Turkesterone
Plant ecdysteroid sold for muscle gain, but human evidence for turkesterone itself is minimal and unconvincing.
Turkesterone
Plant ecdysteroid sold for muscle gain, but human evidence for turkesterone itself is minimal and unconvincing.
Skip it for now — human evidence for turkesterone itself is too weak to justify the price.
Turkesterone is a plant ecdysteroid found in Ajuga turkestanica and related species. It is marketed as a non-hormonal anabolic, but most support comes from cell, animal, and neighboring-compound research rather than turkesterone-specific human trials. Proposed mechanisms include signaling through pathways involved in protein synthesis, yet convincing human outcome data are lacking. It is mainly used by gym-focused adults, but current evidence does not show a reliable benefit for the general health-conscious user.
Proven Benefits
Protocol
Onset Time
Who Should Consider
How It Works
Preclinical work suggests turkesterone may influence muscle-cell signaling pathways linked to protein synthesis, including PI3K/Akt-related signaling, without acting like testosterone at the androgen receptor. Whether oral turkesterone reaches human tissues in amounts that meaningfully change these pathways is still unclear.