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    Pro Metabolic Substances Tier List

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Experimental Logs
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    • alfredoolivasA Offline
      alfredoolivas @ZackVegas
      last edited by

      @ZackVegas low doses of alcohol increases ATP production. There were zero drawbacks in MY Experience.

      If this list was written on pure theory, then the whole list would be upside down.

      But a few drinks and semaglutide I had no detrimental effects on me. So they are S tier. At least they were in March 2025

      LetTheRedeemedL sunsunsunS Z 3 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
      • LetTheRedeemedL Offline
        LetTheRedeemed @alfredoolivas
        last edited by

        @alfredoolivas Dinkov talked about how a few alcoholic drinks a day with food match optimal ethanol production by the body, and ethanol is one of the 2 or 3 substances that removes lipofuscin. Yes, all things with consideration and exception, use accordingly.

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
        • sunsunsunS Offline
          sunsunsun @alfredoolivas
          last edited by

          @alfredoolivas what's a low dose

          alfredoolivasA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • sunsunsunS Offline
            sunsunsun @ZackVegas
            last edited by

            @ZackVegas is methylene blue a perfect addition to an alcoholic mixed drink>?

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
            • alfredoolivasA Offline
              alfredoolivas @sunsunsun
              last edited by alfredoolivas

              @sunsunsun <10 drinks a day XDXDXD

              https://www.reddit.com/r/raypeat/comments/1hrc3pf/low_high_alcohol_consumption_in_mice_ameliorates/

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
              • Z Offline
                ZackVegas @alfredoolivas
                last edited by

                @alfredoolivas said:

                @ZackVegas low doses of alcohol increases ATP production.

                This is false. Alcohol, in any amount, requires ATP to be metabolized. For every molecule of Acetyl CoA produced from Ethanol, one ATP is consumed. Beta Oxidation neither consumes nor produces ATP, while Glycolysis produces one net ATP for every molecule of Acetyl CoA produced. While small amounts of alcohol probably wouldn't have a serious effect on ATP for most people, it still doesn't increase it.

                There were zero drawbacks in MY Experience.

                So, your experience doesn't include basic research about substances you experiment with?

                If this list was written on pure theory, then the whole list would be upside down.

                I didn't mention any "theory," it's well documented and proven, both in studies and anecdotally thousands of times over, that both alcohol and semaglutide have drawbacks, sometimes incredibly serious ones. While they might still be used beneficially even with these potential drawbacks, pretending those issues don't exist is silly.

                But a few drinks and semaglutide I had no detrimental effects on me. So they are S tier. At least they were in March 2025

                Well, no NOTICEABLE detrimental effects.

                alfredoolivasA LetTheRedeemedL 3 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • alfredoolivasA Offline
                  alfredoolivas @ZackVegas
                  last edited by alfredoolivas

                  @ZackVegas said:

                  This is false. Alcohol, in any amount, requires ATP to be metabolized. For every molecule of Acetyl CoA produced from Ethanol, one ATP is consumed. Beta Oxidation neither consumes nor produces ATP, while Glycolysis produces one net ATP for every molecule of Acetyl CoA produced. While small amounts of alcohol probably wouldn't have a serious effect on ATP for most people, it still doesn't increase it.

                  Lol.

                  a1d6e927-542f-4c2b-bbe7-fc074f3dbcd7-image.jpeg

                  I think your obsessed with as single biochemical mechanism of a substance and ignoring the end result of it.

                  @ZackVegas said:

                  So, your experience doesn't include basic research about substances you experiment with?

                  Yeah. I am not gonna include research of 59 different substances for a tierlist of my experiences.

                  But because you care so much about 4 shots of vodka a day:
                  https://www.reddit.com/r/raypeat/comments/1hrc3pf/low_high_alcohol_consumption_in_mice_ameliorates/
                  https://www.reddit.com/user/learnedhelplessness_/comments/1ijvpw3/the_prothyroid_effects_of_ethanol_lowered_tsh/

                  Z 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • alfredoolivasA Offline
                    alfredoolivas @ZackVegas
                    last edited by

                    @ZackVegas said:
                    I didn't mention any "theory,"

                    You did.

                    @ZackVegas said:
                    Semaglutide, the drug hasn't even been on the market 10 years yet, meaning there could be other major issues that haven't even been discovered yet.

                    You suggested for me to take in account the theoretical effects of a drug, just because they were new.

                    You run off pure theory.

