This
Fullerene derivatives induce premature senescence: a new toxicity paradigm or novel biomedical applications.
http://www.ncbi.nlm....pubmed/20045429
is interesting.
Very!
So is the senescence caused by chemically modified fullerene derivative tris carboxyl fullerene adduct (tris-C(60)) desireable, or does it kill off older cells too soon is the question here.
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This stuff looks interesting for killing off senescent cells, but no real research I can find.
http://www.salvestrol.ca/index.aspAn objective viewpoint with interesting responses:
http://www.quackomet...trade-offs.htmlQuote:
I would encourage people to have some patience here. I understand the value of a Quackometer, but I don’t think there’s evidence to include salvestrols.
I have met Gerry Potter twice. He is Professor of Medicinal Medicine and Director of the Cancer Drug Discovery Group at the School of Pharmacy at De Montford University, in Leicester. He is genuine, sincere, and a solid scientist. See
http://www.dmu.ac.uk...res_gpotter.jsp.
The science behind salvestrols starts with Gerry’s work on resveratrol (found in red grapes), which triggers an enzyme that is present in every cancer cell to produce a compound called piceatannol, which then attacks the cancer cell, and the cancer cell alone.He developed a drug to mimic the role of resveratrol in fighting cancer, which is going through clinical trials. He then asked the question, “Since nature did not need a drug to trigger the enzymes, the enzyme must exist in nature. So where is it?”
After analyzing every kind of food, his team found it in abundance in organic food, and named the family of compounds salvestrols. When ripe fruits and vegetables are attacked by fungus, which happens all the time, they develop the salvestrols as a natural defence. When we eat the plants, the salvestrols in the food trigger the enzymes in any cancer cell to produce piceatannol, which then attacks the cancer.
Having discovered this, his team searched for plants that had the highest level of salvestrols, and stared testing to see if the compound would fight an active cancer if eaten as a supplement. When they discovered that it seemed that they did, he helped create the Nature’s Defence to sell the food supplements as Fruitforce; these are simply concentrated salvestrols, taken from fruit.
The salvestrols are currently undergoing clinical trials in London, Dublin and Malaysia, and it will be several years until these are complete. Until then, all evidence of their effectiveness is rightly considered “anecdotal”. That word covers everything from “I heard it at the bus stop” to (in the case of salvestrols) evidence from doctors supervising cancer patients who are using the salvestrols. It is not true that all anecdotes are nearly worthless. Some are; some are not. It depends on the source of the evidence.
As to the company being formed, this was the best way to get the salvestrols distributed so that people with cancer could benefit from them, and so that a body of informal evidence could be gathered. The income goes back into further research.
Cancer is such an insidious disease that I really welcome a development such as this. It is completely right that we should cast a skeptical eye on new developments, since the world is full of scams and quackeries, but this one deserves to be given patience while the clinical trials are proceeding.
Sincerely,
Guy Dauncey
Canada
Edited by Logic, 15 June 2012 - 12:58 PM.