Most stacks fail because of competition. Calcium blocks Zinc. Coffee blocks Iron. titrate untangles these conflicts so every milligram counts.
Before we optimize, we protect. Our AI audits your stack for known nutrient-nutrient and drug-nutrient interactions to flag:
Biology has a rhythm. A stimulant at 4 PM isn’t energy — it’s a sleep disruptor. We map your stack to your circadian biology:
Requires DNA upload (23andMe / Ancestry / CircleDNA)
The final calibration. We scan 100+ SNP markers to personalize your protocol:
Genetics is not destiny; it is probability. These results tell you your “factory settings,” but your current diet, stress levels, and environment (epigenetics) determine which of these genes are actually “turned on.”
Output: Your Protocol
Conflict-free. Bio-available. Timed to your biology.
Our analysis is powered by Google Gemini AI, grounded in broadly available clinical and pharmacological knowledge — not blog posts or anecdotal data.
AI Model
Google Gemini
Clinical reasoning & interaction analysis
Genomics
100+ SNP Knowledge Base
Curated in-house, 20+ health categories
Safety Rules
Curated Interaction Rules
Expert-built rules informed by published research
Clinical Note:Our AI generates a “Titration Score” (0–100) for every stack, penalizing safety conflicts, timing errors, and missing essentials. All AI outputs should be verified with a healthcare provider.
In chemistry, titration is the process of slowly adding a solution to a reaction until the perfect balance is reached.
Your health is not static. Your protocol shouldn’t be either.
Establishing baseline saturation for critical deficiencies (e.g., Vitamin D loading phase).
Reducing dosage to a maintenance level once blood markers stabilize.
Scheduled washout periods for compounds that build tolerance (Caffeine, certain Adaptogens) to reset receptor sensitivity.
titrate is a data intelligence tool, not a doctor. We provide information based on your inputs and current clinical research. This protocol is for educational and optimization purposes and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment.