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Nov 18, 2018
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Day 2
Temp 97.7 post breakfast
This could be because I had salt yesterday.
I think better erections and slightly higher libido is all I can tell so far.
 
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scoobydoo

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Jan 7, 2020
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My concern with Tribulus is lots of supps have been found to be traced with steroids
Many athletes have been banned due to doping from taking contaminated Tribulus
 

Wagner83

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Oct 15, 2016
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I finished the VemoHerb trial. The benefits were mostly related to morning wood, libido and how I was perceived. I don't think I had increased drive, anti stress effects or anything else. Perhaps better sleep.
 

rei

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Aug 6, 2017
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I can recommend everest nutrition's bulk powder. It has 1% taurine and i believe there is some bioavailability benefit from adding it, exactly like they claim. I get same effect with ~1/3 of the saponin dose compared to the product i mentioned in the beginning of this thread. Or possibly the quality is just better and the absorption story is just marketing. But i don't believe so because additionally i have not managed to get a flush with their c vitamin up to 25 gram dose. But again, it might be due to purity, not the taurine.

Of course the same can be achieved by consuming a little bit of taurine with any manufacturer's product so i would appreciate if someone could try and report back.
 
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shine

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666
Recently, I was interested in finding out more on protodioscin molecule. I stumbled on a PDF describing the ingredients of a product called Protocin made by a company called Optigen (www.optigen.com.au). In the PDF, the very first sentence under Mechanism of Protodioscin it states "Protodioscin acts by stimulating the enzyme 5-alpha-reductase, which plays a role in the conversion of testosterone into dihydrotestosterone (Viktorof et al. 1994)". This is the very first time I have seen any research that actually showed/proved that protodioscin can activate this enzyme let alone any enzyme. If true this could be a another mechanism by which protodioscin act on the androgen system.

The interesting part is protodioscin has been researched as a remedy since the 1980's !! I can only imagine the amount of people that could benefit from this information if important research was made available internationally.

Unforuntally, I cannot find the reference paper anywhere. Maybe @haidut or anyone else could find the paper and see what Viktorof et al. found in their research. I will link the PDF below and the paper cited.


http://www.optigen.com.au/pdf/PROTOCINR.pdf

Viktorof I., Bozadjieva E., Protich M., et al. Pharmacological, pharmacokinetic, toxicological and clinical studies on protodioscin. IIMS Therapeutic Focus Vol 2 (1994).


Has anyone found the study or can get access to it?
 

Hgreen56

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Apr 8, 2020
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Some people on the forum like @Wagner83 myself and a few others have tried the infamous herb TT with the hope of raising androgens and improving body composition. Despite Wikipedia bashing TT and raising doubts about its effectiveness, there is plenty of evidence from human trials shows the herb does have an effect. Its main effects seem to be on body composition, libido, steroid levels, and mental health. The proposed main active ingredient is the saponin protodioscin (PTD), even though there are others like diosgenin, tigogenin, 3-OH-5a-sapogenin, etc.
Protodioscin - Wikipedia

If you look at the molecular structure of PTD you will quickly see that it is identical to the molecule of DHEA except for several sugary molecules attached to positions C-3 and C-22. One of the known effects of TT is that it raises mostly DHT and DHEA, and less so total/free T. This is pretty much what DHEA does as well when taken on its own. Another known effect of TT is that is increases androgen receptor density in various tissues like muscle and brain, which DHEA is also known to do. However, unlike DHEA, the saponins in TT do not seem to convert into estrogen or raise it much when ingested. Several studies suggest such DHEA-like effect of TT.
Evaluation of the efficacy and safety of Tribulus terrestris in male sexual dysfunction-A prospective, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled... - PubMed - NCBI
"...The exact mechanism of action of protodioscin is still unclear. Some authors affirm that improvement of sexual desire and enhancement of the erection is due to the conversion of protodioscin to dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA) [11]. Recently, a hypothesis was reported that the induced relaxation of the corpus cavernosum is probably due to the involvement of the nitric oxide synthase pathway and the endothelium of the corpus cavernosum [1]."

