Performance

Ecdysterone

Plant ecdysteroid marketed for muscle gain; limited human studies suggest possible lean-mass and strength benefits in adults who lift.

Ecdysterone

Ecdysterone

28
score
C
evidence
Caution
risk
Quick Take

Mostly a speculative training add-on — skip for general wellness; evidence is thin and product quality varies.

Ecdysterone is a phytoecdysteroid found in trace amounts in spinach, quinoa, and some herbs. In lab models it may affect muscle-growth signaling without acting like testosterone. Human evidence is still preliminary and inconsistent: one modern resistance-training trial and a few older low-quality studies suggest possible gains in lean mass and strength. Adults already doing structured strength training are the most plausible candidates to notice any effect.

Proven Benefits

01
May increase lean mass
02
May improve strength gains
03
May improve work capacity

Protocol

Amount
200 mg
Frequency
Once daily
When
Any time of day with food; timing around workouts has not shown a clear advantage.

Onset Time

8-12 weeks with resistance training; no reliable acute effect.

Who Should Consider

Healthy adults doing structured resistance training
People who already have protein and creatine covered
Users willing to stop if nothing changes after 8-12 weeks

How It Works

Ecdysterone does not appear to work through the androgen receptor. Preclinical data suggest it may influence estrogen receptor beta-related signaling and the PI3K/Akt pathway, which can increase muscle protein synthesis. Oral absorption in humans appears low and variable, which likely limits real-world effects.

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