdose with supplements + Brazil nuts combined. Test serum selenium if concerned. |
Ratings:
Effectiveness | Ease of Use | Evidence | Cost | Overall |
7/10 | 9/10 | 7/10 | 10/10 | 7/10 |
── SPORT & PERFORMANCE ──
CREATINE MONOHYDRATE | |
Category | Sport & Performance |
Intro | The single most evidence-backed performance supplement in existence. Increases phosphocreatine stores in muscle → more rapid ATP regeneration during high-intensity efforts. Cheap, safe, and effective. Monohydrate is as good as any fancy form. |
Mechanism | Phosphocreatine donates phosphate to ADP → rapid ATP regeneration. Increases intramuscular water retention → improved protein synthesis environment. Potential nootropic effects via brain creatine. |
Benefits | 5-15% strength and power improvement. Lean mass increase (partly water, partly genuine myofibrillar protein synthesis). Cognitive benefits under stress or sleep deprivation. Safe for long-term use. |
Negatives | 1-2kg water weight gain initially (intramuscular, not subcutaneous). Mild GI upset with loading phase — unnecessary to load. |
Dosage | 5g/day, every day. No loading needed. No cycling needed. |
Timing | Any time — consistency matters more than timing. Post-workout with carbs slightly superior. |
Cost | Extremely cheap. €10-15 for 3 months. |
Evidence Grade | A+ — Hundreds of RCTs. ISSN considers it the safest and most effective performance supplement. |
Synergies | Beta-Alanine (complementary ATP/buffer systems). Carbohydrates post-workout. |
Warnings | No meaningful safety concerns at 5g/day long-term. Check creatinine levels if kidney concerns. |
Ratings:
Effectiveness | Ease of Use | Evidence | Cost | Overall |
10/10 | 10/10 | 10/10 | 10/10 | 10/10 |
WHEY PROTEIN / VEGAN PROTEIN | |
Category | Sport & Performance |
Intro | Complete protein source with high leucine content — the key amino acid triggering mTOR and muscle protein synthesis. Whey has superior leucine content and absorption vs plant sources. For vegans: Pea+Rice blend provides complete amino acid profile approaching whey. |
Mechanism | Leucine activates mTOR-S6K1 pathway → upregulates muscle protein synthesis. Provides essential amino acids as building blocks. Post-workout ingestion maximizes MPS in anabolic window. |
Benefits | Muscle protein synthesis maximization. Convenient complete protein source. Satiety. Easy to hit daily protein targets. |
Negatives | Whey can cause GI issues in lactose-intolerant individuals (use whey isolate). Quality varies significantly by brand. |
Dosage | 20-40g per serving. Total daily protein 1.6-2.2g/kg bodyweight. |
Timing | Post-workout within 2 hours. Or any time to hit daily protein targets. |
Cost | €30-60/month for quality product. |
Evidence Grade | A — Protein requirements extremely well-studied. Whey specifically has extensive RCT data. |
Synergies | Creatine (complementary for muscle building). Leucine addition for vegan proteins. |
Warnings | Check for heavy metal contamination in plant proteins. Third-party tested brands preferred. |
Ratings:
Effectiveness | Ease of Use | Evidence | Cost | Overall |
9/10 | 10/10 | 9/10 | 8/10 | 9/10 |
BETA-ALANINE | |
Category | Sport & Performance |
Intro | Non-essential amino acid that combines with histidine to form carnosine in muscle. Carnosine buffers hydrogen ions (H+) during intense exercise — delaying fatigue and improving capacity in the 1-4 minute intensity range. Characteristic tingling (paresthesia) is harmless. |
Mechanism | Rate-limiting precursor to carnosine synthesis. Carnosine buffers intramuscular pH during high-intensity exercise by binding H+ ions. Improves performance specifically in the 60-240 second intensity range. |
