What are the active ingredients and dosages commonly found in neurogold formulations?
Executive summary
“Neurogold” is not a single, standardized product; the name appears across at least three distinct product families with different active ingredients and doses. In India, products sold as Nurokind/Nurokind‑Gold RF typically list B‑vitamins (methylcobalamin/B12, pyridoxine/B6, niacinamide), folic acid, vitamin D3 and minerals or ginseng (sources include Truemeds, Netmeds, PharmEasy) [1][2][3]. Separately, brand names “Neuro Gold”/Neurogold on U.S./direct‑to‑consumer sites are used for phosphatidylserine supplements (100–300 mg per capsule) and for mushroom/microdosing products that list psilocybin‑containing P. cubensis (200 mg fruiting body per capsule) plus lion’s mane, chaga, ginger [4][5][6]. Other “Neuro Gold”/“Neuro M Gold” Ayurvedic or honey‑based supplements show entirely different ingredient lists [7][8].
1. Brand confusion: same name, different chemistry
Consumer searches return at least three non‑overlapping product categories using “Neurogold”/“Neuro Gold”/“Nurokind Gold”: (a) prescription/OTC combined B‑vitamin + mineral capsules in Indian pharmacy listings (Nurokind Gold RF) [1][2][3]; (b) U.S. supplement lines selling phosphatidylserine under the NeuroGold label at 100 mg and 300 mg strengths [4][5]; and (c) a direct‑to‑consumer “Neuro Gold” mushroom/microdose product listing P. cubensis 200 mg plus functional mushrooms (lion’s mane 125 mg, chaga 125 mg, ginger 50 mg) per capsule [6]. Buyers must not assume a single formulation when they see the “Neurogold” name [1][4][6].
2. Typical active ingredients in Indian “Nurokind Gold” listings
Multiple Indian pharmacy and health sites describe Nurokind‑Gold RF as a multimineral/multivitamin formulation targeted at nerve health and fatigue that commonly contains methylcobalamin (vitamin B12), pyridoxine (B6), niacinamide (B3), folic acid, vitamin D3 and often ginseng or minerals such as iron, calcium, zinc and copper [1][2][9]. Some listings also cite alpha‑lipoic acid in variants [9]. Exact per‑capsule dosages are not consistently published across the pharmaceutical listings provided (available sources do not mention consistent, complete dosage tables for those Indian products).
3. Dosage examples from other “NeuroGold” supplements
The U.S. supplement retailer PipingRock sells NeuroGold phosphatidylserine products at clear per‑serving doses: 100 mg softgels and 300 mg capsules are explicitly stated by the vendor [4][5]. The direct‑to‑consumer Neuro Gold mushroom product lists ingredient amounts per capsule: P. cubensis fruiting bodies 200 mg, lion’s mane 125 mg, chaga 125 mg, ginger 50 mg [6]. These are explicit dose claims and differ fundamentally from the vitamin/mineral formulas seen in Indian pharmacy listings [4][6].
4. Safety and regulatory context: different rules apply
The products span prescription/OTC medicaments, dietary supplements and a product containing psilocybin‑bearing mushroom material. Indian “Nurokind” entries are framed as vitamin/mineral supplements for neuropathy and deficiency—typically regulated as medicines/supplements in pharmacy channels [1][3]. PipingRock’s NeuroGold phosphatidylserine is marketed as a dietary supplement with standard mg dosages [4][5]. The Neuro Gold mushroom microdose listing names P. cubensis (magic mushrooms) at 200 mg — that ingredient carries legal and safety implications that differ by jurisdiction and are not equivalent to over‑the‑counter vitamins [6]. Available sources do not discuss legal status or clinical safety profiles across jurisdictions for the mushroom product (not found in current reporting).
5. Why dosage details are often missing or variable
Pharmacy product pages and aggregator sites frequently list component names but omit standard per‑unit dosages; this appears in the Nurokind Gold RF entries where ingredient lists are consistent but exact mg per capsule are not uniformly published [2][1][3]. By contrast, supplement retailers and direct manufacturers give explicit per‑capsule mg amounts for single‑ingredient supplements (phosphatidylserine) and for their mushroom blends [4][6].
6. Practical guidance for consumers and clinicians
Do not assume “Neurogold” denotes a single product. Verify the exact product page: for Indian Nurokind/Nurokind‑Gold RF check pharmacy product composition and ask clinicians about per‑dose amounts [1][3]. For phosphatidylserine, expect 100–300 mg capsule strengths as sold by PipingRock [4][5]. For any product listing P. cubensis or other psychoactive fungi, seek jurisdictional legal guidance and clinical advice because those formulations are categorically different from vitamin/mineral supplements [6]. Available sources do not provide comprehensive clinical dosing guidance or regulatory status across countries for all these products (not found in current reporting).