I take a LOT of supplements, and it's not because I like swallowing pills.
Scientific studies and other observations have shown that LIFE, and HEALTHY LIFESPAN, are statistically lengthened by a wide range of supplements. This goes back decades, but the avalanche of new scientific data hasn't missed this area and new understandings plus newly-available supplements are rapidly extending the list of what you might consider taking to live a longer and healthier life.
The list below is nowhere near complete. It's from a series of questions I asked LEO, the AI built into Brave Browser. The original broad question yielded fewer items than I wanted, so, knowing about others, I asked a few more questions.
Abbreviated list of Inexpensive Supplements that EXTEND LIFESPAN
Q: list of supplements that have been shown to EXTEND LIFESPAN of humans or animals
Quick Answer
Several supplements have demonstrated lifespan-extending effects in animal studies, though evidence for direct human lifespan extension remains limited or inconclusive. Creatine has been shown to extend lifespan by 9% in mice, with additional benefits including improved cognitive function and increased lean tissue mass in aging adults. Curcumin, the active compound in turmeric, extended lifespan by 26% in fruit flies and increased superoxide dismutase (SOD) activity, a key antioxidant enzyme. Taurine supplementation led to a 10–12% increase in median lifespan in mice and improved antioxidant defenses. Coenzyme Q10 (CoQ10) increased mean lifespan by 11.7% and maximum lifespan by 24% in mice, supporting mitochondrial function and reducing cellular damage. Resveratrol extended lifespan in 60% of studied organisms, with up to a 70% increase in lifespan observed in yeast, though human trials have not confirmed similar benefits. EGCG (epigallocatechin gallate), found in green tea, extended median lifespan by 25% in mice and reduced mortality risk by nearly 47%. NAD+ precursors, such as nicotinamide riboside and NMN, have been shown to extend mean lifespan by 30% in fruit flies, linked to enhanced DNA repair and sirtuin activation. Omega-3 fatty acids have been associated with a 4.7-year increase in life expectancy in humans, primarily through reduced cardiovascular risk and slowed biological aging. While these supplements show promise in preclinical models, large-scale clinical trials in humans have not yet confirmed significant lifespan extension, and the longevity supplement industry remains largely unregulated.
Q: I've seen evidence that glucosamine extends lifespan; can you confirm?
A: Yes, glucosamine has been shown to extend lifespan in animal models. Studies indicate that glucosamine supplementation:
Extended lifespan by almost 10% in aged mice, equivalent to about 8 additional human years, while improving glucose metabolism and mimicking the effects of a low-carbohydrate diet.
Increased lifespan in Caenorhabditis elegans (a nematode used in aging research) by up to 30%, with effects linked to autophagy induction and activation of AMPK. Demonstrated dose-dependent lifespan extension, with optimal results at specific dosing levels.
The proposed mechanisms include inhibition of glycolysis, induction of mitochondrial biogenesis, increased amino acid catabolism, and reduced oxidative stress—effects collectively resembling caloric restriction.
While direct evidence of lifespan extension in humans remains limited, large-scale observational studies have associated glucosamine use with lower mortality rates, suggesting potential longevity benefits. However, causal conclusions in humans require further clinical investigation.
Q: Is there evidence the PPQ can extend lifespan?
A: Yes, PQQ (pyrroloquinoline quinone) has been shown to extend lifespan in animal studies. Research primarily conducted in Caenorhabditis elegans (a model organism for aging) demonstrates that PQQ:
Extends mean lifespan by up to 33%, with multiple studies reporting increases between 30–31%.
Enhances oxidative stress resistance and activates key longevity pathways, including the insulin/IGF-1 signaling (IIS) pathway and autophagy. Promotes mitochondrial biogenesis and function, a mechanism strongly linked to healthy aging.
Increases activity of transcription factors like DAF-16/FOXO and SKN-1/Nrf2, which regulate stress resistance and longevity.
While these effects are robust in preclinical models, direct evidence of lifespan extension in humans has not yet been established. However, PQQ’s role in supporting mitochondrial health, reducing oxidative stress, and activating cellular repair mechanisms makes it a promising candidate in longevity research.
Q: Can senolytics such as fisetin and quercetin extend lifespan?
A: Yes, senolytics like fisetin and quercetin have been shown to extend lifespan in animal models.
Fisetin:
Extended median and maximum lifespan in wild-type mice, even when treatment began late in life (over 20 months old).
