Yeah, Logic posted on lipopolysaccharide on page 24. Dayglow bolded and underlined: He got four upratings for that!
Why do only the popular kids always get away with things! I want to be popular too.
MPL A appears to be a very powerful adjuvant and so the FDA is being very cautious.
There have been rare occurrences of auto-immune responses to it.
Strangely, one report noted that there was an over 12 times increase in narcolepsy in those receiving an MPL A. (?)
Those at risk have an identified risk genotype.
Probably with the anti-AD effect, it is more that the MPL A creates a short term powerful anti-amyloid effect and
then the inflammation subsides.
I have been looking up where to get dosed up with MPL A.
All I am seeing is Ceravrix in the US.
Europe has the hepatitis B vaccine Fendrix and there is the allergy vaccine Pollinex Quattro.
It's surprising that Longecity seems to have missed this back in 2013. I think I know how it works.
It causes an enhanced immune reaction at the injection site, which causes responding macrophages to signal back to the bone marrow to release more of themselves, via GCSF. But once GCSF does that, the body soon figures out that the "infection" (MPLA) is fake because it does not spread virulently. So we're left with excess macrophages (chiefly, nuetrophils). These have nothing better to do than to home in on endothial inflammation sites. As a result, their populations increase in the cerebrovasculature, leading to BBB repair. But some of them cross the BBB, especially where it happens to be compromised. Some sort of signalling between the neutrophils and the microglia ensues, resulting in activated microglia. But then the same problem occurs, namely, that the infection was fake. So the microglia end up attacking brain plaque, having nothing better to do until they become deactivated over time. Meanwhile, cognitive enhancement sets in.
GCSF is expensive. So is MPLA. Unfortunately, I can only find it for sale from US vendors, apparently because it requires a bacterium to manufacture. Perhaps this situation may change in the near future, however, so I would keep MPLA on the short list.
I would not take Cervarix (or Gardasil, for that matter), even if I were a woman. Dr. Mercola has a strong case against it, and whatever you may think of him, I find his argument is compelling.
IL-33 looks like a better route, IMO.