I don't think that PTD converts to DHEA, but rather that PTD acts like DHEA due to its structure but without the estrogenic metabolism of DHEA. So, if the main active ingredients in TT are mostly non-aromatizable DHEA analogs then how can this explain the anabolic effects and increase in strength it has in people who take it? Well, as I explained in another thread, steroids known to be anabolic for muscle (and brain) have pronounced anti-glucocorticoid effects.
Structural Requirements For An Optimal Anti-Catabolic Steroid

DHEA is a known anti-glucocorticoid and I have posted quite a few studies about its effects on inhibiting cortisol synthesis. It also appears to antagonize cortisol at the receptor and possibly centrally (CRH->ACTH).
Anti-glucocorticoid effects of dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA). - PubMed - NCBI

A human study found a 3-fold increase in DHEA from taking TT, which corroborates it being a plant source of DHEA-type steroid.
Effect of oral administration of Tribulus terrestris extract on semen quality and body fat index of infertile men. - PubMed - NCBI

Even more impressively, the TT treatment dropped the prolactin levels of the males from 17 down to 7 - a whopping 60% drop! So, it appears TT is also anti-estrogenic, at least in humans. See further comments down this thread for more discussion on this study. The drop in prolactin is consistent with the dopaminergic effects of TT.
Evaluation of anti-depressant and anxiolytic activity of Rasayana Ghana Tablet (A compound Ayurvedic formulation) in albino mice
"...The studies on Tribulus terrestris (Gokshura) suggest that the harmine content of Tribulus acts as Monoamine Oxidase (MAO) inhibitor, leading to higher levels of dopamine in the brain. Due to higher levels of dopamine, the mood is elevated slowly and the stronger and better is the feeling."

So, if TT contains a non-metabolizable analog of DHEA its primary effects should be through antagonizing cortisol. The study below shows exactly this to be the case and the cortisol antagonism can explain most of the anabolic effects of TT on body and brain, as well as its known anti-depressant effects and improving digestion. As the study below shows, TT was even more effective than Prozac (fluoxetine) in lowering CRH and especially cortisol (fluoxetine effect on cortisol was not significant). The effective doses used in the study seem high but this was plain TT powder, not an extract. Good extracts on the market are usually in potency of 20:1 or even 50:1. With 20:1 potency extracts, the doses used in the study correspond to about 1g-1.5g, which is exactly the dose used clinically with extracts like the Bulgarian prescription drug Tribestan.
The last study also found strong decrease in cortisol combined with increases in T during overtraining, and a much higher T/cortisol ratio then either training or sedentary groups. The dose that lead to these effects was also equivalent to about 1.2g-1.5g TT extract daily.


So, anybody else experience cortisol-lowering effects from TT? Any improvements in cognition or mood (as the study below found)?

Effect of tribulus terrestris saponins on behavior and neuroendocrine in chronic mild stress depression rats. - PubMed - NCBI
"...As shown in Table 2, Compared with vehicle group, the CMS procedure induced serum CRF levels of model rats a significantly higher (P<0.05). After 4-week treatment, TTS at 0.75 and 2.25 g/kg significantly reduced serum CRF levels in the stressed animals (P< 0.05). Fluoxetine also produced a significant reduce in serum CRF levels (P<0.05). However, TTS at 0.375 g/ kg was failed to alter serum CRF levels in the stressed animals."

"...As shown in Table 2, Compared with vehicle group there was a significant increase in CORT levels in CMS rats (P<0.05). TTS at 0.375 g/kg slightly but not remarkably reduced serum CORT levels in the CMS-treated rats (P>0.05), and TTS at 0.75and 2.25 g/kg significantly attenuated the CMS-induced increase in CORT levels (P<0.05). Fluoxetine exhibited a tendency to significantly decrease these levels of CMS-treated animals (P<0.05)."

"...Our results found that CMS can reduced scores of crossing, rears and time of grooming, increased time of staying in central square in OFT, decreased body weight and reduced sucrose preference in SPT, the present result was in agreement to the findings of other similar studies.9,10 All of these symptoms induced by CMS procedure was significantly attenuated by chronic treatment with TTS at 0.75 and 2.25 g/kg, but not at 0.375 g/kg, which confirmed that CMS can affect rats behavior and cause depression, TTS (0.75 and 2.25 g/kg) can antagonism on it and has antidepressant-like effects."

