Quercetin is a flavonoid โ a class of plant polyphenol โ found abundantly in red onions, apples, capers, berries, kale, and many other plant foods. It is one of the most studied plant compounds in nutritional medicine, with over 1,000 published studies examining its pharmacological properties. Its primary mechanisms of action include antioxidant activity, anti-inflammatory effects, mast cell stabilisation, and zinc ionophore activity (facilitating zinc transport into cells).
For Irish adults, quercetin is particularly relevant in two contexts: allergic conditions (especially hay fever, which affects 20โ30% of the Irish population) and seasonal immune support. But its applications extend considerably beyond these to encompass cardiovascular health, blood sugar regulation, cognitive protection, and antiviral properties.
The classical antihistamine mechanism works by blocking histamine receptors after histamine has already been released. Quercetin works upstream: it stabilises mast cells โ the immune cells that release histamine and other inflammatory mediators during allergic reactions โ preventing them from degranulating in the first place.
Mast cells contain granules packed with histamine, leukotrienes, prostaglandins, and other inflammatory compounds. When an allergen (pollen, pet dander, dust mite) triggers an IgE-mediated response, mast cells degranulate, releasing these compounds into surrounding tissue. This produces the familiar symptoms of hay fever: sneezing, itching, runny nose, watery eyes.
Quercetin inhibits mast cell degranulation through several pathways, including suppression of calcium influx into mast cells (which triggers degranulation) and inhibition of IgE-mediated signalling. In vitro studies and animal models have consistently shown significant mast cell stabilisation. Human trials are limited but encouraging: a 2020 study found quercetin supplementation significantly reduced hay fever symptom scores compared to placebo, with effects comparable to a standard antihistamine but without the sedation or dry-mouth side effects.
Ireland has one of the highest rates of allergic rhinitis (hay fever) in Europe, affecting an estimated 600,000+ adults. The grass pollen season typically runs from May to August, with tree pollen (birch, ash, oak) from February to May. Climate change has extended the pollen season and increased pollen concentrations, making hay fever progressively worse for many Irish sufferers.
The key advantage of quercetin over conventional antihistamines is that it must be taken prophylactically โ starting 2โ4 weeks before the expected pollen season โ to be most effective, because mast cell stabilisation takes time to establish. This is actually the same principle as sodium cromoglycate (Opticrom eye drops, Rynacrom nasal spray) โ prescription mast cell stabilisers used for allergy โ which are also most effective when started before allergen exposure begins.
Beyond histamine, quercetin is a broad anti-inflammatory agent that inhibits multiple pro-inflammatory pathways:
This broad anti-inflammatory profile has made quercetin interesting for chronic inflammatory conditions including arthritis, inflammatory bowel disease, and cardiovascular disease. A 2016 meta-analysis found that quercetin supplementation significantly reduced blood pressure (particularly in subjects with existing hypertension) and inflammation markers including CRP.
During the COVID-19 pandemic, quercetin gained attention for a specific mechanism: its ability to act as a zinc ionophore โ a compound that facilitates the transport of zinc ions across cell membranes into the intracellular space. Zinc inside cells inhibits the replication of RNA viruses by blocking the viral RNA-dependent RNA polymerase enzyme.
Quercetin + zinc became a popular combination for antiviral support. The theory is straightforward: quercetin helps zinc enter cells where it can exert its antiviral activity. Several observational studies found lower COVID severity in populations with higher quercetin and zinc status. While this is not conclusive human trial evidence, the pharmacological rationale is sound.
Regardless of the COVID-specific context, quercetin + zinc as a seasonal immune support stack has a solid biological basis and a good safety profile. Pat Coffey at The Honey Pot recommends Higher Nature Citricidal (grapefruit seed extract, another broad antimicrobial) for immune season support, and combining quercetin and zinc adds complementary antiviral protection.
Quercetin's cardiovascular benefits are mediated through several mechanisms: antioxidant protection of LDL cholesterol from oxidation (a key step in atherosclerosis), endothelial function improvement, blood pressure reduction, and anti-platelet effects. A 2007 randomised trial published in the Journal of Nutrition found that quercetin supplementation (730mg/day for 28 days) significantly reduced blood pressure in hypertensive patients but not normotensive controls โ suggesting a specific benefit for those with elevated pressure.
Quercetin crosses the blood-brain barrier and has been shown in animal studies to reduce neuroinflammation, reduce amyloid-beta accumulation (relevant to Alzheimer's), and protect neurons from oxidative damage. Human data is limited, but quercetin's anti-neuroinflammatory properties make it an interesting candidate for long-term cognitive protection โ particularly given its excellent safety profile and low cost.
Standard quercetin powder has poor and variable oral bioavailability โ typically below 10% in most studies. Several strategies improve this:
"Bioavailability is everything with quercetin," notes Pat. "I steer customers away from basic quercetin powder and toward phytosome forms or quercetin+bromelain combinations. The difference in absorption is significant and you want to know your money is actually reaching the bloodstream."