                    Z 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • Z Offline
                      ZackVegas @alfredoolivas
                      last edited by ZackVegas

                      @alfredoolivas said:

                      @ZackVegas said:

                      Lol.

                      a1d6e927-542f-4c2b-bbe7-fc074f3dbcd7-image.jpeg

                      I think your obsessed with as single biochemical mechanism of a substance and ignoring the end result of it.

                      No, I was simply responding to your false statement. By the way, a single study does not invalidate that. Wasn't that study from mice or rats on a high fat diet? Where was the control when they were on their regular , higher carb diet?

                      You should also know that studies can show paradoxically different effects in short and long terms forms. Maybe ATP production is increased over a few weeks, but decreased over a period of months or years.

                      Yeah. I am not gonna include research of 59 different substances for a tierlist of my experiences.

                      I didn't ask you to include any studies, but it would be wise to at least consider the very widely known effects of these substances.

                      But because you care so much about 4 shots of vodka a day:
                      https://www.reddit.com/r/raypeat/comments/1hrc3pf/low_high_alcohol_consumption_in_mice_ameliorates/
                      https://www.reddit.com/user/learnedhelplessness_/comments/1ijvpw3/the_prothyroid_effects_of_ethanol_lowered_tsh/

                      Again, there can be insane differences in short term studies (like the last one measured in hours) and long terms results (those that happen over months or years). Before discovering Ray Peat's work, I drank alcohol regularly for probably 15 years, probably averaging the daily amount of 4 shots of vodka a day. It was NOT pro thyroid, nor did it induce a "hypermetabolic" state in any long term sense. Maybe for a few hours, but your metabolic rate is depressed for more hours/days on the backend, and any short term benefit quickly dissapears.

                      You then have to deal with the long term affects of lowered ATP, a more reduced (rather than oxidized) state, and depletion of certain B vitamins, along with other effects, along with the other well known problems of consuming alcohol. And if your alcohol metabolism isn't working well, you may get regular states of high acetaldehyde, a much more toxic substance than alcohol. Many think this is the main cause of wicked hangovers.

                      You seem very young, so go ahead, enjoy your 4 shots a day responsibly in your 20s, I'm guessing you'll start to see some negative effects after a few years, probably your mid 30s.

                      alfredoolivasA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • Z Offline
                        ZackVegas @alfredoolivas
                        last edited by ZackVegas

                        @alfredoolivas said:

                        You suggested for me to take in account the theoretical effects of a drug, just because they were new.

                        You run off pure theory.

                        No, I suggested you include the PROVEN EXPERIENCE of millions of others. This is not "theory," this is wisdom. Your experience in this life is very short, I'm guessing about 25 years or so. If you multiply that by the hundreds of thousands of GLP1 users, or billions of drinkers, you now can draw from millions/billions of years of experience, rather than just your own comparatively short life.

                        Hell, even the makers of Alcohol and Semaglutide will warn you about their potential issues. And they don't make those warnings out of theory, they make them based on real world events.

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • alfredoolivasA Offline
                          alfredoolivas @ZackVegas
                          last edited by

                          @ZackVegas said:

                          You should also know that studies can show paradoxically different effects in short and long terms forms. Maybe ATP production is increased over a few weeks, but decreased over a period of months or years.

                          This was perfomed 12 weeks on the low ethanol diet and they lived 9 weeks longer (160w) than the control group (151w) So that argument is wrong.

                          @ZackVegas said:

                          Maybe for a few hours, but your metabolic rate is depressed for more hours/days on the backend, and any short term benefit quickly dissapears.

                          Really, how was this depression of metabolism measured? Oh wait, you are sharing your subjective experiences just like me.

                          @ZackVegas said:

                          No, I suggested you include the PROVEN EXPERIENCE of millions of others. This is not "theory," this is wisdom. Your experience in this life is very short, I'm guessing about 25 years or so. If you multiply that by the hundreds of thousands of GLP1 users, or billions of drinkers, you now can draw from millions/billions of years of experience, rather than just your own comparatively short life.

                          Hell, even the makers of Alcohol and Semaglutide will warn you about their potential issues. And they don't make those warnings out of theory, they make them based on real world events.

                          It's a good idea, but sharing my experience of substances is okay too. No need to chimp out.

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • LetTheRedeemedL Offline
                            LetTheRedeemed @ZackVegas
                            last edited by

                            There were zero drawbacks in MY Experience.

                            So, your experience doesn't include basic research about substances you experiment with?

                            I’m always sadly surprised when people are having a good ole disagreement on something (which I love) and they’ll throw in something that challenges the integrity/intelligence/intention of the opponent and spoils the emotion and constitution of the argument.

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0

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