Quercetin: Tinnitus, Anxiety, Allergies, Prevent Scarring, Lower BP, Fight Infections and More

Has anyone tried taking Quercetin for their tinnitus? I've also got prostate issues which said could be helped by this supplement, but it seems that Quercetin may also be ear friendly.

Any experiences you could share would be helpful.
 
Bringing this BACK TO LIFE!

Guys, Quercetin (as well as large doses of Vitamin C) may be the best thing yet for fighting off COVID-19.
The life cycle of the influenza virus includes viral attachment, entry, replication, and release. Blockade of viral entry/fusion would certainly be a promising therapeutic strategy in the fight against virus infections, including HIV-1, Middle East respiratory symptom coronavirus (MERS-CoV) and the influenza virus.
Quercetin as an Antiviral Agent Inhibits Influenza A Virus (IAV) Entry

Very much so that a Canadian lab is now doing trials in China:

A made-in-Canada solution to the coronavirus outbreak?
 
Can anyone shed some light on how can Quercetin, a natural occurring substance, be ototoxic and otoprotective at the same time?

Ototoxic:
Natural Compounds as Occult Ototoxins? Ginkgo biloba Flavonoids Moderately Damage Lateral Line Hair Cells

Otoprotective:
Quercetine attenuates the gentamicin-induced ototoxicity in a rat model

We should then avoid eating apples.
My theory is a lot of these protection compounds just get in the way of the toxin via concentration gradients or being less ototoxic than the toxin. Pretty simple explanation. Enough vitamins or calcium would help just the same.
 
@BrStan@, I found the same two studies and was wondering the same thing.

It says significant protection, but that doesn't tell you how much. Also dissection microscopy may not be as sensitive as tinnitus is in a human.

Another possibility is that Quercetin is ototoxic in vitro but not in vivo, or at least not at the dosage that may be used. This is because methionine protects against Quercetin ototoxicity. An amino acid will be found in vivo from meat in the diet but not in vitro.

Another zinc ionosphere is EGCG. I have not found anything saying that is ototoxic. However, EGCG comes from green tea or other plants. Well, Quercetin comes from Ginkgo biloba and also the study says Kaempferol which is also found in Ginkgo biloba is ototoxic. Well, Kaempferol is also in green tea, so any green tea extract for EGCG would likely contain kaempferol even if it does not contain Queretin.

One would need an EGCG isolate, and I do not think that is available. Or, need to know if Quercetin is not ototoxic in vivo. Also EGCG has not been tested for ototoxicity.

I wanted to take an antiviral for chronic muscle pain and fatigue called "Novirin". I noticed one ingredient was Quercetin. This reminded me of an ototoxic medication Hydroxychloroquine as I believe they are related and anything malaria related can be ototoxic. The ATA website does not list Quercetin, but does list Hydroxychloroquine and I believe I saw another site mention Quercetin being ototoxic and now I found those studies.

I have tinnitus and also want to avoid ototoxic things now that I have learned about them.
 
I was wondering about taking Quercetin. Besides the points raised, is it safe to take while taking a SSRI and benzo?
 
I don't think I'd take Quercetin. Could be ototoxic for anyone asking. There are better alternatives. Check the ATA website for medication list for anything ototoxic.
 
This is my area of research.

Quercetin glycoside is a polyphenol isoflavone antioxidant. I grow out small brown chick peas into sprouts, soy beans are very rich and I sprout those out as well.

There is huge research literature on these human friendly molecules. Such as promote bone, cardiovascular, metabolic and brain health.

I don't trust supplements, they are expensive and I prefer to create them at home.

Barley and rye polyphenols are also enhanced by sprouting and fermentation, I do all that at home. This is for the fish oil like effects.

Depending on glycoside aglycone, your supplement may not even be absorbed, plus can you trust what they say on the label? For sure good for you. May even help tinnitus but I do not know research.

Best is to learn how to sprout. I use a collander in a bowl with a lid. Plastic collander. And peroxide.
 
Dilemma. I have read the link posted here about Quercetin possibly being ototoxic when applied directly to hair cells of zebra fish, but unsure how this relates to humans.

I suspect that Quercetin was helping me last year, but too scared to take it again in case it has contributed to my relapse.

Does anyone know if Quercetin is ototoxic?
 