Increased lifespan by up to 10% in aged mice, equivalent to about 2.5 months. Showed 30–33% lifespan extension in other studies, with strong senolytic activity in both mouse and human tissues.
Also extended lifespan in Drosophila by 23% and S. cerevisiae by 55%.
Quercetin:
While less potent than fisetin as a senolytic, quercetin has demonstrated anti-aging effects.
In Simocephalus vetulus (a type of water flea), quercetin extended maximum lifespan by about 22%.
Often used in combination with dasatinib (D+Q) [See NOTE below], which has shown improvements in healthspan and reduced senescent cell burden in human trials, though direct lifespan extension in humans remains unproven.
Both compounds reduce senescent cell burden, improve healthspan, and show promise for translational longevity applications.
NOTE: Theaflavins are often used (well, by me anyway) as a replacement for the prescription drug dasatinib. Like dasatinib, theaflavins reduce senescent cells via different pathways than does quercetin, making the two a good combination. Below, Brave's response to a query about that:
Theaflavins, polyphenols derived from black tea, have demonstrated senolytic activity by inhibiting cellular receptors such as Eph, BRC-ABL, and BLC-2, which helps clear senescent cells from the body.
Preclinical studies indicate that theaflavins can inhibit the accumulation of senescence biomarkers and reduce the senescent cell burden.
Furthermore, research suggests that theaflavins may contribute to lifespan extension, as they have been associated with improved healthspan and longevity in animal models.
The combination of theaflavins with quercetin has been shown to enhance senolytic effects without the side effects associated with drugs like dasatinib.
I would just like to ask:
Do you trust what that supplement maker is putting in there?
If the sons of Cain are poisoning our food, how much of a kick do you think they'd get out of poisoning 'supplementary health' pills?
wouldn't it be better to find a natural way to get the equivalent of these supplements?
I used to use supplements until i started asking these questions.. now i don't use anything.
Excellent point.
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Good questions, Fatality.
Many brands, no, of course not. Certain brands (Solgar, Wild Harvest, Solaray, and more) I am comfortable with, and 90% of what I take is from Life Extension, which I've been using since they began in the early 1980s. They've fought the FDA (and won) and are run by William Faloon, who has always been serious about the quality of Life Extension's supplements. They once sent me (free and unasked) replacements for 8 bottles of Resveratrol because they'd tested a two-year-old sample of that batch and found that it was 3 or 4 percent below the listed potency. They've always been fanatical about not buying from junk suppliers, they test for quality, and they maintain medical and scientific advisory boards. -- I have a few reservations about Life Extension (they've become annoyingly good at sales promotions and such, for one thing) but nothing that makes me think they've downgraded the quality of their products.
I agree. Some of the quality old brands have been taken over by conglomerates and that always raises suspicions.
I spent years treating my body badly (smoking, drinking, eating poorly) yet my semi-annual blood tests suggest that I have the innards of a healthy 40-yr-old (I'm decades older). Not only am I certain that supplementation is the only way that would be the case, I am pretty sure I'd be dead and gone by now otherwise.
About your Point 3 -- many plant extracts available in pill form provide FAR more of the studied active ingredient(s) than any reasonable serving of the fruit or vegetable. It's not surprising then that in most cases that I've seen comparisons of, the pill form provides stronger benefits than regular consumption of the food (but not all cases). And of course you're not getting the sugar you'd be ingesting with a big serving of the fruit (and sometimes the vegetable, for that matter).
Hard either way considering just about everything is sprayed with glyphosate, has heavy metals from the trails or jabbed with pharmaceuticals. I'm sure they're poisoning all the the alternative medicine amd supplements where they can. There are good supplements out there, but ya it's hard to vet them.
Buy organic supplements and/or from companies that test their ingredients for toxins and heavy metals. Solgar and Wild Harvest are two examples I'm comfortable with; Life Extension is very careful about the ingredients they buy and has been for decades.
Nothing is pure and un-adulterated today; I've read that apples and carrots have nano-plastics in them, much of which comes from the AIR. That shit is EVERYWHERE, as is radioactive Cesium from Fukishima and elsewhere, glyphosphate and other toxic chemicals, GMO (even Organic wheat, for instance, is said to be contaminated with GMO DNA), and more.
Still, quality supplements are a health benefit (assuming you do your research and aren't an idiot about it) and are almost certainly cleaner than most foods you find at the market.
Visiting my Father soon. I'll save this and go over them with him. Thanks and Merry Christmas Fren. Happy New Year.
I have noticed that most of our problems seem rooted in inflammation.
