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Our honest Prevagen review explains how this popular supplement is backed by very limited clinical research, plus how its marketing tactics can be problematic.
Last week, a federal jury in the New York attorney general’s case against the maker of Prevagen, a purported brain supplement that is deceptively marketed as able to improve memory, gave us something to celebrate, at least in part.
Research suggests it doesn't. The apoaequorin in Prevagen likely gets digested by your stomach before any of it stands a chance of reaching your brain. Apoaequorin also has been studied as...
Prevagen is a dietary supplement that’s advertised to help with mild memory loss. However, it doesn’t treat or prevent memory-related health conditions, such as Alzheimer’s disease. Prevagen’s evidence to support its claims is questionable.
Gizmodo filed a Freedom of Information Act request with the FTC for complaints lodged against Prevagen. The stories come from both emails and the FTC’s Call Center and you’ll notice a distinct ...
They charged the supplement maker with false advertising back in 2017; in February 2024, a New York jury found that many of the supplement's claims were not supported by reliable evidence and some (but not all) of the claims were "materially misleading." The FTC lawsuit has not yet been decided.
Makers of a product called Prevagen are falsely advertising it as a memory booster, and falsely claiming the product can get into the human brain, the charges claim.