Does anyone know if Quercetin is ototoxic?
Nonsense. Quercetin is found in many things, e.g., red wine, onions, green tea, apples, and berries.

Paranoid to think it would be ototoxic in humans. So paranoid actually that there are zero references to it even potentially being ototoxic in humans on PubMed.
 
Nonsense. Quercetin is found in many things, e.g., red wine, onions, green tea, apples, and berries.

Paranoid to think it would be ototoxic in humans. So paranoid actually that there are zero references to it even potentially being ototoxic in humans on PubMed.
Yes, but would it be ototoxic in mammals at higher concentrations?

There was one study referenced on Tinnitus Talk that indicated it was ototoxic in zebra fish, but as I said 'I am not sure how that translates to humans...'
 
Does anyone know if Quercetin is ototoxic?
Hi @DebInAustralia -- Really sorry to hear about your difficult relapse with tinnitus.

I don't know whether or not quercetin could be ototoxic for some people, but I highly doubt it. I started taking high doses of Quercetin recently (4 grams/day), first in January when I got COVID-19 (because it really supports immune system function), and then decided to keep taking it because it's a great natural anti-histamine. -- Quercetin – The Best Natural Antihistamine – Foods With Quercetin – Dr.Berg

It feels like it's been a real net positive for me, and my breathing seems a bit easier. I also learned in my research that it has a half life of about 3 1/2 hours in the body, so that might give you a sense of assurance if you decide to try it. It's not something that would hang around for days causing continuing damage like a lot of drugs.

I recall a post of yours where you seem to have a hard time calming yourself with your recent increase in tinnitus. I just did a post on castor oil packs that you may find interesting. It's one of many tools I use regularly to keep a sense of equilibrium for myself. -- Take care Deb!
 
Hi @DebInAustralia -- Really sorry to hear about your difficult relapse with tinnitus.

I don't know whether or not quercetin could be ototoxic for some people, but I highly doubt it. I started taking high doses of Quercetin recently (4 grams/day), first in January when I got COVID-19 (because it really supports immune system function), and then decided to keep taking it because it's a great natural anti-histamine. -- Quercetin – The Best Natural Antihistamine – Foods With Quercetin – Dr.Berg

It feels like it's been a real net positive for me, and my breathing seems a bit easier. I also learned in my research that it has a half life of about 3 1/2 hours in the body, so that might give you a sense of assurance if you decide to try it. It's not something that would hang around for days causing continuing damage like a lot of drugs.

I recall a post of yours where you seem to have a hard time calming yourself with your recent increase in tinnitus. I just did a post on castor oil packs that you may find interesting. It's one of many tools I use regularly to keep a sense of equilibrium for myself. -- Take care Deb!
Thank you.

Has it helped quieten your tinnitus?
 
Has it helped quieten your tinnitus?
Something has taken my tinnitus down a notch in the past several weeks. I credit it to some kind of combination of three things: 1) 4x 1 gram Quercetin; 2) 1-2 oz. Poppy Seeds; & 3) 30K IUs of Vit. D3 daily. My best guess is that it was the poppy seeds and D3 that were primarily responsible. I will say however, that the Quercetin (which is often taken for allergies) seems to have made my breathing easier, and that might have more of an impact than I'm aware of. Quercetin is a strong anti-histamine, and a strong immune system modulator.
 
Something has taken my tinnitus down a notch in the past several weeks. I credit it to some kind of combination of three things: 1) 4x 1 gram Quercetin; 2) 1-2 oz. Poppy Seeds; & 3) 30K IUs of Vit. D3 daily. My best guess is that it was the poppy seeds and D3 that were primarily responsible. I will say however, that the Quercetin (which is often taken for allergies) seems to have made my breathing easier, and that might have more of an impact than I'm aware of. Quercetin is a strong anti-histamine, and a strong immune system modulator.
Thank you @Lane.

I love reading your posts. Sorry I forget to respond. My brain is scattered at the present.

I will say that my interest in Quercetin lays in its ability to modulate Kv channels. I have also learnt that histamine blocks/inhibits Kv channels. So maybe that is why you are on the improve.
 
