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SKQ1 is a Longevity Game Changer

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#1 jroseland

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Posted 22 March 2018 - 08:43 PM


 

Skulachev Ions (or SKQ1) are smart antioxidantssmart because they specifically target the Mitochondria that actually need them. This makes SKQ1 a very potent, economic and safe anti-aging agent, I'll make the case in this article that it's the cutting edge anti-aging innovation of tomorrow.

1*iJ83RzdC1nrF6VPiRY6L8g.jpeg

 

Scientific Research

People often ask me about novel Biohacksexotic Nootropics or ground breaking anti-aging strategies. They will want to pay attention to the applications of SKQ1.
You can find over 150 pieces of published research on Pubmed, including two significant human clinical trials. So it's firmly out of the territory of being an unpredictable pharmacologically active research chemical and is attracting the attention of mainstream anti-aging researchers.

 

 

Novel Longevity Science

Usually I begin these article by first describing the main uses and benefits of the supplement or technology. This article though I'll begin by describing the unique anti-aging mechanism of SKQ1 because it's quite remarkable.

 

 

SKQ1 vs Phenoptosis

Phenoptosis is the death of an organism programmed by its genome...

 

Begins an articulate paper by Vladimir P. Skulachev, the premise of the paper is that aging is intentional as opposed to incidental. The popular view is that aging is just the result of entropy, our biology just breaks down over time like an old car but Professor Skulachev argues, using a variety of compelling examples like salmon dying immediately after spawning, that our very own selfish genes are accomplices to the aging process. Oddly, aging and death may be evolutionarily advantageous.

 

1*_V1wpjvnJUEX7XOuoN3D-w.png

Vs Reactive Oxygen Species

figure1.jpg
The chemical executioners carrying out Phenoptosis are Reactive Oxygen Species, which you'll often see referred to by the acronym ROS (don't worry I promise not going to get too crazy with acronyms in this article!)
Species don't necessarily have to be things that are furry, fighting, flighting (or fucking!) Species also includes categories of chemicals that react with our neurobiology.

 

The famously quirky transhumanist Aubrey de Grey says that...

Breathing is bad for us!

 

Which sounds absurd but it's actually quite true, the same oxidizing effect that rusts metal and makes food go bad eats away and corrodes our biology.

 

A very reasonable fellow on FightAging.org is worth quoting:

[Reactive oxygen species] can damage mitochondrial structures, and that can lead to mutant mitochondria that take over and cripple cells, causing harm to surrounding tissues. [Reactive oxygen species] are also used as signals in many fundamental cellular processes, such as the response to exercise and triggering of cellular maintenance in response to stresses. Thus antioxidants targeted specifically to the interior of mitochondria have the ability to influence these processes, where other types of antioxidant cannot

 

Chief clinical officer Lawrence Friedhoff, M.D. summarizes...

SkQ1’s uniqueness and innovation is that it was designed to accumulate inside an important part of every living cell...
And that’s what makes the difference—targeting free radicals where they do most of their damage to the cell, inside mitochondria.

 

The Dictatorship of the Genome

I've argued before that Mitochondria are to genes what free will is to predetermination.

Skulachev paints a similar metaphor to explain how these unseen factors deep in our biology affect our lives - we are at the mercy of the “dictatorship” of the genome...

In essence, the issue here is already not social well-being, but the “dictatorship” of the genome, the only self-reproducing biological structure whose preservation, development, and expansion have taken priority over the well-being of an individual or a group of individuals. In terms of this concept, an organism is nothing but a machine serving the genome’s interests...
It seems quite possible that the mechanism of rapid phenoptosis, like that of slow phenoptosis (aging), is mediated by intramitochondrial ROS at early stages of the process. If this hypothesis is true, then the positive effect of SkQ not only on aging, but also on a variety of acute pathologies in both young and old organisms, can be explained in terms of quenching of these ROS. 
Thus, it seems possible that SkQ can serve as a tool in the “rise of the machines”, an attempt of Homo sapiens to overcome the genome tyranny and to cancel those genome-dictated programs that are useful for genome evolution but unfavorable for an individual.

 

To build on Skulachev's metaphor if the genome is the dictator and ROS is the KGB (government secret police) then SKQ1 molecules are the freedom fighters.

 

 

What is SKQ1?

 

1*bnRF55mfXHyUzb125UutkA.png

Before moving onto the exciting potential (and actual!) biohacking applications of SKQ1 it's important to make sure that you understand just a little more of the science.
SKQ1 is an antioxidant, but it's not just any old antioxidant, it's a smart antioxidant that targets the Mitochondria that needs it.