Benefits | Improved performance in high-intensity intervals, rowing, cycling, MMA. Potential muscle mass gains via improved training volume. Performance in 400-1500m running equivalent intensities. |
Negatives | Paresthesia (tingling/flushing) — harmless but uncomfortable at high doses. Minimal at split dosing. |
Dosage | 3.2–6.4g/day. Split into 0.8-1.6g doses to minimize paresthesia. Loading takes 4-6 weeks. |
Timing | Split throughout day with meals. Not acutely time-sensitive. |
Cost | €10-20/month. |
Evidence Grade | B+ — Strong meta-analysis data for high-intensity performance. ISSN position stand supports use. |
Synergies | Creatine (different energy systems — highly complementary). Sodium Bicarbonate (stacking amplifies buffer effect). |
Warnings | Paresthesia is safe but if unbearable use sustained-release form. Less relevant for pure strength training. |
Ratings:
Effectiveness | Ease of Use | Evidence | Cost | Overall |
7/10 | 8/10 | 8/10 | 9/10 | 7/10 |
L-CITRULLINE / CITRULLINE MALATE | |
Category | Sport & Performance |
Intro | Citrulline is converted to arginine in the kidneys (superior oral bioavailability vs direct arginine). Arginine then converts to NO via eNOS. More effective than arginine supplementation for increasing plasma arginine and NO production. |
Mechanism | Citrulline → Arginine (kidneys) → Nitric Oxide (via eNOS) → vasodilation. Also involved in urea cycle → reduces ammonia accumulation → delays fatigue. Malate form adds TCA cycle intermediate. |
Benefits | Improved blood flow and muscle pump. Reduced muscle soreness (DOMS reduction ~40%). Improved endurance performance. Enhanced ATP production with malate form. |
Negatives | GI upset at high doses. Some people non-responsive (genetic NOS polymorphisms). |
Dosage | 6-8g L-Citrulline or 8-10g Citrulline Malate (2:1 form) 30-60 min pre-workout. |
Timing | 30-60 minutes pre-workout. |
Cost | €15-25/month. |
Evidence Grade | B+ — Good RCT evidence for pump, DOMS, and endurance performance. |
Synergies | Beetroot/nitrates (synergistic NO production). Agmatine (complementary NO pathway). |
Warnings | Avoid stacking with PDE5 inhibitors (Tadalafil) at high doses — excessive vasodilation. |
Ratings:
Effectiveness | Ease of Use | Evidence | Cost | Overall |
7/10 | 9/10 | 7/10 | 8/10 | 7/10 |
HMB (BETA-HYDROXY BETA-METHYLBUTYRATE) | |
Category | Sport & Performance |
Intro | Metabolite of leucine. Anti-catabolic compound that reduces muscle protein breakdown via ubiquitin-proteasome pathway inhibition. Most significant effects in caloric deficit, untrained individuals, or during periods of high catabolic stress. |
Mechanism | Inhibits atrogin-1/MAFbx (muscle-specific E3 ubiquitin ligases) → reduces muscle protein degradation. Also activates mTOR (anabolic) and inhibits apoptosis in muscle cells. Free-acid form absorbed 25x faster than Ca-HMB. |
Benefits | Muscle preservation during caloric deficit. Reduced muscle damage markers. Strength gains in untrained subjects. Post-surgery muscle preservation. Accelerated recovery. |
Negatives | Effects minimal in well-fed experienced athletes in eucaloric state. Free-acid form expensive. |
Dosage | 3g/day of free-acid HMB. Or 3.4g Ca-HMB (lower bioavailability). |
Timing | Split doses morning and pre-workout. Free-acid form: 30-60 min pre-workout. |
Cost | €25-50/month for free-acid form. |
Evidence Grade | B — ISSN supports use during caloric restriction. Less evidence in trained athletes at maintenance. |
Synergies | Creatine (different mechanisms — complementary). Leucine (same pathway, HMB is the active metabolite). |
Warnings | Use free-acid form for best results. Ca-HMB has significantly lower absorption. |
Ratings:
Effectiveness | Ease of Use | Evidence | Cost | Overall |
6/10 | 8/10 | 6/10 | 6/10 | 6/10 |
CAFFEINE | |
