Paul Saladino· MD
resveratrol as we know if you've heard the stuff i've talked about or you've read my book the carnivore code can act as a xenoestrogen it can mimic estrogen in the human body
We can't find evidence that holds up here. Proponents are reasoning from mechanism or analogy rather than direct human data, and the most credible skeptics raise objections we can't dismiss.
resveratrol as we know if you've heard the stuff i've talked about or you've read my book the carnivore code can act as a xenoestrogen it can mimic estrogen in the human body
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whether it's resveratrol i spoke about that one last week in the wine discussion not a fan of that one either can inhibit uh the formation of androgen precursors like dhea it is a xenoestrogen that mimics estrogen in the human body not a valuable thing you don't need that
in the case of resveratrol that is a xenoestrogen in many ways it is going to is a xenoestrogen like quercetin it could be a hormonal disruptor in some people
in the case of resveratrol that is a xenoestrogen in many ways it is going to is a phytoestrogen like quercetin it could be a hormonal disruptor in some people
Resveratrol is probably not actually that good for humans it is actually a phytoestrogen is a compound that mimics estrogen in the human body and that is no good