A static test page for the extension. If the extension is installed and enabled, its content script scans this text and highlights every review name it recognizes. Hover a highlighted term to see its evidence-review card.
The evidence base for supplements varies widely. Some people take creatine for strength and muscle mass, use melatonin to shift sleep timing, or reach for magnesium for cramps. In cardiometabolic health, metformin and statins are frequently discussed, and riboflavin has been trialed for migraine prophylaxis.
Interest in longevity has pushed compounds like rapamycin, spermidine, and glycine into the conversation, alongside long-studied basics such as vitamin D, zinc, and omega-3.
Use the Highlight once switch in the extension popup to test this. The word taurine appears three times in this paragraph: taurine here, taurine again, and taurine a third time.
After flipping the switch, the extension reloads the tab automatically, so just watch this paragraph change.
Auto mode is non-intrusive: names inside links like
creatine, inside code like melatonin,
and inside form fields like are all
left untouched — the extension never rewrites interactive, code, or editable content.
Acronym review names only match in their exact casing. The supplement SAMe should highlight, but the ordinary word "same" in this same sentence should not. Likewise AGE (advanced glycation end-products) highlights while "age" as a common word does not.
reviews.json from evipedia.ai,
so exactly which terms highlight reflects the current published review set. If none of
the terms above highlight, check the DevTools Network tab for the
evipedia.ai/reviews.json request.