I agree with xEva about the inadequacy of SENS to provide viable solutions to aging. To be honest, I am amazed at how people still believe at the promise that SENS can deliver anything useful.
Apart from the technical and research issues, one of the most significant obstacles to their proposed therapies is translation (from laboratory research to clinical application). For example, a main therapy suggested by SENS is stem cell replacement through bone marrow transplant. Currently, there are about 60 000 bone marrow transplants performed each year in the world. Experts believe that with adequate funding and development of facilities, our medical systems can cope with perhaps another 30 to 50 thousand. That's a total of 100 000 bone marrow transplants a year. In order to treat a mere 10% of humanity with SENS-inspired bone marrow transplants of stem cells, we need to reach 700 000 000 people. It doesn't make any sense (oops, excuse the pun!)
If this is the best example of why SENS won't work, then it's even more likely to succeed than I thought. First of all, they are not proposing to do bone marrow transplants. Their ideas about dealing with cell atrophy are more sophisticated, and don't involve xenotransplants. Whatever therapy we are considering, delivering it to the entire planet on Day 1 is not part of the plan, and has nothing to do with the validity of the therapy. At this point in our history, we can't protect the entire population of the world from disease, starvation, war, mis-governance, or natural disaster. That doesn't mean that our efforts to get better at all of those things are without merit.
If you want to cherry-pick the least plausible part of the entire SENS program, I suggest that you look at WILT. However, that doesn't mean the rest of it can't be done.
My example is one of many and it is hardly the best. See here for the full version of my paper:
https://www.academia...ogical_barriers
You say they are not proposing to do bone marrow transplants. But in this paper they contradict you, confirming that bone marrow transplants are a method for delivering stem cells:
Zealley B, de Grey AD. Strategies for engineered negligible senescence. Gerontology. 2013;59(2):183-9.
In any case how do they propose to transfer whatever they are manipulating (cells, genes etc) from the outside to the inside of the human body?
For example, there is a lot of mention of tissue engineering. How do you put this engineered tissue inside the human body? I can’t see any other method apart from a surgical operation. Just to play with numbers again, consider that many surgeons are not able to perform transplants of tissues. How many operations can a surgeon perform in a day (in addition to their routine, existing workload)? How many new surgeons do we need in order to treat 10% of humanity, even over a 10 year period (70 000 000 people a year)? How many times do we need to repeat the operation on the same patient in order to replace another organ? What about follow up, risk of infection, debility, let alone cost? Any major operation involves pre and post treatment modalities which may take at least 2-3 months. If we target several other organs in the body, plus whatever method you think they can employ in order to deliver stem cells (if it is bone marrow transplant, you are looking at several months), and genetic therapies, and vaccines, and immunosuppression, and apoptosis-inducers and, and ...(let alone WILT)...… there won’t be enough months in the year for a patient to have the full treatments.
Niner, I followed your posts for several years now. You are intelligent and educated. If you were a fool I wouldn’t mind so much, but it is frustrating to see clever people falling for this simplistic trash. There is nothing sophisticated about SENS. It reminds me of 3-year olds playing at the beach with plastic buckets and spades, aiming to build a fully functioning skyscraper. It won’t happen.
Edited by Marios Kyriazis, 21 November 2014 - 02:34 PM.