Stack analysis
Berberine + chromium + cinnamon (cassia)
Glucose and ‘metabolic synergy’ retail bundles targeting insulin sensitivity narratives.
Confidence
67/100
Registry ingredients
Structured entries from our supplement intelligence registry (not personalized recommendations).
- Berberine (from Berberis / supplements)herb
Evidence tier: medium·Typical label range: Studies often ~500 mg 2-3x/day with meals in metabolic trials.
- Chromium (picolinate)mineral
Evidence tier: low·Typical label range: AI ~25-35 mcg; supplement doses often 200-1000 mcg.
- Cinnamon (Cassia vs Ceylon)herb
Evidence tier: medium·Typical label range: Cassia coumarin content limits safe chronic dose; Ceylon lower coumarin.
What this stack claims
Lower fasting glucose, better HbA1c, reduced cravings - often overstated relative to trial heterogeneity.
Biological logic
Berberine has multiple metabolic trial signals (not equivalent to metformin decisions). Chromium helps true deficiency states but is oversold for general populations. Cassia cinnamon can have acute glucose effects but carries coumarin concerns at chronic high doses.
Evidence level
Registry tier for this stack: MEDIUM
Berberine is the strongest single ingredient here for some endpoints, but quality, diet, and medications dominate outcomes. Chromium is frequently unnecessary. Cinnamon type matters: cassia vs Ceylon coumarin load is not trivia.
Risks
Hypoglycemia stacking with diabetes drugs; berberine interactions (CYP/P-gp); liver injury rare case reports with some botanicals; coumarin liver risk with high-dose cassia; pregnancy/breastfeeding contraindications for berberine in many references.
Final verdict
**Not a DIY diabetes protocol.** If you have dysglycemia, clinician-guided therapy and monitoring beat a three-bottle stack.
FAQ
- Is berberine ‘natural metformin’?
- Mechanistic overlap is oversimplified. Dosing, safety, and monitoring differ - don’t switch therapies without medical care.
- Why mention coumarin?
- Cheap cinnamon stacks often use cassia; chronic high intake can be hepatotoxic - Ceylon may be preferable if large chronic doses are used.
- Should I add biotin?
- Biotin interferes with some lab assays; not automatically helpful for glucose control.