Upon watching 60 Minutes tonight and conducting further research, it’s evident that the benefits of Resveratrol may result in both the most prominent advance in human medicine in decades, as well as provide investors with the right player a substantial return on investment. I somehow manage to turn every hot topic into a finance/investment idea and this one could be a multi-bagger. What is Resveratrol You Ask? I have to admit, I didn’t know much about Resveratrol until I was watching 60 Minutes tonight, which I consider to be a legitimate news outlet that prodigiously checks their sources, challenges assertions and injects skepticism into their reporting. The segment outlined the science and the discovery process behind Resveratrol, which was intriguing from a human health standpoint, but of course, as I was watching, in the back of my mind, I was thinking, “what’s the best Resveratrol stock” to own right now? My only other exposure to Resveratrol was some Google image ads (possibly like one that Google’s serving up somewhere on my site now) touting hot actresses and Dr. Oz in some fashion endorsing the chemical; but I had never investigated those ads - the lightbulb just went off tonight. Resveratrol is a naturally occurring substance that has been shown to have both protective and regenerative properties in all sorts of plants and animals. Resveratrol has been proven in numerous independent studies to have substantial benefits in everything from yeast to mice and monkeys in various therapeutic categories. While that’s encouraging, the vast majority of drugs that enter the clinical lifecycle cleared that similar hurdle and never make it to market, so here’s where the skeptic in me comes out. What has already made it to market of course, is Resveratrol supplements, which don’t require the rigor clinical trials and subsequent review and approval by the FDA in the US. In this article, I’m going to elaborate on Resveratrol itself, the vast differences I see in the commercial potential between Resveratrol supplement companies and an FDA approved source of Resveratrol, and try to separate the facts from the hype. Resveratrol Benefits If a safe and efficacious form of Resveratrol can be demonstrated in humans, the benefits are enormous: Extension of lifespan to the tune of over 10 years In the later stages of life, a much more healthy/disease-free existence Diabetes treatment Weight Loss Cancer Prevention Delay/Eliminate the onset of Alzheimer’s Disease …the list goes on. While this sounds too good to be true, some Resveratrol companies are making these claims now, which I do not believe can be substantiated just yet until I see data from clinically controlled studies. But, within the next few years, we’ll see actual data from formal clinical trials. How does Resveratrol work and how could these benefits be achieved? Resveratrol: The Facts Resveratrol is naturally occurring and the most commonly consumed material providing Resveratrol in any meaningful quantity is in red wine due to the concentration of the material in grapes. People have looked at the marginally higher life expectancy in Europeans who drink red wine en masse compared to the rest of the world and proclaimed, “Alas! Correlation is Causation! We have found the fountain of youth”. Unfortunately for those looking to draw a direct link, in order to derive the benefits that are being seen in animals at the human scale, the amount of Resveratrol required to achieve those levels would amount to more wine than a human could reasonably consume without incurring other, much more serious side effects that would more than offset any benefit. So, perhaps there’s something going on there, but don’t go start drinking more red wine based on this possible correlation and improbably causation. The Real Breakthrough came not from a supplement company, but from an actual biotech startup named Sirtris. Initially, they showed that Resveratrol could significantly extend the lifespan of yeast. Sounds funny, but read on. There’s a “magic gene” called Sirtuin, that is normally turned off. When turned on, it has regenerative and healing effects that are pretty incredible. The trouble is, you can’t just turn it on and off. Several studies including one ongoing by CDC have shown that caloric restriction appears to turn this gene on and significantly increase lifespans of highly evolved creatures like monkeys while forstalling disease. In a search to turn this gene on, Sinclair, a co-founder of Sirtris, screened thousands of compounds in an attempt to activate the gene and guess what he arrived at? The compound that activated the gene was none other than Resveratrol! That’s when the alarm bells went off for him. This was the same chemical evident in red wine. So, to recap, the breakthrough isn’t that caloric restriction increases

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Will Resveratrol Benefits Create the Biggest Blockbuster Drug Ever?