 

Mitochondrial Targeting Antioxidant

I once saw a documentary about how in Israel very clever farmers make the desert bloom because they don't water their farms the way everyone else does with a sprinkler system. The Israelis use an ingenious pumping system that delivers the water to the individual plants themselves, thus saving immense quantities of water and making farming much more productive - it's a significant factor in Israel's success as a country.
 

SKQ1 kind of does the same thing for our Mitochondria!
To jump to another metaphor, SKQ1 is kind of like a science fiction space freighter tugging cargo, that cargo is plastoquinone (I'll explain what that is shortly) and the Mitochondria is like a black hole sucks in the space freighter and it's cargo.

 

The Mitochondria sucks in the SKQ1 because of electrical polarity; the mitochondria is negative and SKQ1 is positive.

An Interdimensional biohacker surmised about it's mechanism

There might be two reasons why mitochondrial targeting is effective.

#1. The mitochondria produce a high concentration of ROS, and thereby an antioxidant localized to that area would absorb greater quantities of ROS than an antioxidant that is free to wander other parts of the cell, and would thereby prevent those ROS from escaping to other parts of the cell where they could cause havoc.
 

#2. The mitochondrial genome is in close to a high concentration of ROS generated by the electron transport chain. Damage to this mitochondrial genome might cause all sorts of trouble to the cell, for instance by impairing energy metabolism. An antioxidant that could nullify ROS before they have a chance to interact with mitochondrial DNA might prevent downstream consequences of mtDNA damage. 

 

 

Plastoquinone to the rescue!

 

0*n1tyPe_n44eO1ct1.png

Plastoquinone is the cargo that gets delivered right to the Mitochondria. It does two very helpful things for us

  1. ATP Production - Energetic molecules that are exported from the Mitochondria to power our cells.
  2.  Cleanup of Peroxides - Peroxides are a bad ROS which is kind of like Mitochondria poop, a toxic byproduct of the mitochondrial process.

From a paper that Skulachev himself penned in 2012

...mitochondria-generated reactive oxygen species (ROS) is a tool to stimulate apoptosis, an effect decreasing with age the cell number (cellularity) of organs and tissues. A group of SkQ-type substances composed of plastoquinone and a penetrating cation were synthesized to target an antioxidant into mitochondria and to prevent the age-linked rise of the mitochondrial ROS level.

 

An Anti-Aging Innovation

This is a very exciting anti-aging avenue, an recent animal study concluded

When started late in life, supplementation with SkQ1 not only prevented age-related decline but also significantly reversed it.
We suggest that supplementation with low doses of SkQ1 is a promising intervention to achieve a healthy ageing.

 

In 2017 Russian and Swedish researchers collaborated on a follow up animal study, that confirmed SKQ1’s beneficial effects on traits of aging like

  • Alopecia
  •  Kyphosis
  •  Lower body temperatures
  •  Body weight loss
  •  Heart, kidney and liver pathologies

It maybe an organ and heart health hack 

As the results, the normal mitochondrial ultrastructure is preserved in liver and heart...

 

The study found that it improved animal longevity by about 15%:

MtDNA mutator mice exhibit marked features of premature aging. We find that these mice treated from age of ≈100 days with the mitochondria-targeted antioxidant SkQ1... live significantly longer (335 versus 290 days). These data may be relevant in relation to treatment of mitochondrial diseases particularly and the process of aging in general.
 

15% improvement in longevity may not sound all that exciting but the interesting thing is that in the animal studies they started giving SKQ1 to mice in the middle or the end of their lives and it worked to improve quality and quantity of life. Many anti-aging and health interventions fall into the category of...

An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.

 

These studies are indicating that SKQ1 maybe an anti-aging hack for those whose younger selves spent many decades making poor decisions about their health and lifestyle.


It increases quality of life and senescence signs in aged animals, in the animal studies it reduced aging diseases like...

If you want to go deeper into SKQ1 science, I'll encourage you to do some reading of the numerous papers that Skulachev and his colleagues have published, which are readable and well translated into English. Unlike studies about a lot of Nootropics most of the SKQ1 papers are published in full, publicly on the Internet as opposed to hidden away behind pay walls.

Assuming you now have at least a cursory understanding of this novel anti-aging tool I'll move on to the practical uses of SKQ1...