Something has taken my tinnitus down a notch in the past several weeks. I credit it to some kind of combination of three things: 1) 4x 1 gram Quercetin; 2) 1-2 oz. Poppy Seeds; & 3) 30K IUs of Vit. D3 daily. My best guess is that it was the poppy seeds and D3 that were primarily responsible. I will say however, that the Quercetin (which is often taken for allergies) seems to have made my breathing easier, and that might have more of an impact than I'm aware of. Quercetin is a strong anti-histamine, and a strong immune system modulator.
Hi Lane, hope you're well.

Just wondering if you're still taking Quercetin?
 
Just wondering if you're still taking Quercetin?
Hi @DebInAustralia -- I am still taking it. But I take and do so many things, it's often hard to discern what's working and what isn't. So then I will often not do something for a while, and then restart. Haven't really done that with Quercetin, because my intuition tells me it's a good thing to keep doing. I recently read it's not water soluble, so it's important to take it with food that has fat in it.

Something that I think is helping me the most recently, primarily because it's improved my sleep, is a product called Tone Pacer PRO. I wrote about my experience in the following thread:

Tone Pacer PRO App — Has a Very Soothing Effect on My Auditory Cortex
 
Something has taken my tinnitus down a notch in the past several weeks. I credit it to some kind of combination of three things: 1) 4x 1 gram Quercetin; 2) 1-2 oz. Poppy Seeds; & 3) 30K IUs of Vit. D3 daily. My best guess is that it was the poppy seeds and D3 that were primarily responsible. I will say however, that the Quercetin (which is often taken for allergies) seems to have made my breathing easier, and that might have more of an impact than I'm aware of. Quercetin is a strong anti-histamine, and a strong immune system modulator.
Isn't that a very high dose of vitamin D3? Are you taking vitamin K2 to offset that? Such high doses of vitamin D3 aren't safe long term. I might be wrong about dosage but I do think it's super high off the top of my head.
 
You can prepare Quercetin, which is isoflavone, at home, by simmering soy bean, immersing in super hot milk, allowing to cool, inoculating with Kefir.

Soy bean has amino acid profile of beef, so it is quite healthy, and the isoflavones are good for you, besides promoting sleep.

You can also do desi chickpea sprouting, this is technically more difficult, but it is doable. Problem is the chickpeas can get moldy on you, it needs to get to 6-7 days stage, but that is doable if you spray them with 2-3% peroxide on a daily basis. "Peroxide shock" is a lab method to induce antioxidant production, so it could have additional benefit. The Professor at the University wants to write a paper about this with me, but we need a hard working grad student to take this on. The Professor applied for and has the research funds, even to hire staff. The University has sprouting chambers, and the HPLC for measuring the isoflavones, we were just frustrated a bit by COVID-19 which put a damper on things.

Ideally go all vegetarian and you might convert yourself to and "equol producer" which is beta estradiol analogue. It's non feminizing so quite safe for males, don't worry.

Soy beans in Canada are $1 per pound from Bulk Barn. They have "Seniors Day" 25% discount. Their soy beans are Canadian grown. The amino acid profile is the same as beef. You just need to make sure you are getting your Omega 3's which are your essential fatty acids. Hemp oil is also good, it has GLA which your body might be able to convert to your essential fatty acid requirement.
 
You can prepare Quercetin, which is isoflavone, at home, by simmering soy bean, immersing in super hot milk, allowing to cool, inoculating with Kefir.

Soy bean has amino acid profile of beef, so it is quite healthy, and the isoflavones are good for you, besides promoting sleep.
Hey, may I ask you if you use Quercetin yourself, and if so, at what doses?

Do you think that Quercetin could potentiate the effectiveness of anticonvulsants when co-administrated?
 
Hey, may I ask you if you use Quercetin yourself, and if so, at what doses?

Do you think that Quercetin could potentiate the effectiveness of anticonvulsants when co-administrated?
Hi, I can't tell you my dose of isoflavones, I don't have access to HPLC, so all I can say is soy sprout is the richest source of isoflavones.

As for anticonvulsant properties, not that I'm aware of, but they do have sedative properties, so useful for people like us who often report difficulty with sleep, me especially, sleep is ridiculous.

Right now, I've discovered I've got some kind of incurable leukemia/lymphoma, I'm thinking I'm not long for this world, actually something I was hoping for for several years, I think I've been "subclinical" for a few years, which however explains a lot... such as relentless fatigue and search for effective sedative, including but not limited to novel cannabinoids, such as CBDV/THCV.
 

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