Bump on this. Very curious how the new Rez-V is treating people, orally or transdermally.
I just received this product. Does anyone have any recent opinions as to when to take this? Should I take it on an empty stomach or on a full stomach?
Does anyone feel this actually works for reducing estrogen and increasing testosterone?
I’m going to start taking it today, I will tell everyone what type of changes I see after the bottle runs out.
Thanks
Very interesting idea.
And yes, while in fact the nano-dispersion formulation used was designed for oral delivery, we found some time ago that it also can be pretty amazing transdermally. To be clear I did not discover or think of that:
Tim conceived it and had it tested. That was with a different compound than resveratrol, but that it also works for resveratrol is completely reasonable.
So which is more effective transdermal or oral? Anyone have more experiences to share?
Yes, it is. Sorry to bump, but it’s kind of a bummer that nobody can say for sure whether it’s cool to apply this transdermally or not, as well as where you should actually apply it. I tried doing it on my wrists, but it was all gooey and took ages to dry, lol. It was also hard to get out of the pills themselves.
I saw a video on Youtube, where the effects of high concentrations of rez were tested on mice. Interesting stuff. Mice fed REZ actually lost weight compared to those who didnt consume REZ where the same calories were given. They also lived longer. The problem is that the amount of REZ required would be astronomical, something along the lines of drinking an absurd amount of wine every day. Wouldn’t mind trying it though.
[quote]MaximusB wrote:
I saw a video on Youtube, where the effects of high concentrations of rez were tested on mice. Interesting stuff. Mice fed REZ actually lost weight compared to those who didnt consume REZ where the same calories were given. They also lived longer. The problem is that the amount of REZ required would be astronomical, something along the lines of drinking an absurd amount of wine every day. Wouldn’t mind trying it though.[/quote]
This is why the idea of transdermally applying Rez-V is so intriguing to many people.
If it gets through the skin well, you could potentially use far less to get the same effect.
Well, there is a problem with it in terms of any commercial application.
You cannot sell a transdermal as a nutritional supplement.
A dermally-applied product has to be sold for the purpose of effect in the skin.
Androsol was sold as a Sports Skin Tonic. Man did you feel tonic’d.
11-T is sold for effect in reducing dermal fat.
While cosmetically there are reasons to apply resveratrol, most assuredly our exist product – taking the capsules and using the microemulsion formulation in them on your arms or something – just isn’t believable as a cosmetic application.
So it might be hard to justify spending money measuring resveratrol blood levels from transdermal application when we cannot sell such a product.
Also transdermal just does not sell as well as oral. Not a fraction as well.
But you’re right, it’s interesting.
Anyway, if wanting to use the capsules that way, spread over a maximal area. If wanting to convert the capsules to liquid first, it takes very modest temperature: about 113 F.
I’ve heard a lot about Rez-V being used as an anti estrogen, but I’m not sure exactly the science behind it. I’ve googled it and come up with practically nothing. Anybody want to throw me a bone here? What kind of results can be expected, best dosage, spacing between dosing, ect… Anyone?
I’ve almost bought this several times, and I’d be willing to give it a shot if I could just understand how exactly one can expect an anti-oxidant to work as an anti-estrogen?
Ok forget that I just posted that I just asked that, I did some surfing around on youtube and found a link to a sight that answered my question. Now for another… Is the $50 for Sustain Alpha worth it? Or is Rez-V a better deal?
I am curious to know, if anyone has any information on whether the amount of REZ changes with the fermentation process? What I mean is, could one simply eat grapes, raisins or drink grape juice, or does one HAVE to drink wine because its fermented?
I have no doubt that red wine IS one factor to longevity. I come across plenty of people who reach well into their 90’s and 100’s in my culture, and they continually swear by red wine. Hell, my grandmother passed away at 96, and it wasn’t because of old age. Get your REZ people.
Whine is just a more concentrated form of revZ because during the processesing of whine, the water is removed from the mixture. So whine is just less water, more revZ.
[quote]Beershoes wrote:
Whine is just a more concentrated form of revZ because during the processesing of whine, the water is removed from the mixture. So whine is just less water, more revZ. [/quote]
WTF are “whine” and “revZ?”
Perhaps “whine” is, in some unusual language, some distilled product, inasmuch as it is stated to have had water removed from it.
E.g., perhaps it is distilled Ripple, Mad Dog, or maybe it is even from some fine Thunderbird wine.
Yes my apologies, wine was the intended noun. So suck it dry.
How do you figure wine has water removed from it?
Are you just ignorant? Why post ridiculous explanations like that? When obviously having no clue of what you are talking about. The spelling was the least of the glaring dumbness.
Bump! I was wondering if anyone can say if transdermal application of resveratrol would effect different areas of the body differently. The stomach and chest have more estrogen related receptors compared to upper back and triceps so I am wondering if there might be an added benefit of using the transdermal on the latter areas.
Edit: Right, the reason i bumped this thread was also to see if anyone had taken this a step further with the resveratrol product Biotest has out.
i noticed today that the capsules in an almost empty bottle of Rez-V that i’ve had for close to a year looked liquidy inside the capsule. the bottle didn’t have a best by date printed on it. is it still good? where’s the best place to transdermally apply the stuff? any benefit to putting it on the areolas (srs)? lol
[quote]Schmazz wrote:
I like the fact that DMSO is a free-radical scavenger. I think that the two-fold benefits (anti-estrogen and free radical elimination) would make for an AMAZING product. Although I’m not sure I’ll be applying it to the scrotum area…[/quote]
DMSO achieves penetration enhancement by destroying the structural integrity of the stratum corneum.
In other words, it’s quite harsh on the skin area to which it is applied.
This is acceptable when not repeatedly applying to the same area, but it is good reason why for example it’s not used for pharmaceutical drug delivery.
Another is the breath problem.
[quote]TheBigV wrote:
Bump! I was wondering if anyone can say if transdermal application of resveratrol would effect different areas of the body differently. The stomach and chest have more estrogen related receptors compared to upper back and triceps so I am wondering if there might be an added benefit of using the transdermal on the latter areas.
Edit: Right, the reason i bumped this thread was also to see if anyone had taken this a step further with the resveratrol product Biotest has out.[/quote]
There might be a difference in effect on fat within the dermis according to where it is applied, but the great majority of fat is too deep for transdermal delivery to be relevant. Any compound applied will be carried away by blood vessels near the skin or the lymphatic system before being able to diffuse to much depth, and the fat does not derive its blood supply from the blood vessels in the dermis.