 

 

Vision Biohack

The application of SKQ1 that most interests me is as a vision Biohack. Eyes are particularly susceptible to ROS related mitochondrial deficiency - this is why old people, so consistently, develop worsening vision impairments and eye conditions.

In 2015 a notable clinical trial demonstrated the efficacy of SKQ1 as a vision biohack, at least for people suffering with dry eye syndrome. It was a randomized, double-masked, placebo-controlled study of 240 Russians over 6 weeks.

Dry eye syndrome... is a multifactorial disease of the tears and ocular surface that results in symptoms such as discomfort, visual disturbance, and tear film instability, with potential damage to the ocular surface.

 

It concluded

Based on the results of this study, Visomitin is effective and safe for use in eye patients with [dry eyes] for protection from corneal damage.

 

In 2016 American and Russian researchers collaborated on a phase 2 clinical trial following up on the previous dry eye research. 

 

Visomitin exhibited a more pronounced and stable post-therapy effect in patients with [dry eyes] than placebo...

SkQ1 was safe and efficacious in treating dry eye signs and symptoms. Statistically significant improvements with SkQ1 compared to placebo occurred for the dry eye signs of corneal fluorescein staining and lissamine green staining in the central region and lid margin redness, and for the dry eye symptoms of ocular discomfort, dryness, and grittiness.

 

Another recent animal study noted that 

Visomitin SkQ1-containing eye drops have pronounced preventive and therapeutic effects on the photodamaged retina

 

According to Dave Asprey's authoritative book on Biohacking mitochondria 

After your brain and your heart (and your ovaries if you’re a woman), your eyes contain the highest concentration of mitochondria in your body. This makes your eyes extremely sensitive to anything that might mess with your mitochondrial energy production. (p. 156)

 

This is why for example, Biohackers find that their vision improves when they use Nootropics like the Racetams that empower mitochondria and they become better at playing videogames, sports or shooting guns at the range.

Could this mean that SKQ1 eye drops are a vision hack for otherwise healthy people with healthy eyes?
That's hard to say, there has not yet been any human studies done with otherwise healthy people.

 

Visomitin

1*3AtJagd0B9WFQnvNh0MPYw.png

One of the the initial applications is in these eye drops for those who suffer from dry eyes, that's the on label application, that's increasingly being verified in human clinical trials.

Now even though these studies are focused mostly on dry eyes SKQ1 holds some promise for almost everyone who wishes that they had better eyes. What these high quality studies are saying is that SKQ1 is effective at repairing and restoring vision.

 

To quote from a 2017 Australian paper on SKQ1 as a treatment for optic neuropathy:

Many reports have illustrated a tight connection between vision and mitochondrial function. Not only are most mitochondrial diseases associated with some form of vision impairment, many ophthalmological disorders such as glaucoma, age-related macular degeneration and diabetic retinopathy also show signs of mitochondrial dysfunction. Despite a vast amount of evidence, vision loss is still only treated symptomatically, which is only partially a consequence of resistance to acknowledge that mitochondria could be the common denominator and hence a promising therapeutic target.

Thus these are the Off label applications for Visomitin

  • Early onset age-related cataracts

  • Cataracts

  • Glaucoma

  • Uveitis

  • Enteral inflammations

  • Neurodegeneration

Visomitin is pretty affordable so it seems worth trying if you suffer from any of these.

 

Anecdotally, Skulachev cured his own cataracts using SKQ1

One user reported it effectively relieving eye strain:

...I have personally tried visomitin.

Since I spend a lot of time at the computer, pain and dryness appear in my eyes. this disease is called dry eye syndrome. So the doctor prescribed me Visomitin drops, in the drugstore they also call the drops Skulachev ions, at first they arranged that they are not expensive enough, and when I began to drip into my eyes, I felt that eyes were not so tired, and if they were tired, then after usage - Five minutes later, all the unpleasant sensations pass away. I advise everyone!

 

Skin Care

Our skin is our organ which makes the most contact with the atmosphere and the ROS discussed earlier, thus Mitochondrial targeted antioxidants like SKQ1 have a variety of rejuvenating effects on the skin.

At least for the time being, the skin care applications do not have as strong clinical evidence as the vision applications do. There's several animal studies that demonstrate that it improves dermal wound healing.

