Phosphatidylserine

ColinérgicoDosis clínica: 100–300mg/day (soy-free sunflower-derived preferred)Tiempo de efecto: 4–6 weeks for memory effects; cortisol reduction within 2 weeks

Mecanismo de Acción

Phosphatidylserine (PS) is a phospholipid that forms a critical component of neuronal cell membranes. It supports signal transduction across synapses, facilitates acetylcholine and dopamine release, and modulates cortisol secretion. Supplementation replenishes PS levels that decline naturally with age.

Resumen de Evidencia Clínica

FDA allows a qualified health claim for PS and reduced risk of dementia. Multiple RCTs (Crook et al., 1991; Cenacchi et al., 1993) show improvements in memory, learning, and concentration in age-related cognitive decline. The 2010 soy-free sunflower-derived form shows equivalent bioavailability to the original bovine-cortex-derived PS used in older trials.

Matriz de Efectos en Humanos

Basado únicamente en ensayos clínicos en humanos. Se excluyen datos en animales e in vitro.

EfectoEvidenciaMagnitudEstudios
Memory Recall●●● Fuerte
Moderado
11
Cortisol Reduction●●○ Moderado
Moderado
6
Processing Speed●●○ Moderado
Pequeño
5
Age-Related Cognitive Decline●●● Fuerte
Moderado
8

Clave de evidencia: ●●● Fuerte = múltiples ECAs consistentes  |  ●●○ Moderado = ECAs más pequeños/escasos  |  ●○○ Preliminar = ensayos tempranos o muestra pequeña  |  ◐◐○ Mixto = resultados contradictorios

Beneficios Documentados

  • Memory recall speed
  • Cortisol reduction under stress
  • Age-related cognitive support
  • Focus and processing speed

Efectos Secundarios y Precauciones

  • !Well tolerated
  • !Mild GI discomfort in some users
  • !Blood-thinning interaction possible at high doses

Cómo Tomar

Dosis100–300mg/day
MomentoWith meals — split doses across 2–3 meals for best results (e.g. 100mg with breakfast, 100mg with lunch)
Con AlimentosPS is a fat-soluble phospholipid and absorbs best with dietary fat. Always take with food. Splitting doses across meals is better than a single large dose.
FormasCapsule (softgel preferred). There are three source types: (1) Soy-derived — most common, cheapest, effective but contains soy; (2) Sunflower-derived — soy-free, same efficacy, preferred option; (3) Bovine-brain-derived — used in original 1990s trials, no longer commercially available due to BSE concerns. Sharp-PS from sunflower is the benchmark form.

Recomendaciones de Combinación

Ingredientes que combinan bien con Phosphatidylserine y por qué.

PS maintains cell membrane integrity while Lion's Mane drives NGF synthesis. Both support long-term brain health via complementary structural and growth-factor pathways.

Both are membrane phospholipid precursors, but they work on different pathways. Citicoline primarily builds phosphatidylcholine; PS addresses phosphatidylserine. Together they provide comprehensive neuronal membrane support.

DHA is a structural component of neuronal membranes that works synergistically with PS. Some clinical PS products are DHA-conjugated (PS-DHA). Taking PS with a fish oil supplement is a well-validated combination.

Preguntas Frecuentes

Soy-derived vs sunflower PS — which is better?

Both are effective. Sunflower-derived PS (Sharp-PS) is soy-free and is the preferred option for anyone with soy sensitivity or wishing to avoid soy. Bioavailability studies show equivalent plasma levels between the two. Sunflower PS is slightly more expensive but widely available in quality supplements.

What is the FDA health claim for PS?

The FDA allows a qualified health claim stating: 'Consumption of phosphatidylserine may reduce the risk of dementia and cognitive dysfunction in the elderly.' This is a qualified claim (not a full claim) because the evidence, while substantial, did not meet the full threshold for a conventional health claim. It is nonetheless one of the strongest regulatory positions any supplement ingredient holds.

What about the bovine brain source I see mentioned in older studies?

Original 1990s PS trials used bovine-cortex-derived PS. This source was discontinued globally after BSE (mad cow disease) concerns in the early 2000s. All current commercial PS is plant-derived (soy or sunflower). The plant-derived forms have been validated in subsequent trials and show equivalent efficacy.

Does PS interact with blood thinners?

At standard doses (up to 300mg/day), no significant interaction is documented. At very high doses (>600mg/day), a theoretical platelet aggregation effect exists. If you are on warfarin, aspirin, or other anticoagulants, consult your doctor before supplementing PS.

Stacks con Phosphatidylserine

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