.. Longo's "immune regeneration" studies are only on bone marrow stem cells, not the functional immune system; they offer evidence of regeneration, but none on cell-level rejuvenation; and the human study showed only a nonsignificant trend towards changes in the lymphoid:myeloid ratio which promptly reverts to baseline shortly after the fast ends.
It's not "only on bone marrow stem cells". In mice, they also kept track of lymphoid and myeloid cells:
At the end of six cycles of treatment, mice in the PF group [prolonged fasting] also showed normal or close to normal levels of lymphoid cells and normal ratios of lymphoid and myeloid cells (L/M) (Figure 1E, right panel).
Regarding humans and 72h:
the results from a phase I clinical trial indicate that 72 but not 24 hr of PF in combination with chemotherapy were associated with normal lymphocyte counts and maintenance of a normal lineage balance in WBCs (Figure 1F).
If you look at Figure 1F, it does not look "nonsignificant". To the contrary, it looks like 72h fasting protected lymphocytes from destruction by chemo seen in the control group.
Also, in mice again, they tied it neatly together:
In agreement with the effect of PF on the recovery in WBC numbers and improvement in lymphoid/myeloid ratio, results of fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS) analyses for stem cell populations indicated an improved preservation of LT-HSCs and ST-HSCs and the enhanced resistance to the myeloid bias in the PF group after six cycles of CP treatment in mice (Figures 1G and 1H).
As for functionality of the immune sys, they transplanted bone marrow cells from the treated mice to the recipient mice and then took measurements at 16 weeks:
BM cells collected from mice treated with either CP or PF + CP were transplanted into the recipient mice. The chimerism of donor-derived cells in PB and that in BM was determined 16 weeks after primary BM transplantation. The ratio of lymphocytes to myeloid cells (L/M) in the reconstituted blood was also measured.(Figure 1I).
Then they studied aged mice and restored their biased ratio to that of young mice:
We therefore investigated if PF cycles can correct this bias in aged mice. Results from 18-month-old mice indicate that eight cycles (!) of PF could reverse the age-dependent myeloid bias in HSC subtypes and reverse the effect of aging on WBC number in whole blood (Figures 2F and 2G), .... Taken together, these results suggest that PF cycles can also stimulate the HSCs in a chemotherapy-independent manner, which leads to a lineage-balanced hematopoietic regeneration.
Regarding your "lymphoid:myeloid ratio which promptly reverts to baseline shortly after the fast ends" -- where did you see that? Besides, regeneration mainly takes place during the refeeding phase, which is after the fast ends. Maybe you mean that soon after refeeding it went back to the biased baseline? Admittedly, It's a hairy study, I did not see it, but maybe I missed it -? That would be a real bummer, if after all that effort it reverted to baseline.
Thanks Michael
But guys, did you notice that it takes 5 to 8 cycles to revive an aged or damaged immune sys? What makes you think that "not eating food for a week or two" --just once-- would suffice?
oh yeah: Prolonged Fasting Reduces IGF-1/PKA to Promote Hematopoietic-Stem-Cell-Based Regeneration and Reverse Immunosuppression, 2014
Edited by xEva, 18 May 2017 - 11:38 PM.