Press to navigate, Enter to select, Esc to close
Recent Searches
Trending Now

Resveratrol

supplement Verified

Specifically for Menopause

0% effective
0 votes
0 up0 down

Why it works for Menopause:

Phytoestrogen & vascular effects: Resveratrol is a plant polyphenol that can act on estrogen receptors and up-regulate endothelial nitric-oxide synthase (eNOS), improving blood-flow regulation—mechanisms thought to underlie benefits seen in some postmenopausal trials (e.g., cognition, cerebrovascular responsiveness). MDPI

SIRT1/AMPK pathways: It activates longevity-related pathways (e.g., SIRT1), with downstream anti-inflammatory and antioxidant effects that may support vascular and brain health. ScienceDirect

Bone metabolism: In bone, resveratrol is reported (preclinically) to favor osteoblast activity and counter osteoclast signaling (RANKL/OPG axis), a plausible mechanism for bone-density findings in postmenopausal women. Article

How to use for Menopause:

If you and your clinician decide to try it, model your approach on studied regimens:

  • Form & dose used in RCTs: Trans-resveratrol 75 mg, twice daily (total 150 mg/day). This dose was used in multiple randomized, placebo-controlled trials in postmenopausal women for 14 weeks to 24 months. MDPI
  • Duration: Benefits (when seen) accrued over months (e.g., 12–24 months for cognition and bone endpoints; 14 weeks for well-being/pain). MDPI
  • With what: Trials used purified trans-resveratrol capsules (≥98% purity); choose reputable, third-party-tested products and avoid multi-ingredient blends that obscure dose. MDPI
  • Who should NOT self-start: Women on warfarin/anticoagulants, with bleeding risks/surgery pending, or with hormone-sensitive cancers should review risks first (see warnings below). MDPI

Scientific Evidence for Menopause:

Cognition & brain blood flow

  • 12-month RCT (n=129): 75 mg trans-resveratrol twice daily improved overall cognitive performance and maintained cerebrovascular responsiveness versus placebo in postmenopausal women. MDPI
  • Longer-term program (RESHAW): A 24-month, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, two-period crossover trial in postmenopausal women reported sustained cognitive and cerebrovascular benefits with 75 mg BID. (Full clinical report and journal versions). Clinical Nutrition Journal

Bone health

  • RESHAW bone outcomes (JBMR): In the same program, lumbar spine and femoral-neck BMD improved and a bone-resorption marker decreased versus placebo after 12 months on 75 mg BID; effects were sustained in the crossover period. Oxford Academic

General well-being/pain

  • 14-week RCT (n=80): 75 mg BID improved a composite well-being score and reduced pain, with concurrent improvements in cerebrovascular reactivity. (Short-term, not powered for vasomotor symptoms.) Veri-te Resveratrol

Vasomotor symptoms (hot flushes/night sweats)

  • Current major guidelines for nonhormonal management do not list resveratrol as an evidence-based treatment for vasomotor symptoms; instead, they recommend options like SSRIs/SNRIs, gabapentin, oxybutynin, and NK3-receptor antagonists. (NAMS position statement; British Menopause Society consensus). UW Departments


Specific Warnings for Menopause:

Bleeding risk / surgery: Resveratrol has antiplatelet activity; stop before elective surgery (many hospital lists include it among agents that may increase bleeding). Discuss timing with your surgeon (often 1–2 weeks prior). Stanford Medicine

Drug interactions:

  • Warfarin/anticoagulants and antiplatelets: Potential to increase bleeding; avoid unless your prescriber agrees and monitors closely. Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center
  • CYP interactions: In vitro inhibition of CYP1A2/3A4; clinical implications are uncertain, but caution with narrow-therapeutic-index drugs. Hello Pharmacist

Hormone-sensitive conditions: As a phytoestrogen, resveratrol may have estrogenic/anti-estrogenic actions; patients with ER-positive breast cancer or on endocrine therapy should only use under oncology guidance. Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

Pregnancy/lactation: Avoid—insufficient safety data. (General supplement safety monographs.) Drugs.com

Side effects: Generally mild at ≤150–300 mg/day; higher doses more often cause GI upset (nausea, diarrhea). Drugs.com

Supplement quality: Choose third-party-tested trans-resveratrol; supplements aren’t regulated like medicines. Verywell Health

General Information (All Ailments)

Note: You are viewing ailment-specific information above. This section shows the general remedy information for all conditions.

What It Is

Resveratrol is a naturally occurring polyphenolic compound—a type of antioxidant—found in certain plants, fruits, and beverages. It is most abundant in the skin of red grapes, blueberries, cranberries, peanuts, and particularly in red wine. Resveratrol belongs to a class of compounds known as stilbenes, which plants produce as a defense mechanism against environmental stressors such as UV radiation, injury, or fungal infection.

In supplemental form, resveratrol is often derived from Japanese knotweed (Polygonum cuspidatum) or grape extracts. It is commonly marketed as a nutraceutical for its potential anti-aging, cardiovascular, and neuroprotective benefits.

