Turnbuckle, there have been no trials reproducing the study with rats and rats aren't mice as have been discussed there is evidence they are metabolically different with fasting for example when recovering from injury. And in fact Kmoodys leukemia trial with mice showed similarities to Baati.
The toxicity study has one explanation -- antioxidant properties, while the longevity study had another -- UCP2 blocking. They assumed C60 had only one function, and they were wrong. Your argument that the failed experiments were mice and not rats amounts to clutching at straws. So I ask you, are men more like mice, or more like rats?
As for requiring a government trial, I don't see the deduction - i am saying we can pull in some useful anecdotal evidence. If we can find a handful of people in their 80s of been taking c60 daily for a decade who are aging well, then it is hard to know precisely which Paul is being robbed.
You find them, then. Anecdotal evidence only interests me as an extension of real experimental evidence, like epigenetic tests.
I don't argue against your theories, but you seem unwilling to accept the possibility that people have been taken c60 each day or week for a decade and are fine because it conflicts with your repeated assertion they must be depleting their stem cells.
I would simply ask you this: if people are fine and well having taken c60oo daily for 10 years, how would you revise your theory? You seem not to consider that this could be the case, when it quite possibly or I would say probably is the case.
Again, you find them. I haven't seen any evidence of it. And if you find them, ask them about their diet.
That is basic scientific dialogue: if the effect of A is not Y as proposed, but X how might we revise our understanding of the mechanism of A? If that question cannot be asked then this is not a platform for scientific discussion.
You are speaking in generalities with only imagined evidence. What if I found a white crow!
As for loading up on stearic acid for a week - nothing I have am aware that you propose suggests this would not increase the stem cells more than doing so for one day or so - that maintaining fusion over a period of a week would keep creating more stem cells. I appreciate that doing so intermittently means repleting those spent between fusion sessions but I am assuming we aren't maxing levels of stores on each cycle. And yes I do note, you have reported fusion to be an undesirable state to be maintained but it is also worth noting Sincalir has been on a gram a day probably for 7 or 8 years and does look remarkable and he also fasts 22 hours a day, so more fusion I assume. That at least deserves some consideration.
A gram of what? Stearic acid? That isn't very much -- a fraction of the normal intake. In fact, Sinclair's list doesn't include it.
As for the well, not hundreds, but maybe a hundred ml to start with, of c60 on the back end of a few days of stearic acid - it would just be an experiment, no more, without too much risk. Sensei, was like you an outlier and while you achieved remarkable effects with c60 in the early days, you did so on very low doses, Sensei was the opposite.
The required dose is only what it takes to block UCP2 pores. More than that isn't necessary. That people take more than necessary (of anything) is generally because it has stopped working.
It is still a curiosity that you had such remarkable effects where others didn't - might this have been some effect of the statins? Perhaps the c60 induced release from the stressed environment the statins inflicted on the mitochondria created those effects?
I haven't take statins in 15 years.
You for example increased shoe size and regained height - no one else, as far as I know, reported this and I am not aware that you have ever attempted to explain this.
I have explained it. These are the result of not using fusion. Stem cells are being delivered without receiving signals they are needed. I also saw hair regrowth (also seen in mice), but that disappeared after a year or so and has not returned -- evidence of total depletion in follicle SC niches. You can multiply SCs with this protocol, but you can't manufacture them out of nothing.