Category | Sport & Performance |
Intro | Most widely used psychoactive substance globally. Adenosine receptor antagonist. Reliable ergogenic aid for most exercise modalities. Tolerance develops with daily use strategic use preserves effectiveness. |
Mechanism | Competitive adenosine receptor antagonist → reduces fatigue signaling. Stimulates catecholamine release (adrenaline, noradrenaline). Increases dopamine signaling in PFC. Mobilizes free fatty acids (at rest). |
Benefits | Improved endurance (3-12% in time trials). Strength increase 1-3%. Cognitive alertness and focus. Reduced perceived exertion. Thermogenic effect (modest). |
Negatives | Tolerance with daily use. Withdrawal headaches. Disrupts sleep if taken after midday. Anxiety at high doses. |
Dosage | 3-6mg/kg bodyweight for performance. 100-200mg for cognitive use. |
Timing | 30-60 min pre-workout. Never after 2pm for normal sleepers. |
Cost | Essentially free. |
Evidence Grade | A+ — One of the most studied ergogenic compounds in sports science. |
Synergies | L-Theanine (reduces jitteriness, improves focus quality). Beta-Alanine. Creatine. |
Warnings | Cycle off for 2+ weeks to reset tolerance. Never combine with stimulant medications without caution. Cut off at 1pm. |
Ratings:
Effectiveness | Ease of Use | Evidence | Cost | Overall |
9/10 | 10/10 | 10/10 | 10/10 | 9/10 |
ELECTROLYTES | |
Category | Sport & Performance |
Intro | Sodium, potassium, magnesium, and calcium maintain fluid balance, nerve conduction, and muscle contraction. Lost through sweat — replacement is critical for performance and recovery, especially in high-volume training. |
Mechanism | Sodium: primary extracellular cation, regulates fluid volume. Potassium: primary intracellular cation, membrane potential. Magnesium: ATP stability, muscle relaxation. Calcium: muscle contraction trigger. |
Benefits | Prevents hyponatremia in high sweat output. Reduces cramps. Maintains performance in heat. Cognitive function during prolonged effort. |
Negatives | Over-supplementation rarely causes issues if kidneys are healthy. |
Dosage | Sodium 500-1000mg intra/post workout. Potassium 1000-3000mg/day from diet + supplement. Magnesium 300-400mg/day. |
Timing | During and after training. Morning for baseline. |
Cost | €5-15/month. |
Evidence Grade | A — Essential physiology. |
Synergies | Creatine (creatine increases intracellular water — electrolytes complement). Hydration. |
Warnings | Excessive sodium without adequate potassium raises blood pressure. Balance is key. |
Ratings:
Effectiveness | Ease of Use | Evidence | Cost | Overall |
8/10 | 9/10 | 9/10 | 9/10 | 8/10 |
EAA / BCAA | |
Category | Sport & Performance |
Intro | Essential Amino Acids (EAA) are the 9 amino acids the body cannot synthesize. BCAAs (Leucine, Isoleucine, Valine) are a subset. If protein intake is adequate (1.6g+/kg), standalone BCAA/EAA supplementation adds minimal benefit. Useful intra-workout when training fasted. |
Mechanism | Leucine activates mTOR → MPS. EAAs provide all substrates for muscle protein synthesis. BCAAs oxidized for energy during prolonged exercise. |
Benefits | Muscle protein synthesis stimulation. Useful during fasted training. Reduces muscle breakdown during caloric deficit. |
Negatives | Essentially useless if protein targets are met from food. Expensive per gram of protein vs whey. |
Dosage | 10-15g EAA intra-workout if fasted training. Skip if adequate protein intake. |
Timing | Intra-workout only if relevant. |
Cost | €20-40/month — often better spent on more protein. |
Evidence Grade | B — Context-dependent. If protein targets met, evidence minimal. |
Synergies | Protein shakes (just get more protein). Intraworkout |
Warnings | Don't buy BCAAs if hitting protein targets, waste of money. EAAs more complete. |
