Dihydroberberine (GlucoVantage) vs Quercetin

Side-by-side comparison of mechanisms, dosing, interactions, and stacking potential.

Dihydroberberine (GlucoVantage)Quercetin
CategorySupplementsSupplements
Standard Dose500-1000mg daily
TimingWith meals for absorption. For senolytic effect: 3-day pulse monthly on empty stomach.
Cycle Durationongoing for general use; pulsed monthly for senolytic protocols
Evidence LevelModeratemoderate_human

Mechanism

Active metabolite of berberine with 5x greater absorption. AMPK activator that improves insulin sensitivity, reduces hepatic glucose production, and modulates gut microbiome. More bioavailable form allows lower dosing with fewer GI side effects.

Contraindications

  • Same as berberine — hypoglycemia risk with diabetic medications
B

Quercetin

Supplements

Mechanism

Quercetin is a flavonoid that inhibits mast cell degranulation and histamine release, functions as a potent senolytic (selectively clearing senescent cells) when combined with dasatinib or fisetin, and activates AMPK and SIRT1 pathways. It inhibits PI3K/Akt/mTOR signaling, suppresses NF-kB, and modulates JAK-STAT inflammatory cascades. As a zinc ionophore, it facilitates zinc entry into cells, which may inhibit viral RNA-dependent RNA polymerase.

Standard Dosing

500-1000mg daily

Timing

With meals for absorption. For senolytic effect: 3-day pulse monthly on empty stomach.

Cycle Duration

ongoing for general use; pulsed monthly for senolytic protocols

Side Effects

  • Headache
  • Mild GI upset
  • Tingling extremities at high doses
  • Rare: kidney toxicity at very high doses

Contraindications

  • Pregnancy/lactation at high doses
  • Concurrent cyclosporine therapy

Best Stacking Partners

ZincVitamin CBromelain (enhances absorption)FisetinEGCG

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