Insights on supplements, nootropics, and wellness.
247 articles matching "UTI".
An evidence-based guide to turmeric and curcumin — covering the bioavailability crisis, enhanced delivery systems compared (BioPerine, Meriva, Longvida, BCM-95), joint health and inflammation evidence, dosing protocols, and safety considerations.
A comprehensive, evidence-based guide to supplements for stress and cortisol management — covering ashwagandha, rhodiola, magnesium, L-theanine, phosphatidylserine, and practical stacking strategies ranked by strength of evidence.
An evidence-based guide to immune support supplements — separating science from marketing hype. Covers vitamin C, zinc, vitamin D, elderberry, functional mushrooms, and a practical winter immune protocol for Northern Europe.
A comprehensive guide to omega-3 fatty acids covering EPA vs DHA differences, fish oil vs algae-derived options, supplement forms (triglyceride vs ethyl ester), dosing for specific health goals, quality red flags, and sustainable sourcing.
An evidence-based guide to iron absorption and the vitamin C synergy — covering iron deficiency prevalence, heme vs non-heme iron, supplement forms compared, absorption blockers and enhancers, optimal dosing protocols, and plant-based iron strategies.
A comprehensive guide to the 8+ forms of magnesium supplements — glycinate, L-threonate, taurate, citrate, oxide, malate, orotate and chloride — covering absorption rates, best uses, dosing, and how to choose the right form for your goals.
An evidence-based guide to Europe's vitamin D crisis covering latitude science, D3 vs D2, the D3+K2 synergy, optimal blood levels, testing options, and practical supplementation strategies for Northern European climates.
A comprehensive, evidence-based guide to supplement-drug interactions covering CYP450 enzymes, blood thinners, antidepressants, blood pressure and diabetes medications, thyroid drugs, and how to check for interactions before combining supplements with prescriptions.
"Supplements are unregulated." "More is better." "Natural always means safe." You've heard these claims a thousand times. Here's what the evidence actually says.