Performance

Turkesterone

Plant ecdysteroid sold for muscle gain, but human evidence for turkesterone itself is minimal and unconvincing.

Turkesterone

Turkesterone

18
score
D
evidence
Caution
risk
Quick Take

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

01
May support lean mass gains
02
May improve strength output
03
May support training recovery

Protocol

Amount
500-1000 mg
Frequency
Once daily
When
Any time of day with food may improve tolerance, but no timing strategy is proven.

Onset Time

Unknown in humans; no well-established onset window

Who Should Consider

Adults who still want to experiment despite weak evidence
People willing to stop if no measurable change after 8 weeks
Consumers prioritizing third-party testing over marketing

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.

Updated Invalid Date