How It Works

Resveratrol’s effects stem from its ability to influence several key biological pathways related to aging, inflammation, and metabolism. Some of the main mechanisms include:

  1. Antioxidant Activity: It neutralizes harmful free radicals—unstable molecules that can damage cells and DNA—thereby reducing oxidative stress, a major contributor to aging and chronic diseases.
  2. Activation of Sirtuins (SIRT1): Resveratrol is known to activate sirtuin 1 (SIRT1), an enzyme involved in cellular regulation and longevity. Activation of SIRT1 enhances DNA repair, improves mitochondrial function, and promotes cellular resilience under stress. This is one reason resveratrol is sometimes linked to the concept of “mimicking calorie restriction.”
  3. Anti-Inflammatory Effects: It inhibits inflammatory signaling pathways, such as NF-κB and COX enzymes, helping to reduce chronic low-grade inflammation that contributes to diseases like arthritis, diabetes, and atherosclerosis.
  4. Cardioprotective Actions: Resveratrol helps increase nitric oxide (NO) production, which relaxes blood vessels, improving circulation and reducing blood pressure. It also prevents oxidation of LDL cholesterol, reducing plaque formation in arteries.
  5. Neuroprotective and Anti-Cancer Pathways: In laboratory studies, resveratrol modulates signaling cascades involved in neuronal survival, apoptosis, and tumor suppression, though the effects in humans are still being investigated.

Why It’s Important

Resveratrol has gained attention because it may support multiple systems in the body simultaneously, offering potential protection against age-related decline. Its importance lies in the following health areas:

  • Heart Health: Associated with reduced risk of coronary artery disease and improved endothelial function (this is part of the so-called “French Paradox”, where moderate red wine intake correlates with lower heart disease rates).
  • Brain Health: May protect against neurodegenerative disorders like Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s disease by limiting oxidative stress and inflammation in neurons.
  • Metabolic Health: Studies suggest it may improve insulin sensitivity and glucose metabolism, potentially aiding in type 2 diabetes prevention.
  • Longevity Research: Through SIRT1 activation and mitochondrial enhancement, resveratrol is studied for its role in slowing biological aging and extending lifespan in animal models (though human evidence is limited).

In essence, resveratrol represents a compound at the intersection of nutrition, pharmacology, and geroscience—bridging natural dietary sources with potential therapeutic benefits.

Considerations

While resveratrol shows promise, several important points should be considered:

Bioavailability Issues

  • Resveratrol is poorly absorbed and rapidly metabolized in the human body, which limits how much actually reaches tissues in its active form. Efforts are ongoing to improve its bioavailability through new formulations (e.g., liposomal, micronized, or combined with other compounds).

Dosage and Safety

  • Typical dietary intake from food or wine is very low compared to doses used in studies.
  • Supplement doses vary (50–500 mg/day are common), but higher doses may cause gastrointestinal upset or interact with medications.
  • Long-term human data on safety are still limited.

Medication Interactions

  • Resveratrol can inhibit platelet aggregation, potentially increasing bleeding risk when combined with anticoagulants (e.g., warfarin, aspirin). It may also affect the metabolism of certain drugs processed by cytochrome P450 enzymes.

Not a Substitute for a Healthy Lifestyle

  • While it may offer supplementary benefits, resveratrol is not a replacement for balanced nutrition, regular exercise, or medical treatment for chronic diseases.

Research Limitations

  • Much of the evidence for resveratrol’s benefits comes from animal or cell studies. Human trials are fewer and often produce mixed results, especially regarding longevity and disease prevention.

Helps with these conditions

Resveratrol is most effective for general wellness support with emerging research . The effectiveness varies by condition based on clinical evidence and user experiences.

Menopause 0% effective
Fatty Liver 0% effective
Oxidative Stress 0% effective
Cellular Aging 0% effective
Mitochondrial Dysfunction 0% effective
Multiple Chemical Sensitivity 0% effective
6
Conditions
0
Total Votes
33
Studies
0%
Avg. Effectiveness

Detailed Information by Condition

Menopause

0% effective

Phytoestrogen & vascular effects: Resveratrol is a plant polyphenol that can act on estrogen receptors and up-regulate endothelial nitric-oxide sy...

0 votes Updated 1 month ago 5 studies cited

Fatty Liver

0% effective

Metabolic re-programming (SIRT1 → AMPK): Resveratrol activates SIRT1 and downstream AMPK signaling, pathways that reduce hepatic lipogenesis and impro...

0 votes Updated 1 month ago 4 studies cited

Oxidative Stress

0% effective

Amplifies your own antioxidant defenses (not just “scavenging ROS”). Resveratrol can activate the Nrf2–ARE pathway, increasing enzymes like HO-1 and N...

0 votes Updated 1 month ago 4 studies cited

Cellular Aging

0% effective

Sirtuin/AMPK/PGC-1α axis: Resveratrol can activate SIRT1 and AMPK, increasing mitochondrial biogenesis and shifting metabolism toward a calorie-restri...

0 votes Updated 1 month ago 4 studies cited

SIRT1/AMPK → PGC-1α → mitochondrial biogenesis & oxidative metabolism. RSV activates nutrient-sensing pathways (SIRT1 and AMPK), which can up-regu...

0 votes Updated 1 month ago 6 studies cited

Resveratrol has well-documented anti-inflammatory, antioxidant, mitochondrial-protective and signaling (SIRT1/Nrf2/NF-κB) effects that make it biologi...

0 votes Updated 2 months ago 10 studies cited

Community Discussion

Share results, tips, and questions about Resveratrol.

0 comments 0 participants
Only registered members can join the discussion.
Please log in or create an account to share your thoughts.

Loading discussion...

No comments yet. Be the first to start the conversation!

Discussion for Menopause

Talk specifically about using Resveratrol for Menopause.

0 comments 0 participants
Only registered members can join the discussion.
Please log in or create an account to share your thoughts.

Loading discussion...

No comments yet. Be the first to start the conversation!

Remedy Statistics

Effectiveness
Not yet rated
Safety Rating 9/10

Recommended Products

No recommended products added yet.