This combines **BCM-95 curcumin** with **French grape seed extract** (VX1) in a single softgel aimed at antioxidant and anti-inflammatory support. BCM-95 is an enhanced-bioavailability curcumin form — roughly 6.9x more absorbable than standard extract — so even a moderate dose can deliver meaningful curcuminoid levels to your bloodstream.

The grape seed component is standardized to 80%+ OPCs (oligomeric proanthocyanidins), which have moderate clinical evidence for cardiovascular and antioxidant benefits. Turmeric essential oil in the formula serves double duty — it's part of what makes BCM-95 more bioavailable, and turmerones may offer additional anti-inflammatory activity on their own.

The catch: this is a 575mg proprietary blend split across three ingredients, and you don't know how much of each you're getting. If curcumin makes up the majority, you could be in a useful range for the BCM-95 form — but there's no way to confirm that from the label. If transparency in dosing matters to you, that's worth weighing.

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BioStacks

Terry Naturally

CuraMed+OPC

Capsule · 30 servings · $1.49/serving

N/A

Score Breakdown

Proprietary Blend

Individual doses not listed on the label. We can't assess efficacy without knowing the dose of each ingredient.

Ingredients (1)

Proprietary Formula

Dose not disclosed

Label Nutrition Facts

Active Ingredients

From the label · % Daily Value

DV%

Proprietary Formula575 mg

Curcumin
French Grape (Vitis vinifera) seed extract
Turmeric (Curcuma longa) rhizome Oil

Other Ingredients

Fillers, coatings, and additives

6Safe

Silicon DioxideAnti-caking

Safe

GelatinCapsule

Safe

GlycerinHumectant

Safe

Purified WaterSolvent

Safe

Sunflower LecithinEmulsifier

Safe

Vegetable OilCarrier

Safe

Annatto color (color)

Unknown

Beeswax

Unknown

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Sources & Scoring

Nutrient data (RDA, UL, and safety thresholds) sourced from: NIH Office of Dietary Supplements and National Academies Dietary Reference Intakes (DRI).

This is not medical advice. Consult a healthcare provider before making changes to your supplement routine.

The score analyzes what's on the label: ingredient doses vs. clinical ranges, chemical forms, evidence levels, and known interactions. It does not verify label accuracy or test for contaminants — for that, look for third-party certifications like USP or NSF.