Therefore, I think DMSO and grounding should not be overlooked.
Do you have a TLDR listing the supplements?
I'll consider putting together a suggested list of supplements to consider, and why. It'll be awhile (and I'm not saying it'll definitely happen); got things to do.
Medical Cannabis is the true Age extender, I have barely aged on the outside since I started using it. Look at people who use organic cannabis daily for years, they barely age at all. FULL BODY HEALING. Trump even posted a video about Cannabis for seniors recently.
I appreciate the research, but your best bang for your buck health product is fresh organic bulk cannabis, always has been, always will be.
Do you grow your own? And do you have a favorite brand?
Some years I grow a few herbs, but that's all. My favorite brand by far is Life Extension, which I've been using as my primary source of supplements since the 1980s.
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If you take all of those and add up the increased life expectancy of each, one could easily extend their life to well over 100%. We will have a lot of people reaching age 150 or better. Glad they didn't add Adrenochrome to that list.
It's probably not directly additive, but I believe taking a bunch of different, carefully chosen supplements both increases the chance of a HEALTHY life and almost surely extends it somewhat.
To an extent, I also believe carefully chosen supplements can reduce the harm of bad habits like smoking, drinking, and poor diet -- again, to an extent, not completely. It certainly reduces one's statistical chance of (and delays the arrival of, if you aren't on the right side of the statistics) getting cancer, heart attack, and other diseases and conditions you'd want to avoid.
This is great. Thank you.
I took a quick look. I take a heaping teaspoon of creatine in 20 oz of Fairlife milk daily, drink quite a bit of unsweetened black tea, and taurine when I drink a zero calorie Monster. I also drink a couple of cups of black coffee everyday. I am surprised that isn’t on the list.
You may want to rethink that monster. Sweeteners and sugar substitutes are horrible for you, and nullify any positive effects you may gain from the taurine, or any other good ingredient. Likewise carbonation itself actively fights oxygenation of your muscles, leaving you weak and your body in bad shape.
For the record, I drink 16 oz of water when I wake up. Then I drink two cups of black coffee everyday. After coffee, I shower and make a concoction that has an entire lemon squeezed and cut up into small pieces in a 40 oz stainless steel drinking cup. I usually put zero sugar cranberry black cherry drink with some sort of zero calorie soda. The soda is specifically for the carbonation. I like carbonation. I don’t keep Monsters around the house but I like them and pour them into my 40 oz cup when I am out and about. I don’t buy that they are particularly bad for you in moderation. Monster and lemon, yum.
Yes, artificial sweetener and carbonation. As I drink this, I eat the lemon and add ice tea, monster or more soda to the lemon. I drink this because it is what I like and the best that I like without sugar. I am really not a health food nut in particular. Maximizing protein and minimizing carbs is my main theme.
Edit*** I also ride a bicycle 3-5 hours a week weather permitting. I just got back from an hour ride. It isn’t exactly iron man stuff but the difference it makes is noticeable. Especially when I don’t do it.
Lol...monster.
Go look up the horror of sucralose dude
It has been studied to the nth degree. It looks like the jury is still out. Everything is bad for you. I will take my chances.
Sugar on the other hand makes me ill. Too many carbs for me and I am out of it. I have gone through that viscous cycle enough to know it is true for me.
I dont doubt the sugar hangover effect. Stevia leaf looks okay but its not as common probably costs alot more
Yes! For years coffee was vilified as bad for you, but recently it's been repeatedly shown in studies to be a real benefit. One study I saw found that coffee was the biggest single source of antioxidants in the diet of most adult Americans, which I'm not sure I believe, but . . . then again, the typical American diet HAS gone downhill with all the ultra-processes garbage out there . . .
Forget the monster-it's a poison pill
Three or four a week is my guilty pleasure. The only thing I try to avoid is sugar.
I completely understand-i drank the ultra monsters for years
Yeah, I get that all the time from people in real life that tell me that Monsters are bad for you. Every so often I research it and really can’t find evidence. They may not be good for you but I am not convinced that they harm you.
I actually quit them for about a year and didn’t find that they made me ill one way or another. The good thing about quitting for a period is that I broke the habit and now I just drink them for convenience. I originally quit them for the money savings. It is an expensive habit.
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STUDY this page (esp polyphenols and terpenes)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_phytochemicals_in_food#Polyphenols
Thank you, 5DchessWatch. I've actually read that page before and many others with details about the health-giving phytochemicals in foods.