@TMNMK:
EVERY Vitamin is useful. The point was, that overdosing on Vitamin A is a problem. The in-vitro studies you are quoting don't change that.
Vitamin A is fat-soluble vitamin. It is in circulation much longer than water soluble Vitamins. Rejuvant contains 100% of the RDA for Vitamin A. We have studies in living humans (not mice cells in a dish) demonstrating long term liver damage, if you take about 10 times the RDA of Vitamin A for a prolonged duration. And if you want to have the mice effects you need to take more than the single serving of Rejuvant on their label (the mice consumed up to 30 times the amount, scaled for humans).
@yz69:
I can't speak for Michael, but given his connection to the SENS-F I'd assume the following:
"aging" is the manifestation of functional decline and pathologies, that results from the accumulation of cellular and tissues damage over decades
Reversing the methylation patterns does nothing for reversing the accumulated damage. It may or may not influence the accumulation of future damage (there is not much in-vivo data on that). But reversing some methylation patterns by 50% doesn't repair your damaged mitochondria, it doesn't reverse the plaque you already got in your vascular system or the cross-links of proteins.
Methylation changes are not the major drivers of aging. They do not constitute the functional decline of pathologies, that commonly are summarized as "aging". They are indirect measures of the progress in time of a living metabolism - and they might well respond to or influence the speed of accumulation of the damage, that results in an "aging phenotype".
But those clocks are not the aging phenotype itself. That is the damage. And reversing the clocks doesn't reverse the damage. That's what all the SENS strategies are about. You have mtDNA damage. You got damaged proteins. Your body doesn't have the machinery to deal with that. No amount of methylation reversal changes that. E.g. you are not suddenly able to break up lipofuscin to make autophagy work like in a young person. Humans just don't got the enzymes to do the clean-up.
Edited by Guest, 28 February 2021 - 08:28 AM.