 

MitoVitan

0*E7Bu3841HM8-GZAS.png

This is a (rather expensive) mitochondrial skin hack for the vain, it's more of a beauty and skin care application for making your skin look younger and more vibrant. It's on label applications include

  • Reducing wrinkles

  • Reducing skin pigmentation

  • Restoring natural moisture balance

To quote NootropicSpot.com

Anti-aging serum reduces the visibility of already existing mimic wrinkles, restores natural moisture balance, and reduces skin pigmentation. MitoVitan has prolonged and accumulative effect, i.e. the effectiveness increases with permanent and long-term use.

 

Exomitin

1*exJI7RorVyzWfuwMkk6h3g.png

Is a skin repair and rejuvenation application of SKQ1. It's on label applications include

  • Thermal or mechanical skin injury

  • Dry skin

  • Skin reddening

  • Different forms of skin irritation

 

The Pathway to Mainstream Medicine

Mitotech S.A is the pharmaceutical company founded by Skulachev based in Luxembourg which is developing SKQ1 products and drugs.

For better or for worse Skulachev and his colleagues are taking SKQ1 through the American FDA's regulatory process.

As you can see below Mitotech has completed stage 2 trials for the FDA and the researchers anticipate completing stage 3 for all indications of Visomitin in 2018.

SKQ1_trials_graphic.png

Many anti-aging drugs and technologies choose to circumnavigate bureaucracy by being sold as a none-dietary supplement or a not for human consumption product that is not intended or prescribed to treat any condition but they take a big risk that one day a letter from a government lawyer will put them out of business.

This makes me think (or at least hope!) that SKQ1 is a legit anti-aging innovation, drugs that go through the FDA process are subject to significant scrutiny.

Now you, like me, might be quiet cynical about the FDA but it shows that Skulachev and company have real confidence in SKQ1.

If SKQ1 were just a cash grab it would already be sold as a flashy Internet marketing supplement instead of ensconced in laboratories as it's creators take it through the tedious regulatory process.

This is why, with the exception of the vision and skincare products, you can't yet whip out your credit card or Bitcoin wallet and have some SKQ1 on it's way to your doorstep.

Good things take time.

 

 

Plastomitin™

The first SKQ1 drug which is poised to treat and profoundly help those suffering from Multiple Sclerosis, Acute Kidney Injury and Barth Syndrome which is a rather rare heart condition.

It’s also poised to begin phase 2 trials in Russia for treating Neurodegeneration, this should interest biohackers seeking performance enhancement, as it means that Plastomitin will likely have significant Nootropic effects. There have been at least several books written about how optimizing Mitochondria seriously improves your mind; motivation, memory, mood, powers of focus and cognition.

Presumably something that hacks your Mitochondria on such a fundamental level should in the long term make you feel quite limitless.

According to Dr. Anton Petrov, Chief Operating Officer of Mitotech Plastomitin™ should be on the market in the next few years.

 

 

SKQ1 vs MitoQ vs C60

1*9k8F5GCoH0_MyJCBnFhAqw.png

SKQ1's anti-aging cousins are the antioxidants MitoQ and C60 (also sometimes called C60oo and other silly names) which is derived from olive oil.

MitoQ and SKQ1 deliver to the Mitochondria chemical foot soldiers that fight ROS, MitoQ delivers CoQ10,  and SKQ1 delivers Plastoquinone.

C60 is a little different, it's an antioxidant molecule that your mitochondria absorbs by osmosis.

1*yW-6WFLkehHR6acVksI9lw.png

Why is SKQ1 worth your attention when C60 and MitoQ are highly accessible?

SKQ1 directly targets the mitochondrial membrane, MitoQ is also targeted to the mitochondria, C60 is not, your Mitochondria absorb it by osmosis (hopefully!)

According to Skulachev

MitoQ cannot be regarded as a mitochondria-targeted form CoQ or CoQ precursor since it cannot replace CoQ in its master function...

The big problem that MitoQ has is that VERY little of the CoQ10 actually gets delivered to the inside of the mitochondria, perhaps as low as 1% - 2% according to a 2014 paper out of the University of Toronto:

CoQ10 has low oral bioavailability due to its lipophilic nature, large molecular weight, regional differences in its gastrointestinal permeability and involvement of multitransporters. Intracellular delivery and mitochondrial target ability issues pose additional hurdles. To maximize CoQ10 delivery to its biopharmaceutical target, numerous approaches have been undertaken.

