What is the full ingredient list and dosages in NerveFlow supplements?
Executive summary
Public-facing listings for NerveFlow consistently name a long blend of vitamins, minerals and botanical extracts but do not publish per-ingredient dosages; independent verification of exact amounts is not available in the supplied reporting [1] [2] [3]. One marketplace listing gives a capsule ingredient roster and a serving guideline of “1 capsule, 1–3 times per day,” but the manufacturer/official sites sampled market the formula without an itemized dose table [1] [2].
1. What the sellers list as the full ingredient panel
A third‑party marketplace posting (Etsy) and secondary listings name the most complete ingredient roster found in the reporting: Acetyl‑L‑carnitine (ALCAR), alpha‑lipoic acid, calcium lactate, magnesium gluconate, vitamin B1 (thiamine), vitamin B4, vitamin B6 (pyridoxine), vitamin B9 (folic acid), vitamin B12, vitamin D3, zinc gluconate, feverfew leaf, Ginkgo biloba leaf, Gotu kola leaf, oat straw, St. John’s wort, turmeric root, black pepper (piperine), cayenne pepper, and skullcap [1]. Other marketplace mentions also highlight folic acid and B12 among key nutrients [4].
2. What the official NerveFlow marketing confirms — and what it omits
Official NerveFlow websites repeatedly describe the product as a plant‑based, natural formula designed to address inflammation, oxidative stress and circulation to support nerve health and list core ingredients in promotional copy, but they do not publish a breakdown of ingredient weights or milligram dosages per serving in the materials provided [2] [5] [3] [6] [7]. The corporate messaging also emphasizes vegetarian/vegan suitability, non‑GMO claims and manufacturing in FDA‑registered, GMP‑certified U.S. facilities, though those are marketing assertions in the supplied sources rather than independent regulatory records cited in the reporting [2] [8] [3] [6].
3. Where dosage information does appear — and its limits
The only explicit dosage guidance found in the aggregated reporting is the Etsy seller’s serving recommendation: one capsule, one to three times per day (with an example of one capsule three times daily at six‑hour intervals) [1]. That posting, however, is a marketplace listing and includes a seller disclaimer about labeling responsibility; it does not list milligram or microgram amounts for individual ingredients [1]. None of the official product pages in the provided dataset disclose exact per‑ingredient dosages, so the true quantitative composition of a NerveFlow capsule cannot be confirmed from these sources [2] [8] [5] [3] [6] [7].
4. Conflicting signals and marketing vs. verifiable facts
Promotional stories and press releases describe “bioavailable” blends and “science‑backed” ingredient selection for nerve repair, and at least one review piece echoes ingredient names like turmeric and alpha‑lipoic acid as clinically familiar components, but these items remain claims without the supporting, independently verifiable supplement facts panel in the supplied reporting [8] [9]. Marketplace sellers and aggregated review copies can amplify ingredient lists, yet they can also vary in completeness and are explicitly subject to seller labeling accuracy [1] [4].
5. Bottom line: what can be stated with confidence and what cannot
The composite ingredient list above reflects the most detailed roster found in the supplied sources and can be cited as the ingredients that sellers and promotional sites attribute to NerveFlow, but none of the provided materials disclose per‑ingredient dosages or a formal Supplement Facts label that would enumerate milligrams/micrograms per serving; therefore the precise dosages in NerveFlow capsules cannot be determined from the reporting available [1] [2] [8] [3]. If dosage specifics are required, the reporting indicates only two practical options: request the manufacturer’s official Supplement Facts or examine the product label on a supplied retail package, neither of which appear among the provided sources [1] [2].