What ingredients are in Memory Blast and what are their typical effective doses in human RCTs?
Executive summary
Available product pages and marketplace listings for Memo/Memo Blast list a changing, inconsistent set of botanical and common-health ingredients — examples include cinnamon extract, tongkat ali (Eurycoma longifolia), wild yam, apple cider vinegar, garcinia cambogia and L‑lysine — but official sites do not publish a reliable, complete ingredient panel or per‑ingredient doses [1] [2] [3] [4]. Randomized controlled trial (RCT) dose data for those named ingredients are not provided in the sources you supplied; the reporting here therefore cannot match ingredients to “typical effective doses in human RCTs” because the current product pages and secondary write‑ups do not cite or link to human RCT dose information [3] [4] [1].
1. Product labels and vendor pages: inconsistent ingredient lists
Memo Blast’s official marketing claims a “synergistic blend of brain‑supportive nutrients and herbal extracts” but the site does not publish a clear supplement facts panel in the material you supplied; marketplace listings and third‑party vendor pages show inconsistent ingredient lists — eBay listings highlight “Cinnamon Extract (Cinnamomum verum) Bark, Tongkat Ali Extract (Eurycoma longifolia) Root, Wild Yam Extract (Dioscorea villosa) Root” while other merchant pages list apple cider vinegar, garcinia cambogia and L‑lysine among “powerhouse ingredients” [3] [1] [2] [4]. These discrepancies signal that publicly available marketing materials disagree about exact composition [1] [4].
2. Manufacturer claims vs. verifiable facts
The product’s official copy asserts “clinically researched nootropic ingredients” and FDA‑registered, GMP‑certified manufacturing, but the pages in the dataset do not include citations to clinical trials, a supplement facts label, or batch‑specific testing certificates to substantiate the clinical or dosing claims [3]. That gap matters: without an authoritative ingredient panel and per‑serving milligram amounts, you cannot reliably compare the product’s contents to doses used in published human RCTs [3].
3. Common ingredients named here: what the sources actually say
Across the supplied pages, recurring ingredient names include cinnamon extract, tongkat ali, wild yam, apple cider vinegar, garcinia cambogia, and L‑lysine; other write‑ups about similar products in this market also reference botanicals like bacopa in analogous formulas but Memo Blast’s own supplied material does not consistently list bacopa or dose information [1] [2] [4] [5]. The sources do not provide any per‑ingredient dosing or point to RCTs that support specific effective human doses for Memo Blast’s formula [3] [4].
4. Why the RCT dose question can’t be answered from these sources
Determining “typical effective doses in human RCTs” requires two things in the record you provided: (A) a definitive ingredient list with amounts per serving; and (B) citations to human RCTs or a review summarizing RCT dosages. Neither requirement is met: the official site and merchant pages list ingredients variably and do not cite RCTs or dosing data for the product or its components [3] [1] [4]. Therefore any numeric dose attribution would be extrapolation beyond the supplied reporting.
5. Alternative viewpoints and potential agendas in the materials
Marketing copy frames Memo Blast as “safe, natural, and effective” and “clinically backed,” which aligns with a commercial agenda to drive sales; vendor pages echo promotional language and list ingredients without standardized labels, which can be characteristic of supplement marketing rather than peer‑reviewed science [3] [4]. Independent reviews and safety reports in this dataset focus on different but related products (IQ Blast Pro) and highlight the need to confirm authenticity through official channels — an implicit caution about marketplace variants and counterfeit listings [6] [7].
6. Practical next steps to get the RCT dose answers you want
To map Memo Blast’s ingredients to human RCT doses you should obtain a current, authoritative supplement facts panel (exact ingredient names and mg per serving) from the manufacturer or an official retail sheet, then search clinical literature for each listed botanical or nutrient for “human RCT” and dose ranges. The sources provided do not contain that supplement facts panel or RCT dose citations, so they cannot be used to establish typical effective RCT dosages for Memo Blast’s ingredients [3] [1].
Limitations: this analysis uses only the supplied pages and marketplace listings; available sources do not mention any human RCTs or per‑ingredient doses for Memo/Memo Blast [3] [1] [4].