 

Whereas SKQ1 delivers Plastoquinone directly to the interior of the Mitochondria. To quote author and doctor Josh Mitteldorf

But no animal study has ever succeeded in extending life span with CoQ10. Perhaps its value is limited by bioavailability. Only a small portion of ingested CoQ10 makes its way from the stomach into the bloodstream, and a much tinier portion actually reaches the mitochondria where it is needed. This is the issue that Skulachev has addressed in such an innovative way with his molecule, which his friends and students have affectionately dubbed SkQ.

 

Plastoquinone is better than CoQ10. Skulachev initially used CoQ10 but A/B testing it with Plastoquinone in animal experiments discovered that Plastoquinone is a more effective antioxidant.

 

Regarding C60, one of the masterminds behind the anti-aging forum Longecity clarified

C60 is NOT currently theorized to promote rejuvenation, only to slow aging

 

I would not say that MitoQ and C60 are useless, there's significant anecdotal evidence and some clinical evidence that they are very helpful in restoring and maintaining health but SkQ1 is the clear leader in terms of safety and economics thanks to the tiny dose of it needed to achieve the kind of effect that the others might have. The tiny dosage also makes it highly non-toxic, which is a concern with the other Mitochondrial antioxidants.

 

Potency

SKQ1 is very potent. A 2008 study reported

These results suggest that under the conditions used SkQ1 protects mitochondria from oxidative damage as an antioxidant when added at extremely low concentrations.

A 2012 animal study concurred

...extremely low, nanomolar concentrations of the mitochondria-targeted plastoquinone derivative SkQ1... were shown to prolong the lifespan of male and female Drosophila melanogaster by about 10%...

 

 

SKQ1 as a Nootropic?

A lot of Biohackers are at this point wondering if SKQ1 would work as a performance enhancing Nootropic or smart drug for otherwise healthy people that just want more energy or motivation.

It's hard to say at this point, there have been no human trials conducted demonstrating an effect on cognition. I could find no meaningful or credible anecdotal reports from Biohackers who tried it and experienced classic Nootropic effects.

However, the Mitochondria are the fundamental energy generation system of the body; optimizing your Mitochondria is quintessential performance enhancement; more energy, better mood, memory, immunity, resilience or hotter sex. Anything that improves your Mitochondria will make you better but we are probably a few years off from real SKQ1 Nootropics, for the time being at least SKQ1 is quite expensive, if you're interested in hacking your Mitochondria for performance enhancement, you'll want to use the Mitochondrial supplements I list here.

 

 

Antibiotic

A 2017 in vitro study out of Lomonosov Moscow State University observed that SKQ1's targeting made it a highly effective antibiotic:

Mitochondria-targeted antioxidants are known to alleviate mitochondrial oxidative damage that is associated with a variety of diseases...

Therefore, SkQ1 may be effective in protection of the infected mammals by killing invading bacteria.

1*srAiseYn0K7t7MYLAjGs5A.jpeg

 

Vs Cancer

Ten published pieces of scientific research explore it’s potential as an anti-cancer agent, specifically cervical, prostate and pancreatic cancers.

From the most recent study:

In our study, we used mitochondria-targeted antioxidant SkQ1 to lower the mtROS level...

Thus, we showed that scavenging of mtROS by SkQ1... suppressed proliferation of cervical cancer cells.

1*-badNuIzvUMOPxnfekrRFw.jpeg

According to 2013 paper it's something of an apoptosis biohack for treating and preventing cancer:

It seems promising to study the possibility of using SkBQ as an anticancer drug on the types of cancers that can be treated by chemotherapeutic prooxidation. Thus, activation of mitochondrial ROS generation in prostate cancer cells leads to the death of these cells...

...according to our data, reducing the generation of mitochondrial ROS kills cancer cells by inhibiting the cell cycle aftermitosis, which activates apoptosis...

 

Vs Alzheimer's

Seven items of scientific research discuss how it maybe a transformative tool for combating Alzheimer's.

From a 2017 animal study

Using OXYS rats that simulate key characteristics of sporadic AD, we evaluated effects of SkQ1 treatment from the age of 19 to 24 months on the locomotor and exploratory activities, signs of neurodegeneration detectable...

As a result, in OXYS rats, the proportion of severely damaged mitochondria decreased...

According to our past and present results, the repair of the mitochondrial apparatus by SkQ1 is a promising strategy against [Alzheimer's].

In 2016 Russian and American scientists collaborated on another animal study entitled, An antioxidant specifically targeting mitochondria delays progression of Alzheimer's disease-like pathology.

The study concluded

Collectively, these data support that mitochondrial dysfunction may play a key role in the pathophysiology of [Alzheimer's] and that therapies with target mitochondria are potent to normalize a wide range of cellular signaling processes and therefore slow the progression of [Alzheimer's].

