Editorial Standards & Team
Mito Renewal publishes information about Urolithin A, mitochondrial health and cellular ageing. Because this is health-related content, we hold it to a clear editorial standard. This page explains how we research, write and review what you read on our site — and who is behind it.
How we source information
Our articles are grounded in peer-reviewed research. Where we describe what Urolithin A has been “studied for”, we link to the primary studies on our Research & References page so you can read them yourself. We do not cite marketing material or unsourced blog posts as evidence.
How we handle claims
We deliberately use qualified language — “studied for”, “may support”, “research suggests” — rather than absolute claims. Mito Renewal Complete is a dietary supplement, and under Australian law it is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any disease. We will always tell you when evidence is early-stage or preliminary. See our medical disclaimer.
How we keep content current
Research on Urolithin A is active and ongoing. We review our cornerstone articles periodically and update them when relevant new studies are published, noting the date of the most recent update.
Who writes and reviews our content
Our content is written and reviewed by Sherwin Kashani, a qualified pharmacist and the founder of Mito Renewal. As a pharmacist, Sherwin reviews every article on this site for factual accuracy and for responsible, non-misleading language about what Urolithin A has — and hasn't — been shown to do.
The approach is simple: describe the science accurately, cite the primary research, qualify claims carefully, and never present a supplement as a treatment for disease. If a statement can't be supported with credible evidence, we don't make it.
Contact
Questions about our content or sources? Email mitorenewal@gmail.com — we reply to every message, usually within one business day.