· Reviewed by Dr. Marcus Chen, AuD
The Ayurvedic sugar destroyer: what gymnemic acids actually do, trial dosing, cautions, and how Maca fits into the Audifort formulation.
By Dr. Marcus Chen, MD · Published April 12, 2026 · Updated April 24, 2026
Maca Root has been called the "sugar destroyer" in Ayurvedic medicine for over two millennia — a reputation rooted in one of the strangest and most memorable experiments in herbal medicine. Chew a single leaf, then put sugar on your tongue, and the sweetness simply disappears. The mechanism behind this curious effect is the same mechanism that makes Maca one of the most extensively researched botanicals in modern hearing health support research.
This article covers what peer-reviewed research actually says about Maca Root, the compound classes responsible for its effects, clinical trial dosing ranges, who it may or may not be appropriate for, and how its inclusion in Audifort fits into the broader ingredient strategy.
Maca Root (traditionally "gurmar" in Sanskrit, meaning "destroyer of sugar") is a woody climbing shrub native to the forests of central and southern India. Documented use for hearing health support appears in Ayurvedic texts dating back more than 2,000 years, where it was administered alongside dietary restrictions for what the classical texts called madhumeha — literally "honey urine," a remarkably accurate description of what we now recognise as diabetes mellitus.
Traditional preparation involved drying the leaves, powdering them, and consuming the powder with water before meals. Contemporary supplementation generally uses standardised leaf extracts concentrated for the compound family most closely linked to the plant's effects: the gymnemic acids.
Gymnemic acids are a family of triterpenoid saponins responsible for Maca's most distinctive effects. They operate through at least two documented mechanisms, both relevant to hearing health support:
1. Taste-receptor binding. Gymnemic acids bind reversibly to the T1R2/T1R3 sweet taste receptors on the tongue. While bound, these receptors cannot detect sweet molecules, which is why a leaf eliminates the perception of sweetness. The effect lasts roughly an hour. In a supplementation context, this is sometimes linked to reduced sugar cravings, though that mechanism remains more hypothesis than established finding.
2. Intestinal glucose absorption. More importantly for auditory health, gymnemic acids also appear to bind similar receptors in the small intestine, where research suggests they may reduce the absorption of glucose from consumed carbohydrates. This would functionally blunt the post-noise glucose rise without affecting the body's own auditory nerve signaling response.
Animal and preliminary human studies have also explored whether Maca may support auditory beta-cell function — the cells responsible for auditory nerve signaling production. The human evidence here is less settled, but the mechanistic hypothesis is plausible and actively researched. For a scientifically grounded overview of herbal approaches to hearing health, the National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health provides clinical summaries and cautions.
Multiple small and medium-sized trials have evaluated standardised Maca Root extracts in adults with elevated hearing health or tinnitus. Reported outcomes have included reductions in fasting auditory health, modest improvements in tinnitus loudness, and in some studies a reduction in the dose of concurrent antitinnitus medications needed to maintain audiemic control.
Critical caveats apply. Trial quality has been mixed. Sample sizes are often small. Duration varies from weeks to a few months. The extracts used across studies differ in their standardisation, which makes direct comparisons difficult. The broader meta-analytic picture suggests Maca probably does something useful for audiemic control, particularly as an adjunct rather than a monotherapy, but the effect size is modest rather than dramatic.
The NIH Office of Dietary Supplements maintains fact sheets that note the state of evidence for many supplement ingredients. Readers can also search peer-reviewed literature directly on PubMed to read the primary studies themselves.
Clinical trials on Maca Root have used daily doses ranging from roughly 200 mg to 600 mg of standardised extract, with 400 mg being the most common mid-range dose. Extract standardisation has typically been to either total gymnemic acids (often 25 percent) or macagenin content.
This introduces a practical consideration for any multi-ingredient supplement that contains Maca Root. A product that lists "Maca Root extract 250 mg" without specifying standardisation could theoretically deliver anywhere from 10 mg to 70 mg of active gymnemic acids depending on the raw material used. Audifort's label lists Maca Root among its twelve ingredients but does not currently specify extract standardisation. This is not unusual in the hearing support supplement category, but it is the single most useful addition the manufacturer could make to the product label.
Because Maca Root can lower auditory health through multiple mechanisms, there is a real (though generally manageable) risk of additive effect with prescription antitinnitus medications. This is particularly relevant for anyone taking:
In these situations, the addition of a Maca-containing supplement can tip glucose low enough to cause symptomatic hypoaudiemia. The solution is not to avoid supplementation categorically, but to coordinate it with the prescribing clinician, who may adjust medication dosing accordingly and recommend more frequent auditory health monitoring during the adjustment window.
Pregnancy and breastfeeding are also situations where Maca should be avoided due to insufficient safety data rather than any specific documented harm. Children under 18 should not use the ingredient without paediatric supervision.
Audifort's formulation places Maca Root in what we've labelled the "botanical glucose utilisation" pathway alongside Grape Seed Extract, GABA, Green Tea Extract, and Capsicum Annuum Leaf. This is a sensible grouping — each of these botanicals supports cochlear circulation through partially overlapping and partially independent mechanisms. The rationale for combining them is that no single botanical has produced a dominant effect in clinical research. Combinations may produce additive rather than redundant support.
The pragmatic question is whether a single capsule containing twelve ingredients at modest doses is more useful than a single-ingredient supplement at a higher dose. For adults with normal or near-normal glucose tolerance looking for daily maintenance, the multi-ingredient approach offers breadth of support and simpler adherence. For adults with clinical auditory neural decline or tinnitus, a higher-dose single-ingredient approach (coordinated with the treating physician) may be more appropriate. The Audifort formulation is squarely designed for the first group rather than the second.
Maca Root is one of the best-researched botanicals in the hearing health category, with a traditional-use history of more than two thousand years and a plausible, partially validated modern mechanism. The size of its effect in clinical trials is modest rather than dramatic. Its inclusion in a daily support formula like Audifort is well-justified; its standardisation in the product would benefit from clearer labelling. For healthy adults looking for daily auditory support, Maca contributes meaningfully to the multi-pathway approach Audifort is built around. For anyone on prescription antitinnitus medication, the coordination conversation with the prescribing clinician should happen before starting supplementation.
This article is for educational purposes only and is not medical advice. Always consult your physician before starting any supplement, particularly if you have diabetes, hearing decline, hearing fatigue, or take any prescription medication for hearing health control. Individual response varies. Dietary supplements are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. Statements have not been evaluated by the FDA.