Hi All,
Here's a brief update on my Asian friend's situation. I spoke to him this evening through a conference call with our mutual friend.
Based on comments from niner and markymark, it looks like the COPD theory is dominant. Based on his symptoms, it's quite plausible. In particular:
His breathing is tight, although less so since starting c60oo. In particular, he says that he can now sleep on his back for something less than half the night, whereas before he was always on his side. He sporadically wheezes, although less so since c60oo. His cough is unproductive (no mucous or blood) which does indeed sound COPDish as opposed to infective or advanced lung cancer. He has some pain in his throat (from coughing?) and upper chest, bilaterally. So it doesn't sound like a tumor, which I would expect to have a more localized pain profile.
His smoking history began at age 15, and continued until just 3 months ago. He was smoking 4 or 5 cigs a day. At that level, he might only be slightly above the level at which, theoretically, smoking is actually beneficial due to hormesis and some lucky DNA (Google Jean Calment). So this is sort of good news, in that he's not particularly primed for lung cancer.
Sun exposure is actually an hour per day (he's quite tan), and he drinks tumeric in water morning and night. No mushrooms at present due to lack of availability.
His back pain has eased since we last spoke, and is now down to a dull ache. So this does indeed sound like his muscles are getting used to sleeping on his back.
He has a well next to his home, from which he draws a pair of buckets of water, as needed. He has been doing this for a long time, except when bedridden, but only in the past few days, he has noticed that the bucket lifting doesn't leave him with sore muscles. In any event, I'm pleased that he has recovered enough to even do this, let alone more easily than when he was healthier. Granted, it's right next to his home, and he gets very little exercise otherwise, apart from a brief daily walk in the neighborhood, but it's encouraging nonetheless.
He confirmed that he's less tired since c60oo. In particular, he said that last night he couldn't sleep, and ended up getting only about an hour. Nonetheless, he said he felt normal in the morning, which was unexpected for him, following sleep deprivation. The only problem was a mild posterior headache, perhaps due to choline depletion, as in an older brain cogitating all night because it can't sleep. When I asked him why he couldn't sleep, he said he just didn't feel tired, and just lay in bed. His sleep hygiene has otherwise been quite regular for a long time, in that he usually gets to bed by 9 and is asleep around 10. This more circumstantial evidence that c60oo isn't just about peak performance and athletic endurance; it's about oxidative stress resistance and oxygen utilization efficiency in general.
No mental changes to report, good or bad. Tinnitus persists as before, which might be neurological or auditory.
The whites of his eyes continue to be white, as opposed to yellow or red. So despite StevesPetRat's comment, looks like we're not going to get any obvious liver data here.
He confirmed he's still taking his daily multivitamin.
Based on his experiences, I think it would be appropriate to do a field trial of Zmapp plus c60oo for ebola victims. Since viruses have no mitochondria, this would create an asymmetric enhancement in favor of the immune system (which might not occur in the case of cancer, by contrast). If anyone out there knows researchers involved in the ebola war, please invite them here.
@niner
Now this is really interesting, in particular because this is the (much more intensively researched) mechanism of action of various resveratrol analogs (and more proximately, the sirtuin class of proteins). They appear to reverse teratogenic epigenetic mutations (in effect, stem cells or their decendents which evolved into cells belonging to the wrong organ, due to pseudomethylation on the part of pollutants acting as de facto gene switches). In paricular (@ 9:50 but the whole video is worthwhile):
My comments regarding stem cells and c60oo were purely by way of analogy. But the notion that it might intervene in stem cell mediadiated tissue repair is tantilizing indeed. A link to the details would be valuable.
In other news related to c60oo experience, my own:
So this morning I awoke with a headache, which managed to evolve into a raging migraine of the once-a-year nauseating variety. I had planned to start taking c60oo, but not quite yet. However, I figured it might be interesting to see if this stuff could intervene, especially in someone naive to the substance. Not that I expected much, as c60oo is more of an antioxidant than an after-the-fact antinflammatory agent (although I've noted comments in this thread regarding reversal of skin inflammation).
Two hours ago, I took 3 mg of the same stuff I shipped to my friend. It did indeed taste like good olive oil, but otherwise did nothing. I was looking forward to tomorrow's gym workout. But as I sat down to write this post, the phone rang, and a friend of mine asked me a series of very complicated technical questions. It was probably half an hour into the call when he mentioned to me that I was speaking twice as fast as him, and faster than I had ever spoken to him before in the 7 years of our friendship, in his recollection, yet he commented that my diction, grammar, and pronunciation were as correct as they normally are for a fluent English speaker. Judging from his side of the conversation, he understood the actual content of my answers well. I was quite interested in the subject matter, but to be sure, this is not the first interesting conversation I've had in my life. When he mentioned it, it did strike me as odd, and must have been the result of the caffeine in the green tea that I'd been sipping this evening. But when I checked the box after hanging up the phone, I realized that I had bought the decaffeinated stuff. It's the closest I've ever come to a James Bond / Austin Powers piracitam trip -- without piracitam (don't try that at home until you've read the piracitam burnout threads). In hindsight, I really don't know what happened. I certainly can't read or type any faster than normal. c60oo? Maybe. If so, then the results were surely accentuated by Super Quercetin (with bromelain -- verbal fucntion enhancer, another thread for another time) and perhaps aspirin (better oxygenation due to thinner blood, which I don't normally take, but for the migraine today). To be sure, I still have the headache. It has moderated somewhat, but probably to an extent which would have happened anyway. Which in a way makes the verbal acceleration all the more remarkable. On the minus side, this might be bad news for me, in the sense that it implies that my brain is loaded with free radicals, unlike most of you healthier lot who received no such similar benefits.
Edited by resveratrol_guy, 23 August 2014 - 03:39 AM.