Greg Robinson
@gregrob.eth
My wife and I were debating the use of supplements yesterday. We got on to NAD+ and đ¤: People with high X (cell health) have high Y (NAD+). If we measure Y to determine X, does supplementing Y raise X (cell health) or does it just increase Y (the thing we measure -> NAD+). Does anyone know? cc: @bryanjohnson
6 replies
72 recasts
124 reactions
FrensFerdinand
@frensferdinand
Also supplementation doesnât take into account things like bioavailability of something, the form itâs being consumed in, as we are finding out when adding a mineral to a food doesnât necessarily mean you will absorb it the same way if you were consuming a food rich in the mineral
1 reply
0 recast
0 reaction
Greg Robinson
@gregrob.eth
This was a huge part of our convo. Itâs the biology version of âa great product with poor distribution is a failed productâ.
0 reply
0 recast
1 reaction
FrensFerdinand
@frensferdinand
Maybe the way the food is constructed is what affects out GI systems and naturally we know the best way to break it down at each part of the GI, how we manipulate drugs and do things like enteric coats
0 reply
0 recast
0 reaction