1*7BjoA-N25O2I4_h3GizSVw.jpeg

 

Fertility

An animal study suggested it as a male fertility biohack

In conclusion, our data suggest that the mitochondria-targeted antioxidant SkQ1 is effective in improving spermatogenesis... and might be used for the treatment of male infertility.

 

State of the Art

I'm optimistic about the breadth and width of science that's been done on it, 131 clinical trials, animal studies or scientific papers have been published globally in the past decade alone.

[infogram]

 

Conclusion...

Good things take time.

As an anti-aging agent SKQ1 is entering it's adolescence, we're probably several years away from veritable SKQ1 drugs or supplements that biohackers would want to take to improve performance or maintain vitality as they age but it's certainly something to watch.


At this point there's excellent evidence that SKQ1 in the form Visomitin is good for your eyes, in fact it could be transformational for your vision. If your eyes are imperfect thanks to unlucky genetics or way too much time spent staring at glowing rectangular screens Visomitin is worth your attention.

 

 

 

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#2 Kalliste

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Posted 26 March 2018 - 10:03 AM

Good summary but SKQ1 is still taking FOREVER to get here. I was skeptical of MitoQ, but that supplement proved well worth it.

 

I'm going to stick with MitoQ until 2029 or whenever SKQ1 is finally ready.

 

At their current pace, they will get to the market by the time allotopic expression is a reality.


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#3 Razor444

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Posted 26 March 2018 - 04:19 PM

You should probably consider making your podcast available on podcatchers -- in audio-only form.



#4 ceridwen

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Posted 30 March 2018 - 01:03 AM

I don't understand how to pay for this. The invoice says something about an EU order. I've never heard of that. How do I pay?

#5 Oakman

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Posted 03 April 2018 - 02:11 PM

This certainly sounds like another miracle supplement, but has anyone on the forum tried it? I see it on Amazon, so it is readily available (at a steep price). The info given seems more than adequate to encourage it's use.


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#6 jroseland

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Posted 09 April 2018 - 09:29 AM

I'm using Visomitin now it's $19 on NootropicSpot.com, I'll publish a full review in a few weeks or months

This certainly sounds like another miracle supplement, but has anyone on the forum tried it? I see it on Amazon, so it is readily available (at a steep price). The info given seems more than adequate to encourage it's use.

 


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#7 Hip

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Posted 10 April 2018 - 03:09 PM

SKQ1 is very similar to the Western product MitoQ


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#8 Adamzski

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Posted 12 April 2018 - 01:03 PM

Interesting, did use a bottle of the MitoQ lotion and think it had benefits.

 

Look forward to hearing back about this.

 

Might just get some, that Nootropicspot has a lot of interesting products, thanks for posting.

 

Would these eyedrops be something you could consume and get benefit from?


Edited by Adamzski, 12 April 2018 - 01:08 PM.


#9 jroseland

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Posted 13 April 2018 - 11:11 AM

Would these eyedrops be something you could consume and get benefit from?

Well our eyes have a very high density of Mitochondria and are very sensitive to the health of our mitochondria so hypothetically SKQ1 should be VERY good for our eyes.

 

I've been using it for about a week and half now and am not sure if I've noticed any benefits yet...


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#10 aribadabar

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Posted 14 April 2018 - 08:22 PM

I see it on Amazon, so it is readily available (at a steep price).

 I can't find it on Amazon. Link?



#11 Daniel Cooper

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Posted 11 May 2018 - 08:24 PM

Any updates?

 

 

 



#12 Invicta Immortalem

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Posted 19 May 2018 - 12:24 PM

You can already buy SKQ1 from this UK lab, branded as Vismotech:

 

https://mitolab.com/...tion-10ml-30ml/


Edited by Invicta Immortalem, 19 May 2018 - 12:28 PM.


#13 Oakman

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Posted 19 May 2018 - 01:21 PM

 I can't find it on Amazon. Link?

 

I find it here, at least for the USA.


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#14 aribadabar

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Posted 19 May 2018 - 02:09 PM

I find it here, at least for the USA.

 

Thanks but I meant a link to a SkQ1 product, not MitoQ.



#15 jroseland

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Posted 21 May 2018 - 03:28 PM

Any updates?