Ratings:Effectiveness | Ease of Use | Evidence | Cost | Overall |
5/10 | 9/10 | 6/10 | 6/10 | 5/10 |
L-GLUTAMINE | |
Category | Sport & Performance |
Intro | Most abundant amino acid in the body. Conditionally essential body can synthesize it but requirements may exceed synthesis under extreme stress (surgery, burns, intense training). Marketed heavily to athletes but evidence is weak for most claims. |
Mechanism | Primary fuel source for enterocytes (gut cells) and immune cells. Involved in nitrogen transport between organs. Gluconeogenesis precursor. |
Benefits | Gut integrity support in clinical settings. Immune function under extreme stress. Glycogen resynthesis at very high doses. |
Negatives | Very limited evidence for muscle recovery or hypertrophy in healthy athletes with adequate protein intake. |
Dosage | 5-10g/day if using for gut health. |
Timing | With meals for gut effects. |
Cost | €10-20/month. |
Evidence Grade | C+ — Strong evidence in clinical/critical care settings. Minimal evidence for gym performance. |
Synergies | Probiotics (gut health stack). |
Warnings | Don't expect performance improvements if protein intake is adequate. Useful mainly for gut integrity. |
Ratings:Effectiveness | Ease of Use | Evidence | Cost | Overall |
4/10 | 9/10 | 4/10 | 8/10 | 4/10 |
── RECOVERY & HEALTH ──
ASHWAGANDHA (KSM-66) | |
Category | Recovery & Health |
Intro | Adaptogenic herb with the strongest evidence base among adaptogens. KSM-66 is the most studied root extract with standardized withanolide content. Reduces cortisol, improves stress resilience, and has legitimate anabolic and anxiolytic effects. |
Mechanism | Inhibits HPA axis overactivation → reduces cortisol. GABA-A receptor modulation (anxiolytic). Blocks NLRP3 inflammasome. Increases testosterone via LH upregulation. Thyroid-stimulating effects via TSH. |
Benefits | Cortisol reduction 14-28%. Testosterone increase in men with suboptimal levels (+15-17% in RCTs). Anxiety reduction. Improved sleep quality. Strength and muscle mass in training studies. |
Negatives | Thyroid stimulation — contraindicated with thyroid conditions. Mild GABAergic — avoid stacking with Etifoxine/Pregabalin same day. Rare liver cases (very high doses). |
Dosage | 300-600mg KSM-66 extract/day. |
Timing | Evening with food, promotes sleep and cortisol reduction. |
Cost | €15-25/month. |
Evidence Grade | B+ — Multiple RCTs. KSM-66 specifically well-studied. |
Synergies | Magnesium (sleep stack). Zinc (testosterone stack). Never same day as Etifoxine or Pregabalin. |
Warnings | Thyroid stimulation est TSH before and at 8 weeks. Avoid with thyroid conditions. Add to GABAergic load cautiously. |
Ratings:Effectiveness | Ease of Use | Evidence | Cost | Overall |
7/10 | 9/10 | 7/10 | 8/10 | 7/10 |
CURCUMIN + PIPERINE | |
Category | Recovery & Health |
Intro | Active compound of turmeric. Powerful anti-inflammatory but has notoriously poor bioavailability — solved by combining with piperine (black pepper extract) which inhibits CYP3A4 and increases curcumin absorption 20x. |
Mechanism | Inhibits NF-κB (master inflammatory transcription factor). COX-2 and LOX inhibition (similar mechanism to NSAIDs without GI damage). Activates Nrf2 (antioxidant response). AMPK activation. |
Benefits | Anti-inflammatory effects comparable to NSAIDs in some studies. Joint pain reduction. Reduced DOMS. Potential nootropic effects. Antioxidant. |
Negatives | Poor bioavailability without piperine. Piperine inhibits CYP3A4 — may affect drug metabolism. |
Dosage | 500-1000mg curcumin + 5-10mg piperine (or bioperine). Or use phytosome form for enhanced absorption. |
Timing | With fatty meal. |
Cost | €10-20/month. |
