LOG- C60+olive oil on 3 mice at home: a lifespan study
#121
Posted 03 September 2012 - 07:46 PM
mice-020912.JPG 40.67KB 5 downloads - http://agevivo.com/l...mice-020912.avi
Here are photos of them while having C60oo on bread
bw020912.JPG 61.13KB 6 downloads w020912.JPG 45.16KB 6 downloads bb020912.JPG 43.42KB 4 downloads
#122
Posted 08 September 2012 - 03:48 PM
#123
Posted 08 September 2012 - 06:29 PM
#124
Posted 09 September 2012 - 09:19 AM
Here is a picture of them this morning before the feeding: 3mice090912.JPG 141.51KB 17 downloads
Here are pictures of them eating C60oo on bread just after: bb090912.JPG 102.78KB 16 downloads bw090912.JPG 163.88KB 12 downloads w090912.JPG 108.6KB 9 downloads
#125
Posted 09 September 2012 - 12:06 PM
Figure VI.1. Survival curves for females of 12 inbred strains of laboratory mice.
http://research.jax....LifeStudy2.html
Attached Files
#126
Posted 09 September 2012 - 12:55 PM
#127
Posted 09 September 2012 - 01:11 PM
Answer is indeed here: http://www.longecity...post__p__529265 My mice were bought in a petshop and are therefore (contrary to labs) not of a specific strain. The average lifespan is numerically the same as median lifespan in mice (mice are not like bees or ants) and in a non-SPF environment one would expect it to be a few months below 26 months.This might have been mentioned earlier in this thread, but do you know the species of mice you have at home? If so, what is the median or average lifespan?
#128
Posted 09 September 2012 - 07:10 PM
#129
Posted 15 September 2012 - 10:43 PM
#130
Posted 16 September 2012 - 09:07 AM
Great log!
Great work you are doing!
I am following your log with great interest.
Keep it up (and the mice too )!
#131
Posted 16 September 2012 - 09:37 AM
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Here is also a video: The black-and-white mouse (mostly black but with white belly) is the one that goes on the platform the most, but they all three go from time to time.
Edited by AgeVivo, 16 September 2012 - 09:37 AM.
#132
Posted 16 September 2012 - 05:59 PM
#133
Posted 16 September 2012 - 10:29 PM
I am sending you a PM to clarify your question, and then discuss it here or were appropriate.Purified water? Tap water has fluoride and other harmful contaminants so purified water may help keep the mice healthy and smart.
#134
Posted 22 September 2012 - 02:41 AM
#135
Posted 22 September 2012 - 11:13 AM
(I could have answered that they all died, just for fun and to see reactions , but I guess the reactions would have been too strong for it to be perceived as a nice joke )
Edited by AgeVivo, 22 September 2012 - 11:14 AM.
#136
Posted 22 September 2012 - 11:47 AM
(I could have answered that they all died, just for fun and to see reactions , but I guess the reactions would have been too strong for it to be perceived as a nice joke )
Not only died, but died in horrible agony with massive tumors that appeared overnight. That would have created some excitement!
#137
Posted 22 September 2012 - 12:20 PM
Lmao.(I could have answered that they all died, just for fun and to see reactions , but I guess the reactions would have been too strong for it to be perceived as a nice joke )
Not only died, but died in horrible agony with massive tumors that appeared overnight. That would have created some excitement!
Well at least that's not the case here. Is it 25 months in yet?! Lol times takes forever.
#138
Posted 23 September 2012 - 08:40 AM
3miceC_230912.JPG 74.94KB 5 downloads 3 mice: what game can we do together?
3miceB_230912.JPG 91.07KB 11 downloads White mouse going below black-and-white one to steel the wheel place ("my turn !")
3miceA_230912.JPG 103.05KB 18 downloads Everyone on a task
Pictures of them taking C60+olive oil on bread
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Edited by AgeVivo, 23 September 2012 - 08:42 AM.
#139
Posted 28 September 2012 - 07:37 PM
On this coming Monday, October 1st, AgeVivo's mice will be about 22 months old. The average life span of laboratory mice is said to be around 26 months. If we take 78 years as the average life span for humans, then one month in a mouse' life will equate to 36 months or three years in the average human life span. In that case, AgeVivo's mice would have been about 54 years old in human terms when he began administering C60oo to them on the first of June. Four months later, on this coming Monday, October 1st, they'll be the human equivalent of 66 years of age, and they'll have survived the human equivalent of 12 years of C60oo administration with no apparent toxicity. They should reach their human-equivalent median life expectancy of 78 on the 1st of February, 2013, and should be the human equivalent of 90 on June 1, 2013. As of February 1, 2013, they'd pass the 24-year C60oo administration milestone, and as of June 1, 2013, they'd have reached the human equivalent of 36 years on C60oo (assuming that nothing untoward happens to them between now and then).
AgeVivo has noted that pet store mice probably won't live as long as laboratory mice that are kept in a controlled environment. Let's assume that the median/mean life span for pet store mice is 24 months. Also, AgeVivo's mice aren't being allowed to smoke or drink or drive their Harleys the wrong way down one-way streets. Consequently, let's suppose that AgeVivo's mice correspond to slightly healthier-than-average humans who have an average life span of 80. In that case, one month in the life of AgeVivo's mice would translate into 40 months or 3⅓ years in the life of a human. AgeVivo's mice would have been the human equivalent of 60 when he began feeding them buckyballs in olive oil on the first of June, and they will be the human equivalent of 73⅓ on Monday. At that rate, they will reach their median human-equivalent life expectancy of 80 on the first of December, with the human equivalent of 100 coming next June 1st (2013). As of this coming Monday, they will have braved C60oo ingestion for the human-equivalent period of 13⅓ years. By next June 1st, if they should survive that long, this number would reach the human equivalent of 40 years of C60oo intake.