Month 1 - May 2nd
I've noticed (disturbingly) that my soft contact lenses were becoming increasingly blurry. I changed out my old soft contact lenses for new ones and the blurriness seemed to persist which has been a real problem because of my work on the computer. I'm going to discontinue using the Visomitin for two weeks and see what happens.
May 21st
I discontinued Visomitin for two weeks and resumed a few days ago. I don't think the Visomitin was causing any of the blurriness. I think I had a bad pair of soft contact lenses.
I seem to notice from time to time that after like 8-10 hours of wearing soft contact lenses, I'll take them out and take some Visomitin and the Visomitin seems to sting my eyes for a minute or two. I'm not sure if this is the fault of the Visomitin or just wearing my lenses to long.
I've yet to really experience much benefit from Visomitin. Maybe it's made my eyes feel for more comfortable after staring at the computer screen for 8-12 hours but I'm not really sure. I've never been diagnosed with any of the conditions that Visomitin is supposed to treat, so I really don't know if it's going to do anything for me.
But I'll continue to take it and after maybe two months of usage I'll have my eyes examined again to see if my vision impairment has improved.

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#16 YOLF

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Posted 22 May 2018 - 01:57 AM

You can already buy SKQ1 from this UK lab, branded as Vismotech:

 

https://mitolab.com/...tion-10ml-30ml/

It contains bromide, that can become toxic if it accumulates... I don't think that this product is intended for humans or long term studies and unless the bromide is part of the original formula and it somehow gets excreted rapidly, I'd stick with regular retail packages so you don't hurt yourself.

 

Though I guess bromine is selective as to who it accumulates in... I'm not sure I'd risk it.


Edited by YOLF, 22 May 2018 - 02:13 AM.

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#17 Invicta Immortalem

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Posted 22 May 2018 - 06:32 AM

It contains bromide, that can become toxic if it accumulates... I don't think that this product is intended for humans or long term studies and unless the bromide is part of the original formula and it somehow gets excreted rapidly, I'd stick with regular retail packages so you don't hurt yourself.

 

Though I guess bromine is selective as to who it accumulates in... I'm not sure I'd risk it.

 

@YOLF: let's look closer to the Visomitin eye product formula: http://rupharma.com/visomitin/

 

Active substance: plastohinonildetsiltrifenilfosfomiya bromide 0.155 mcg
Excipients: benzalkonium chloride 0.1 mg, 2 mghypromellose, 9 mg of sodium chloride, 0.81 mgsodium dihydrogen phosphate, sodium hydrogen phosphate dodecahydrate 116.35 mg Sodiumhydroxide solution 1 M to pH 6.3-7.3, water d / and 1 ml.

 

The active substance is plastohinonildetsiltrifenilfosfomiya bromide , which is exactly SkQ1 Bromide: https://pubchem.ncbi...091#section=Top

 

The reason Visomitin is not advised to be ingested is sodium hydrogen phosphate dodecahydrate excipient, which can attack the stomach mucosa and can cause cramps and diarrhea.

 

So, if Visomitin is safe for the eye , its active substance is also safe for ingestion: https://www.mitotech...ma.com/programs

 

More here: https://link.springe...006297914100113

 

MitoLab disclaimer is mandatory in EU & UK until approval.


Edited by Invicta Immortalem, 22 May 2018 - 06:34 AM.

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#18 YOLF

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Posted 22 May 2018 - 03:33 PM

@YOLF: let's look closer to the Visomitin eye product formula: http://rupharma.com/visomitin/

 

Active substance: plastohinonildetsiltrifenilfosfomiya bromide 0.155 mcg
Excipients: benzalkonium chloride 0.1 mg, 2 mghypromellose, 9 mg of sodium chloride, 0.81 mgsodium dihydrogen phosphate, sodium hydrogen phosphate dodecahydrate 116.35 mg Sodiumhydroxide solution 1 M to pH 6.3-7.3, water d / and 1 ml.

 

The active substance is plastohinonildetsiltrifenilfosfomiya bromide , which is exactly SkQ1 Bromide: https://pubchem.ncbi...091#section=Top

 

The reason Visomitin is not advised to be ingested is sodium hydrogen phosphate dodecahydrate excipient, which can attack the stomach mucosa and can cause cramps and diarrhea.

 

So, if Visomitin is safe for the eye , its active substance is also safe for ingestion: https://www.mitotech...ma.com/programs

 

More here: https://link.springe...006297914100113

 

MitoLab disclaimer is mandatory in EU & UK until approval.

 

.155mcg is nothing, even if it was all bromine, there's more than that much bromine in food and it shouldn't be a concern.