Evidence Grade | B — Strong in-vitro/animal. Human evidence moderate but growing. |
Synergies | Omega-3 (complementary anti-inflammatory). Boswellia (joint stack). |
Warnings | Piperine affects drug metabolism — check interactions with any medications. High doses may cause GI upset. |
Ratings:Effectiveness | Ease of Use | Evidence | Cost | Overall |
6/10 | 8/10 | 6/10 | 8/10 | 6/10 |
COLLAGEN PEPTIDES | |
Category | Recovery & Health |
Intro | Hydrolyzed collagen provides specific amino acids (glycine, proline, hydroxyproline) that stimulate fibroblast collagen synthesis. Unlike gelatin, hydrolyzed peptides are absorbed as di/tripeptides and accumulate in cartilage and skin. |
Mechanism | Hydrolyzed peptides → absorbed intact → stimulate fibroblasts in skin and joints → upregulate collagen type I and II synthesis. Requires vitamin C for hydroxylation of proline/lysine residues. |
Benefits | Joint pain reduction (well-evidenced for cartilage). Skin elasticity improvement. Tendon and ligament health. Gut lining integrity. |
Negatives | Not a complete protein — lacks tryptophan. Don't replace regular protein with collagen. |
Dosage | 10-15g/day hydrolyzed collagen. Must be taken with Vitamin C for effect. |
Timing | Pre-exercise (15-60 min before for joint effects) or any time for skin. |
Cost | €20-35/month. |
Evidence Grade | B — Good human RCT data for joints and skin specifically. |
Synergies | Vitamin C (essential for collagen synthesis). GHK-Cu (complementary collagen pathway). |
Warnings | Always take with Vitamin C. Not a protein source — supplement on top of regular protein. |
Ratings:Effectiveness | Ease of Use | Evidence | Cost | Overall |
7/10 | 9/10 | 7/10 | 7/10 | 7/10 |
MELATONIN | |
Category | Recovery & Health |
Intro | Primary circadian rhythm hormone. Produced by pineal gland in response to darkness. Supplemental melatonin is most effective for circadian rhythm disorders (jet lag, shift work) and sleep onset — NOT for sleep duration or quality. Lowest effective dose principle applies. |
Mechanism | Binds MT1/MT2 receptors in SCN (suprachiasmatic nucleus) → shifts circadian phase. Does not directly induce sleep — signals that it is nighttime. Also antioxidant and immunomodulatory at higher doses. |
Benefits | Sleep onset acceleration. Jet lag treatment. Antioxidant at higher doses. Potential anti-cancer properties (ongoing research). |
Negatives | Next-day grogginess at >3mg. Tolerance development with chronic high-dose use. Hormonal effects possible in adolescents at high doses. |
Dosage | 0.5–1mg is optimal for sleep onset. 3-5mg only if needed for jet lag. |
Timing | 30-60 minutes before target sleep time. Darkness required for effect. |
Cost | Very cheap. €5-10 for months. |
Evidence Grade | A — Well-studied for circadian effects. Less evidence for improving sleep quality in normal sleepers. |
Synergies | Magnesium (sleep stack). Ashwagandha. L-Theanine. |
Warnings | Start at 0.5mg — higher is not better. Avoid >3mg long-term especially in adolescents due to HPG axis potential effects. |
Ratings:Effectiveness | Ease of Use | Evidence | Cost | Overall |
7/10 | 10/10 | 8/10 | 10/10 | 7/10 |
L-THEANINE | |
Category | Recovery & Health |
Intro | Amino acid found almost exclusively in green tea. Produces alpha brain wave relaxation without sedation. Classically combined with caffeine for improved focus quality and reduced jitteriness. |
Mechanism | GABA-A positive modulator (mild). Glutamate receptor antagonism (anti-excitatory). Increases alpha brain wave activity. Inhibits caffeine's anxiogenic effects via adenosine pathway modulation. |
Benefits | Relaxed alertness without sedation. Reduces caffeine anxiety and jitteriness. Improved focus quality. Mild anxiolytic for daily use. |