At a minimum, AgeVivo's mice have already prospered for the human equivalent of 12-or-a-little-more years of C60oo administration, a fact that I find comforting.
At a minimum, AgeVivo's mice have already prospered for the human equivalent of 12-or-a-little-more years of C60oo administration, a fact that I find comforting.
(This sentence was supposed to be the last sentence in the above post.)
#140
Posted 28 September 2012 - 08:41 PM
To my mind, the most important aspect of AgeVivo's three-mouse study is the safety issue. It will be wonderful if his pet mice enjoy extended life spans, but the key question in my book is, "Is C60oo safe?" If it is, then we can explore C60oo administration with some confidence; if it isn't, we may need to fall back and regroup.
Well, The Baati paper was actually a tox test; they were trying to elicit toxic effects with large doses, and not only did they not find any significant toxicities but the rats lived a lot longer than the controls. That makes me feel a little better about it, even if they're rats, and there were only six of them. At least rats are mammals. It's too bad that efficacy and tox tests for life extension agents take so bloody long.
#141
Posted 28 September 2012 - 10:02 PM
#142
Posted 28 September 2012 - 11:32 PM
To my mind, the most important aspect of AgeVivo's three-mouse study is the safety issue. It will be wonderful if his pet mice enjoy extended life spans, but the key question in my book is, "Is C60oo safe?" If it is, then we can explore C60oo administration with some confidence; if it isn't, we may need to fall back and regroup.
Well, The Baati paper was actually a tox test; they were trying to elicit toxic effects with large doses, and not only did they not find any significant toxicities but the rats lived a lot longer than the controls. That makes me feel a little better about it, even if they're rats, and there were only six of them. At least rats are mammals. It's too bad that efficacy and tox tests for life extension agents take so bloody long.
Thanks, niner! Of course, you're absolutely right: I should have prefaced my remarks with a link to the Baati paper (Full Text Reference), but I didn't think of it. The Baati study is the archetypical C60-in-olive-oil toxicity experiment, and it points to a lifelong absence of C60oo toxicity (along with other supporting studies). AgeVivo's experiment is a "quick-and-dirty" effort to replicate the Baati results. And I mournfully agree that it will probably take years for a university team to secure the approvals and the funding to initiate a replicative study of their own, followed by years of longevity testing, and then six months to a year before they can write up their results, get them peer-reviewed, and published in the public domain. (Sigh!) But thanks again for correcting and clarifying my comments.
#143
Posted 30 September 2012 - 09:15 AM
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#144
Posted 06 October 2012 - 10:20 PM
Edited by AgeVivo, 06 October 2012 - 10:22 PM.
#145
Posted 07 October 2012 - 06:54 PM
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and some picture of them in the cage. We'll see if the illness is temporary. I patted her in my hands, she seemed to appreciate, I have not perceived any reaction of pain from her when caressing her and didn't feel under-skin bumps either; I guess it's more like a cold.
While talking about small problems, for quite some time the 3 mice have some irritation on their nose and have lost vibrissae; I don't bother about that because the same happens in labs and I was told it is the metal tip of the water bottle that irritates slightly when they drink and there is not much one can do (when you put water in a cuve the first reaction is to fill the cuve with straw/litter).
all1_091012.jpg 67.14KB 3 downloads all2_091012.jpg 33.05KB 1 downloads
Edited by AgeVivo, 07 October 2012 - 06:55 PM.
#146
Posted 09 October 2012 - 07:16 PM
Yesterday evening she was in a bad shape: Her big respiration was more like gasps. But I thought it would be temporary. No. This morning I found her not moving. She was solid, I put her in a zip bag, in paper, in a freezer and I am going to investigate tonight what she might have had. In case some people can't stand the sight of organs/blood/other, I am planning not to put the autopsy pictures here. Perhaps in a subform thread for paid memberships, so that it is accessible by acquainted persons.
The white mouse did not look "old", really (see pictures above), so I am not concluding anything before seeing what happens to the other 2 mice, who for now are looking good. I wonder what may have happened to the white mouse: if it is ageing (and associated frailty/senstitivity to diseases), if she hurt herself by ingesting a slight piece of woodstick I gave them early last week (sometimes I give such sticks with mini "candies/vitamins for mice", it's not supposed to be bad), if it is the few cornflakes I gave on saturday (I do that from time to time I'm sure it is not that), if she fell and hurt herself, if the recent C60oo I gave was incorrectly prepared or if it has side effects and shouldn't therefore be given at old age, or not be given weekly for too long... I doubt I the autopsy will tell (I don't have specialized equipment) but I'll try.
PS: my wife tells me she was quite sure she would die overnight; so I have been too confident
Edited by AgeVivo, 09 October 2012 - 07:41 PM.
#147
Posted 09 October 2012 - 10:42 PM
Im wondering if there is not someone in the community who has the equipment etc to do a thourogh autopsy with tests etc?
Edited by Logic, 09 October 2012 - 10:43 PM.
#148
Posted 09 October 2012 - 10:49 PM
Otherwise, I have found the body in very good shape. No sign of hypertension, heart trouble, kidney failure, liver failure, etc.
#149
Posted 10 October 2012 - 07:55 AM
#150
Posted 10 October 2012 - 10:28 AM
+1, can't access the topic fo the autopsy, yet I am very interested by its conclusions.
That says I don't have the permission to view it.
Also tagged with one or more of these keywords: buckyballs, fullerenes, c60, mouse, mice, lifespan, olive oil, home, project, life extension
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