with Stephen Harrod Buhner, master herbalist
I took resveratrol from a red wine source for a number of months and didn’t notice much. Is it that much different from knotweed?
Stephen’s response:
Red wine resveratrol is useless in treating lyme, it must be a standardized knotweed root that is used.
posted on March 21, 2011 | 1,594 views | tags: Borrelia burgdorferi, Healing Lyme, Japanese knotweed, Lyme & Co-Infections, lyme disease, resveratrol, Stephen Harrod Buhner
Andrographis
400 mg tablets: Nature's Way
<400 mg tablets: Paradise Herbs
400 mg tablets: Planetary Formulas Full Spectrum
Japanese Knotweed (Resveratrol)
Green Dragon Botanicals
100 mg tablets: Paradise Herbs
bulk, wildcrafted: Woodland Essence
bulk and Source Naturals 500 mg tablets: 1st Chinese Herbs [Editor's note: As of September 2011, we have received reports that some people have had bad reactions to Source Naturals brand Resveratrol but have done fine with Paradise herbs. Sometimes the brand makes all the difference.]
Cat's Claw (Uncaria tomentosa)
500 mg capsules: Raintree
bulk, sustainably harvested: Raintree
Cryptolepis
tincture: Woodland Essence
Eleuthero (Siberian Ginseng)
Herb Pharm tincture - alcohol-based
Herb Pharm tincture - glycerite (alcohol-free)
250 mg capsules: Nature's Way
Stephania Root
Caution: New research has shown stephania
unsafe for use in pregnancy.
1st Chinese Herbs
Woodland Essence
ARTICLES BY STEPHEN BUHNER
The Use of Apis and Bi-Edta in the Treatment of Lyme Disease
Some Arguments against the Standardization of Herbalists
Gaian Voices Interview with Stephen Harrod Buhner
Depth Diagnosis in the Practice of Sacred Plant Medicine
The Lost Language of Plants
The Health Benefits of Water Fasting
Herbelegy
The Fall of Gruit and the Rise of Brewer's Droop
Paradise Lost: Of Healing, the Sacred, and Beer
The Yeast of the Ancients
BOOKS BY STEPHEN BUHNER

































Dr Baxter
March 22, 2011 at 8:40 am
Your answer to the question of sourcing resveratrol from wine vs. knotweed makes no sense. Resveratrol is resveratrol is resveratrol, with the only variation being that the trans isomer is more biologically active than the cis isomer, but red wine has primarily the trans form so it will be as effective as resveratrol from any other source.