Acai has received a positive report, in a study using a mouse model of Parkinson's: Açai Berry Mitigates Parkinson’s Disease Progression Showing Dopaminergic Neuroprotection via Nrf2 HO1 Pathways link.springer.com/content/p...
In this study, treatment with açai berry was started 24 hours after administration of the toxicant. I would prefer a longer wait but most studies wrongly apply the treatment prior to the toxicant so we have to take what we can get. This was previously reported favorably on this site: healthunlocked.com/cure-par...
Nrf2 is a transcription factor, meaning it affects the transcription of a gene in the cell nucleus. pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/234... "Nrf2 is the master regulator of inducible antioxidant responses, that can attenuate cellular injury from oxidative stress"
Here is a study which compares açai to quercetin, ashwagandha and other compounds as inducers of Nrf2: ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articl...
They found açai was an inducer of Nrf2, although not as powerful as quercetin and ashwagandha (figures 3 and 4). Quercetin is about 2.5 times stronger and ashwagandha 7 times stronger. This was a cell culture model, so it did not include any differences in absorption or passage through blood-brain barrier. To the extent that the effectiveness of açai is due to its induction of Nrf2 this is likely all the more so for quercetin and ashwagandha.
Albert Wright (wriga) has done considerable work on using sulfurophane from broccoli seed to induce Nrf2. As he explained here: healthunlocked.com/cure-par...
"So what happens if you continue to boost Nrf2? You will eventually reach saturation and get a rebound effect due to the negative feedback loops which include Bach1. The virtuous circle then turns back into a vicious circle and you start a downward path. This is where dosing becomes critical. Less is better once you start the process. It's a tricky route to follow and it took me a while to find it." Based on my recent experience this also applies to taking acai.
Per the study cited at top, the human equivalent dosage of açai is about 3 grams after applying the appropriate animal to human adjustment. I took about 5 grams of a freeze-dried product – a heaping teaspoonful – daily, mixed in with my breakfast porridge after it cooled. I took it for about 2 1/2 weeks, during which time I experienced a slow deterioration – worse motor impairment. There was a confounding factor because during this time the need to take other things arose in order to treat an unrelated condition. Be that as it may, after I stopped taking the acai, over a few days my motor impairment improved to what it had been prior to starting. To double check on this I once again took a single dose in the morning a week ago. I did not give the matter any further thought at that time and went about my business. The result was awful – after a few hours my motor impairment was so bad I was physically unable to do my hike. First time that ever happened due to the motor impairment. After one week I am at least recovered enough to be able to resume hiking.
My mistake? 5 grams instead of 3 grams was only a small part of the problem. The big mistake was not accounting for the fact that the study used whole berries while I was using freeze-dried product. According to this reference: harmonyhousefoods.com/asset...
Rehydrating freeze-dried berries increases the weight by factor of 4. So the equivalent to 3 grams of fresh or frozen berries would be about .75 grams freeze-dried product. So I was taking more than 6 times the equivalent mouse dosage. If this were any other sort of edible berry it would not have made any difference, but that was not the case.
I did not experience any effect from my trials of quercetin, but in that case I used a fraction of the açai dosage – after all, they were capsules and not berries. Plus there are unknowns as to comparative absorption and passage through the blood-brain barrier.
I cannot recommend açai, however, if you choose to try it I strongly recommend keeping your dosage down to .75 gram, or less, of freeze-dried product daily. Also, if you choose to try it, an appropriate scale for weighing out gram quantities is a necessity.