Negatives | Very mild effects alone. No significant side effects. |
Dosage | 100-200mg with caffeine (1:2 ratio caffeine:theanine). Or 200-400mg standalone for relaxation. |
Timing | With caffeine pre-workout. Or evening for relaxation. |
Cost | Extremely cheap. €5-10/month. |
Evidence Grade | B — RCT evidence for caffeine+theanine combo specifically. Good standalone data for relaxation. |
Synergies | Caffeine (classic combo — significantly better together). Magnesium for sleep. |
Warnings | No significant interactions. Mild GABA modulation — add to total GABAergic load if relevant. |
Ratings:
Effectiveness | Ease of Use | Evidence | Cost | Overall |
6/10 | 10/10 | 7/10 | 10/10 | 7/10 |
PROBIOTICS | |
Category | Recovery & Health |
Intro | Live microorganisms that confer health benefits when consumed in adequate amounts. The gut microbiome influences immunity, mood, inflammation, and nutrient absorption. Strain specificity matters enormously, not all probiotics are interchangeable. |
Mechanism | Colonize gut → compete with pathogenic bacteria (competitive exclusion). Produce short-chain fatty acids (butyrate → colonocyte energy). Modulate gut-associated lymphoid tissue. Gut-brain axis via vagus nerve. |
Benefits | Improved gut health and digestion. Enhanced immune function. Potential mood and anxiety reduction (gut-brain axis). Improved skin health indirectly via gut-skin axis. |
Negatives | Strain-specific effects, generic multi-strain products may have weak evidence. SIBO patients may worsen. |
Dosage | Colony-forming units (CFU) 5-50 billion/day. Specific strains for specific conditions. |
Timing | Morning before breakfast or as directed. |
Cost | €15-30/month for quality product. |
Evidence Grade | B — Strain-specific evidence varies from A to C. Lactobacillus and Bifidobacterium have most data. |
Synergies | Prebiotics (fiber feeds probiotics — synbiotics). |
Warnings | Choose evidence-based strains for your specific goal. Refrigerated products generally more viable. |
Ratings:Effectiveness | Ease of Use | Evidence | Cost | Overall |
6/10 | 8/10 | 6/10 | 7/10 | 6/10 |
COQ10 (UBIQUINOL) | |
Category | Recovery & Health |
Intro | Coenzyme Q10 is an endogenous electron carrier in the mitochondrial electron transport chain. Plasma levels decline with age and are depleted by statin drugs. Ubiquinol form (reduced CoQ10) has significantly better bioavailability than ubiquinone. |
Mechanism | Electron carrier between Complex I/II and Complex III in ETC → ATP synthesis. Antioxidant in lipid bilayers. Regenerates Vitamin E. At high doses, some NO-mediated vasodilation. |
Benefits | Energy production support. Antioxidant. Statin-induced myopathy prevention. Cardiovascular support. Migraine prevention. |
Negatives | At 18 with normal mitochondrial function, limited additional benefit. Expensive for the evidence. |
Dosage | 100-300mg ubiquinol/day with fatty meal. |
Timing | With largest fatty meal. |
Cost | €20-40/month for quality ubiquinol. |
Evidence Grade | B — Good evidence for statin users and elderly. Limited evidence in young healthy subjects. |
Synergies | PQQ (mitochondrial synergy). Vitamin E. Omega-3. |
Warnings | Use ubiquinol (reduced form) not ubiquinone if budget allows,significantly better absorption. Less necessary at age 17-18. |
Ratings:Effectiveness | Ease of Use | Evidence | Cost | Overall |
5/10 | 8/10 | 6/10 | 5/10 | 5/10 |
─ LONGEVITY & NOOTROPICS ──
RHODIOLA ROSEA | |
Category | Longevity & Nootropics |
Intro | Adaptogen with the strongest acute cognitive and anti-fatigue evidence among adaptogens. Modulates stress response differently from Ashwagandha — more stimulating, better for cognitive performance under stress and fatigue than for anxiety. |