"...Thus normalization of HPA axis activity is a cure key and an indication of depression relief. In the present study, the CMS procedure resulted in increases of serum CRF and CORT in rats, indicating that CMS might cause HPA axis hyperactivity. CRF is the most potent ACTH secretagogue, but in the present study, the CMS procedure rendered no relative differences on serum ACTH concentrations in rats. This dissociation between CRF and ACTH was found in other similar studies.18 These may be due to the origin of serum CRF was a confounding factor in these determinations, hence peripheral concentrations of CRF were difficult to interpret. In this study, we found TTS at 0.75 and 2.25 g/kg but not at 0.375 g/ kg significantly attenuated the CMS-induced serum CRF and CORT levels. It supported the hypothesis that TTS could exert its antidepressant effect by normalizing HPA axis hyperactivity through CRF and CORT levels regulation."

View attachment 11055

Effects of Tribulus terrestris saponins on exercise performance in overtraining rats and the underlying mechanisms. - PubMed - NCBI
"...As shown in Fig. 3, serum level of testosterone was decreased significantly to about 70% of control while serum level of corticosterone was unchanged after six weeks of overtraining. Treatment of rats with TT saponins during overtraining dramatically increased the serum level of testosterone to about 150% of control and 216% of overtraining group respectively and led to a significant decrease in serum level of corticosterone, and consequently a much higher T/C ratio."
View attachment 11101

Not planning a TT product for now. There are plenty of vendors selling this out there and unless I manage to get a large amount of good Bulgarian herb I don't wan to risk it.
Here is one vendor I have used and had good results with. Not endorsing it in any way and not getting royalties from them.
Tribulus Terrestris Saponins Extract | BadmonkeyBotanicals.com

So what i understand is that a good tribulus supplement has a high percentage in Saponins AND Protodioscin?
If a tribulus supplement has a high percentage in Saponins, does it automatically also has a high percentage in Protodioscin?
I think the answer is yes beceuse... well you can't cut something out of a herb... but on the other hand I see a lot of other brand tribulus supplements with a high percentage Saponins but dont mention Protodioscin at all..
Like this one. So i am not sure it has automatically a high percentage in Protodioscin
 
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shine

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Messages
666
So what i understand is that a good tribulus supplement has a high percentage in Saponins AND Protodioscin?
If a tribulus supplement has a high percentage in Saponins, does it automatically also has a high percentage in Protodioscin?
I think the answer is yes beceuse... well you can't cut something out of a herb... but on the other hand I see a lot of other brand tribulus supplements with a high percentage Saponins but dont mention Protodioscin at all..
Like this one. So i am not sure it has automatically a high percentage in Protodioscin

Protodioscin is a saponin. The percentage of saponin in an extract doesn't tell you how much protodioscin it contains. Usually the bulgarian tribulus has a high percentage of protodioscin, whereas tribulus grown in other parts of the world has lower amounts. The area/climate where it is grown determines the concentration of the different saponins.


This study compared the saponin concentrations of TT from different regions.
TT from Bulgaria, some parts of Turkey, Macedonia and Greece seems to have the highest concentrations, whereas TT from Vietnam and India has very low amounts of protodioscin but high values for tribulosin (presumably heartprotective).
 

Hgreen56

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Apr 8, 2020
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723
Protodioscin is a saponin. The percentage of saponin in an extract doesn't tell you how much protodioscin it contains. Usually the bulgarian tribulus has a high percentage of protodioscin, whereas tribulus grown in other parts of the world has lower amounts. The area/climate where it is grown determines the concentration of the different saponins.


This study compared the saponin concentrations of TT from different regions.
TT from Bulgaria, some parts of Turkey, Macedonia and Greece seems to have the highest concentrations, whereas TT from Vietnam and India has very low amounts of protodioscin but high values for tribulosin (presumably heartprotective).
Thanks.
 

Coderr

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Mar 15, 2019
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Does TT's tea work? I found it fresh in my country. Do I need to use this as a tea or grind it
 

Vanset

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Apr 19, 2021
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after two weeks of using 800mg a day of TT from vemoherb i started experiencing BPH symptoms that have not still not gone away, one month after i stopped using it. AVOID
 

Karlucchi

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Feb 20, 2021
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This may be a stupid question but would it be possible to make a transdermal Tribulus compound using dmso or a different solvent?
Tribulus always seems to quickly lose its effect when I take it orally even if it high quality stuff.
 

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