Side-by-side comparison of mechanisms, dosing, interactions, and stacking potential.
| Curcumin (with Piperine/Liposomal) | Nattokinase | |
|---|---|---|
| Category | Supplements | Supplements |
| Standard Dose | 500-1000mg curcuminoids daily (enhanced bioavailability form) | 2000-4000 FU (fibrinolytic units) daily, equivalent to 100-200mg |
| Timing | With meals containing fat. Piperine enhances absorption 2000% but also affects drug metabolism. | On empty stomach, between meals or before bed. Morning and evening split dosing for 24-hour fibrinolytic coverage. |
| Cycle Duration | ongoing | ongoing |
| Evidence Level | strong_human | moderate_human |
Curcumin modulates over 100 molecular targets. Primary mechanisms include direct inhibition of NF-kB nuclear translocation (master inflammatory transcription factor), suppression of COX-2 and iNOS expression, inhibition of STAT3 and AP-1 signaling, and activation of Nrf2-ARE pathway upregulating Phase II detoxification enzymes (glutathione S-transferase, heme oxygenase-1). It also inhibits mTOR signaling and modulates epigenetic enzymes (HATs, HDACs, DNMTs).
500-1000mg curcuminoids daily (enhanced bioavailability form)
With meals containing fat. Piperine enhances absorption 2000% but also affects drug metabolism.
ongoing
Nattokinase is a fibrinolytic serine protease extracted from natto (fermented soybeans). It directly degrades fibrin (the structural protein of blood clots) through four mechanisms: direct fibrinolysis, enhancement of endogenous tPA (tissue plasminogen activator) production, conversion of prourokinase to urokinase, and degradation of PAI-1 (plasminogen activator inhibitor-1). It also reduces blood viscosity and may inhibit ACE (angiotensin-converting enzyme), providing mild antihypertensive effects.
2000-4000 FU (fibrinolytic units) daily, equivalent to 100-200mg
On empty stomach, between meals or before bed. Morning and evening split dosing for 24-hour fibrinolytic coverage.
ongoing
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