Mechanism | Inhibits MAO-A and MAO-B (mild) → increases monoamine availability. Activates Hsp70 (stress protein). Inhibits COMT → prolongs catecholamine availability. Activates neuropeptide Y. |
Benefits | Cognitive performance under fatigue. Reduced mental fatigue in students/workers. Exercise performance improvement. Anti-depressant effects (comparable to sertraline in one RCT). |
Negatives | Can be stimulating avoid in the evening. Some people experience irritability. |
Dosage | 200-600mg standardized extract (3% rosavins, 1% salidroside)/day. |
Timing | Morning — stimulating. Not evening. |
Cost | €10-20/month. |
Evidence Grade | B — Multiple human RCTs for fatigue and cognitive performance. |
Synergies | Ashwagandha (complementary adaptogens — different mechanisms). Caffeine. |
Warnings | Stimulating take morning only. May cause insomnia if taken late. Mild MAO inhibition — caution with serotonergic compounds. |
Ratings:Effectiveness | Ease of Use | Evidence | Cost | Overall |
7/10 | 8/10 | 6/10 | 8/10 | 7/10 |
BACOPA MONNIERI | |
Category | Longevity & Nootropics |
Intro | Ayurvedic adaptogen with the strongest evidence among herbs for memory consolidation and learning. Effects are NOT acute — requires 8-12 weeks of daily supplementation for full effect (bacosides must accumulate). |
Mechanism | Bacosides enhance synaptic transmission in hippocampus. Antioxidant via superoxide dismutase upregulation. Mild acetylcholinesterase inhibition. Reduces β-amyloid formation. Adaptogenic cortisol reduction. |
Benefits | Improved memory consolidation (long-term, not acute). Reduced anxiety. Neuroprotective. Cognitive performance in older adults. |
Negatives | Requires 8-12 weeks for effect — patience essential. GI upset if taken without food. Potential sedation. |
Dosage | 300-450mg standardized extract (20-55% bacosides) with food. |
Timing | With fatty meal, morning or evening. |
Cost | €10-20/month. |
Evidence Grade | B — Multiple RCTs showing memory improvement, especially in older adults. Some in young healthy subjects. |
Synergies | Ashwagandha (stress+memory stack). Lion's Mane. |
Warnings | GI upset without food. Do not expect acute results. 12-week minimum trial. |
Ratings:Effectiveness | Ease of Use | Evidence | Cost | Overall |
6/10 | 8/10 | 6/10 | 8/10 | 6/10 |
LION'S MANE (HERICIUM ERINACEUS) | |
Category | Longevity & Nootropics |
Intro | Medicinal mushroom that stimulates NGF (nerve growth factor) synthesis. The most interesting functional mushroom for cognitive applications. Erinacines and hericenones are the active compounds. |
Mechanism | Erinacines (small enough to cross BBB) directly stimulate NGF synthesis. Hericenones stimulate peripheral NGF. NGF promotes neuronal survival, synaptic plasticity, and myelination. |
Benefits | Potential cognitive improvement. Neuroregeneration support. Mood improvement. Potential neuroprotection. Gut-brain axis benefits (gut NGF). |
Negatives | DHT concerns at very high doses (aromatase/5AR interaction) — unconfirmed at normal doses. Most human evidence in elderly MCI patients. |
Dosage | 500-3000mg/day of fruiting body extract (not mycelium on grain). |
Timing | Morning or split dosing. |
Cost | €15-30/month for quality extract. |
Evidence Grade | B- — Promising human data in MCI patients. Limited data in healthy young subjects. |
Synergies | Bacopa (NGF + memory). Omega-3 (neuronal membrane support). |
Warnings | Ensure fruiting body extract not mycelium on grain (common adulteration). Some anecdotal DHT concerns at high doses. |
Ratings:Effectiveness | Ease of Use | Evidence | Cost | Overall |
6/10 | 8/10 | 5/10 | 7/10 | 6/10 |
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ALWAYS test ferritin first. Iron overload is dangerous. Do not supplement without confirmed deficiency.