Edited by YOLF, 22 May 2018 - 03:34 PM.


#19 Daniel Cooper

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Posted 22 May 2018 - 03:38 PM

It contains bromide, that can become toxic if it accumulates... I don't think that this product is intended for humans or long term studies and unless the bromide is part of the original formula and it somehow gets excreted rapidly, I'd stick with regular retail packages so you don't hurt yourself.

 

Though I guess bromine is selective as to who it accumulates in... I'm not sure I'd risk it.

 

 

All sorts of drugs are produced as bromide salts.  I do not think that is the issue.


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#20 Female Scientist

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Posted 25 May 2018 - 03:03 PM

Hi Folks, I’m looking to buy SKQ1. Has anyone ordered from the UK lab mentioned above, MitoLab? Thanks in advance.

#21 Invicta Immortalem

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Posted 01 June 2018 - 07:23 AM

Yes, I have ordered and used it for about 3 weeks.

It has the exact formula of Visomitin so it is a safe product.

The only concerns remain the low concentration of skq1 vs a quite high price.

I bought 780mcg of skq1 in 30 ml solution for 60 GBP; the bottle has 600 drops, with skq1 bromide concentration at 26 mcg/ml and 1.3 mcg per drop. 

However, if you wanna try, you should use the sublingual route for a better absorption.

Those data you will not find on their website and I really think they should drop the price and produce a more potent product.


Edited by Invicta Immortalem, 01 June 2018 - 07:29 AM.

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#22 QuestforLife

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Posted 05 June 2018 - 11:02 AM

I really think they should drop the price and produce a more potent product.

 

Totally agree. I've used the methylene blue skin cream and the methylene blue drops; both are very expensive. The cream was ineffective; the drops seem decent, but it's a hell of an extra cost to buy USP-verified MB.


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#23 tolerant

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Posted 21 November 2018 - 03:55 AM

So you can use Visomitin via the sublingual route to affect your entire body? Using them as eye drops is not another route of administration for the whole body, but only affects the eyes, correct?



#24 sphere

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Posted 24 November 2018 - 09:18 PM

https://mitolab.com is just re-selling the eyedrops [used to be available on ebay at a fairer price then they are selling for, but again as with -https://mitolab.com just the eyedrops re-bottled---have not checked lately] Other sources claim to sell

https://medkoo.com/products/4508

and some in China [always care needed from China of course]

https://www.chemical...73133755_EN.htm

 

has anyone purchased from another source?



#25 John250

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Posted 25 November 2018 - 04:22 PM

What’s the verdict on MitoQ vs SKQ?

#26 Kalliste

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Posted 26 November 2018 - 06:07 PM

What’s the verdict on MitoQ vs SKQ?

 

I am using MitoQ with very good effects. I do want to try SkQ but it does not seem worth the hassle. Skulachev and McPherson have argued that their respective product is better. I am not sure what to believe but MitoQ served me very well so far. I wait for 20 mg version as dose is clearly proportional to effect. 


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#27 Geoff1892

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Posted 03 February 2019 - 12:42 PM

What’s the verdict on MitoQ vs SKQ?


John, do you take SKQ1? If so, what’s your source? It looks like it may be good for insulin resistance.

#28 jroseland

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Posted 16 February 2019 - 01:58 PM

John, do you take SKQ1? If so, what’s your source? It looks like it may be good for insulin resistance.

Yes. I've been using Visomitin for about 6 months. Which makes my eyes feel better but I'm not sure yet if it's improved my vision. I visit the ophthalmoloist recently and my vision was about the same. I get it from Nootropicspot.com and RUPharma.com.



#29 jroseland

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Posted 16 February 2019 - 02:04 PM

What’s the verdict on MitoQ vs SKQ?

MitoQ is a similar mitochondrial technology but it uses CoQ10 instead of PQQ. PQQ is I think a bit more effective but MitoQ probably has more health applications, you can take it as a super powered version of CoQ10 whereas SKQ1 is just available currently, I believe, as a vision biohack.



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#30 Adamzski

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Posted 05 March 2019 - 06:36 PM

I am using MitoQ with very good effects. I do want to try SkQ but it does not seem worth the hassle. Skulachev and McPherson have argued that their respective product is better. I am not sure what to believe but MitoQ served me very well so far. I wait for 20 mg version as dose is clearly proportional to effect. 

 

 

What are the effects you are having? I used the lotin 1 bottle and felt that it helped but nothing dramatic.





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