Anti Aging Theories/Technology

Resveratrol may remove Amyloid Plaque, an Anti-aging Marker

Amyloid plaque is a byproduct of the cross-linking of Protein and sugar. It is a structured waste product that is not broken down by your body. It is one of the signs of Aging. In the book the end of Aging by Aubrey De Grey, he talks about a concept known as bio-remediation. How do we deal with the pollution of the body more effective. Looking at the problem of aging like cleaning up a toxic super-fund site. Resveratrol in high dosages may be one of the first answers to break down the structured waste in the body.

Ionizing Radiation Extends Life- Russian Study.

Low dosage radiation may actually be evolving the human species. “That which does not kill us, makes us stronger.” Nietchzse Weak cells are being killed off and stronger cells are replacing them with enhanced immune capability. Adaptation is an ongoing process, we have a tendency to view pollutants as our enemy because they may just end up killing us.

Low radiation doses extend human life, Russian biologist says. Ionizing radiation affects genes, which are responsible for cell ageing.

Billions of cells are exposed to natural ionizing radiation. Evolution should have created an effective means for protecting cells from small radiation doses. Thus, the fact that X-rays and gamma rays in low and medium doses extend life of various laboratory animals on 10-29% is not surprising.

Small doses of radiation promote immunity and cell division, as well as initiate other mechanisms of cell defense. But another explanation exists. Russian biologist tends to think that exposure to radiation damages DNA molecules and causes formation of free radicals, which in their turn, lead to premature aging and death of cells. However, first cells that die are usually the most sensitive to stress and unable to repair their DNA. Death of these cells does no harm to the whole organism, because new healthy cells quickly replace dead ones. Perhaps, this is the way an organism reacts on low radiation does and on any other externally induced stress.

Stress and radiation probably affect either some genes of tolerance to stress, responsible for DNA reparation and for increasing antioxidant protection, or apoptosis genes. Scientists already know some of said genes, which launch processes, slowing down ageing process.

Source

528 Hz Miracle Frequency Solfeggio Latin Scale

I am developing a radionically enhanced gas additive called Miracle Miles utilizing the 528 Hz frequency, which is known as the Miracle frequency according to Len Horowitz author of the Biological Apocalypse.
The Miracle Miles product has in trials been getting an increase of up to 25% improvement of gas mileage. Below is a video of the 528 Hz frequency.

Tuning the DNA through Sound, The Key to Healing Disease

The next wave of medicine is through using sound. This article describes Disease as a state of disharmony. The song of the DNA is out of tune. In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. John 1 King James Bible.

With the Tower of Babel, the Word of God was confused and the song lost. Man falls from the Garden because he can no longer hear the Word of God. God is a frequency, he is sound. Interference patterns, disharmonic sounds disrupt the proper replication of DNA. The keys for Age Reversal or Physical Immortality will be found when the proper tones of God are increased in magnitude.
When set to music, colon cancer sounds kind of eerie. That’s the finding of Gil Alterovitz, a research fellow at Harvard Medical School who is developing a computer program that translates protein and gene expression into music. In his acoustic translation, harmony represents good health, and discord indicates disease.

At any given time in each of our cells, thousands of genes are churning out their molecular products while thousands more lie senescent. The profile of which genes are on versus off is constantly changing–with specific diseases such as cancer, for example.

Searching for a more simplified way to represent the complex library of information inherent in gene expression, Alterovitz decided to represent those changes with music. He hopes that doctors will one day be able to use his music to detect health-related changes in gene expression early via a musical slip into discord, potentially improving a patient’s outcome.

The first step in the gene-to-sound conversion was to pare down multiple measurements to a few fundamental signals, each of which could be represented by a different note. Together, the notes would form a harmonic chord in normal, healthy states and become increasingly out of tune as key physiological signs go awry, signaling disease.

Alterovitz employed mathematical modeling to determine relationships between physiological signals. Much like the various systems in an automobile, many physiological signs work in synchrony to keep a body healthy. “These signals [are] not isolated parts,” says Alterovitz. “Like in a car, one gear is working with other gears to control, for example, power steering. Similarly, there are lots of correlations between physiological variables. If heart rate is higher, other variables will move together in response, and you can simplify that redundancy and information.”
Using data collected from a study of protein expression in colon cancer, Alterovitz analyzed more than three thousand related proteins involved in the disease. He whittled down the thousands of proteins to four key networks, using various genetic databases that catalog relationships between genes and proteins. He then assigned a note to each network, and together, these notes formed a harmonic chord. He compared the “music” of normal, healthy human data sets to that of the colon-cancer samples and found that, according to his model, colon cancer sounded “inharmonious.”

Researchers may be able to translate other diseases into music by “tuning” the system that Alterovitz has developed. For example, researchers can identify protein networks related to the disorder of interest and then assign notes that, in combination, form inharmonious chords, compared with their healthy counterparts.

He adds that the technique may have applications outside medicine, such as for simplifying information for air-traffic controllers, and in any other industry that requires analysis of large data sets. There is also an opportunity to use protein music purely for music’s sake: a DJ in the Boston area has expressed interest in playing Alterovitz’s “music” in local bars–a potential revenue stream for musician and mathematician alike. Source

Reverse Dementia and Possibly Aging with InfraRed Helmut

Viewing Aging as a Disease, I am most intrigued by potential technologies that reverse conditions without the aid of nutrients. I have never seen eliminating nutritional deficiencies as a means to reverse aging symptoms. It may slow down aging but never reverse. Of course proper nutrition is a pre-requisite for Age Reversal but not the answer in itself.
It appears to me that Aging is a program that kicks in at certain points in life. All of a sudden someone gets old rapidly, the cause may be a trauma-like event such as a failed relationship, death or a lost dream. There is a rush of feelings that one is getting old or that life is passing you by. You look in the mirror and see new wrinkles a grey hair or two, a slight paunch and an overall decline in the level of enthusiasm for the future. Is this real? Or is it a symptom of a program kicking in? We all know about the baby program for women, one day bam their hips start to gyrate and they look at babies with swooning looks usually reserved for Rock Stars and Meatheads.
Is it possible to turn off this program or even reverse it like the new Brad Pitt movie called Benjamin Button based on a short story by F. Scot Fitzgerald; where a man is born Old and Ages in Reverse, just like Mork from Ork! Some of the keys to Age Reversal may be found in the application of Infrared light.

Two months ago Clem Fennell was fading fast.The victim of an aggressive type of dementia, the 57-year-old businessmen was unable to answer the phone, order a meal or string more than a couple of words together.In desperation, his family agreed to try a revolutionary new treatment – a bizarre-looking, experimental helmet devised by a British GP that bathes the brain in infra-red light twice a day.
To their astonishment, Mr Fennel began to make an astonishing recovery in just three weeks. “My husband, Clem, was fading away. It is as if he is back” said his wife Vickey Fennell, 55. “His personality has started to show again. We are absolutely thrilled.”

While the helmet has yet to be proven in clinical trials, the family say the effects of the 10 minute sessions are incredible. Mr Fennell can now hold conversations and go shopping unaccompanied.
The treatment is the brainchild of Dr Gordon Dougal, a County Durham GP. He believes the device could eventually help thousands of dementia patients.
“Potentially, this is hugely significant,” said Dr Dougal, who is based in Easington, County Durham and is a director of Virulite, a medical research company.

Developed with Sunderland University, the helmet has 700 LED lights that penetrate the skull. They are thought to be the right wavelength to stimulate the growth of brain cells, slowing down the decline in memory and brain function and reversing symptoms of dementia.
Clem Fennell – the head of a family engineering firm in Cincinnati, Ohio – travelled to the UK after neurologists told him nothing could stop the decline of his dementia. The family’s friends had seen a report about the helmet on CBS.
“Honestly I can tell you that within ten days, the deterioration was stopped, then we started to see improvements,” said Mrs Fennell, from North Kentucky. “He started to respond to people more quickly when they talked to him.”
Three weeks later, the father of two is still making gradual improvements. His daughter, 22-year-old Maggie said: “When we go to the restaurant we usually have to order his meals for him, now he can order for himself.” “Dr Dougal has been a godsend to our family. There was nothing anyone could do to help Clem until now.”
It is too soon to say whether Dr Dougal’s invention could help other sufferers. The symptoms of Alzheimer’s disease and dementia can vary from day to day – and relapses are not unusual. And not all patients may benefit from the treatment.
Dr Dougal stressed that a full, clinically controlled trial would be needed before his anti-dementia helmet could be licensed for public use. A trial of 100 patients is expected to start later this year.

“I made it clear to the Fennells that I didn’t know for a fact whether it would work or not, but the results are good,” said Dr Dougal. “He was monosyllabic when I first saw him, but if I ring up now he will answer the phone. He didn’t have the verbal skills to do that three weeks ago.”
The Fennells have been told they can take the prototype helmet back to the US with them so they can continue the treatment at home.
Commercial versions of the helmet will include 700 LEDs and cost around £10,000.
The Alzheimer’s Society said: “’A treatment that reverses the effects of dementia rather than just temporarily halting its symptoms could change the lives of the hundreds of thousands of people who live with this devastating condition.
‘Non-thermal near infra-red treatment for people with dementia is a potentially interesting technique. We look forward to further research to determine whether it could help improve cognition in humans. Only then can we begin to investigate whether near infra-red could benefit people with dementia.’
Source