William D. Johnson

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Metformin and its role in anti-ageing

30 июн. 2021 г.

William D. Johnson

Metformin, the most common drug prescribed for type II diabetes, was discovered in 1922 and first used clinically in France in 1957. It wasn’t until 1972 that it was approved in Canada, followed by the US 23 years later for the treatment of Diabetes. Over the years, millions of diabetic patients have been prescribed Metformin. Now, almost 100 years after its discovery, we have the data and understanding of all the amazing ways that Metformin can slow your ageing.

The wheels of change turn slowly in medical treatments, despite clear evidence of their effectiveness and high safety profile. The first written record of a controlled clinical trial occurred in 1747 aboard a naval ship, the HMS Salisbury. During this age of discovery, it was commonly accepted that after eight weeks at sea, ones’ mouth would begin to rot as Scurvy took hold, leading to open sores and eventual death. Scurvy killed more mariners than anything else. On the Salisbury, Dr James Lind took 12 cases and tried six different remedies. It was apparent after only six days that the two patients given citrus fruits were recovering nicely, while the other remedies were ineffective. It was almost 50 more years before the Royal Navy adopted fruit as a protocol to prevent Scurvy. After all, it was expensive.

TAME (Targeting Ageing with Metformin) 2020 was the first large-scale clinical trial where the drug was tested for its anti-ageing efficacy. The new findings helped shed light on Metformin’s apparent ability to promote healthy ageing. Although the FDA doesn’t even recognize ageing as a legitimate target for clinical trials, let alone accelerating research or development of regenerative medicines. An initiative such as TAME is inspiring and can hopefully facilitate changes within the FDA to begin addressing the core problem of ageing as a disease, rather than the chronic illness that is simply a symptom of the disease of ageing.

Some fascinating conclusions emerged from the massive amount of data collected over treating type II Diabetic patients with Metformin. Despite the fact that Diabetes shortens your life expectancy, diabetics treated with Metformin were living 15% longer than the people without Diabetes and were 30% less likely to develop cancer. Metformin reduces the incidence of almost all age-related chronic diseases, including the horrific pathologies of Alzheimer’s and early onset of dementia.

While we are well on our way to unravelling the mystery of ageing, Lopez-Otin et al. have characterized nine distinct pathways that cause ageing and are generally acknowledged by the people who study this emerging science. Metformin basically turns down the dial on all of them, reducing the speed of ageing.

We now know that Metformin has the following nine effects that are interconnected to all nine ageing pathways:

  • Improves Nutrient Sensing. Deregulated nutrient sensing is a symptom of most age-related metabolic disorders. One significant example would be the hypothalamus telling us we are hungrier than we should be… weight gain as we age is not just a product of slowing metabolism.

  • Enhances Autophagy. The process by which the body clears out damaged cells and recycles the proteins.

  • Strengthens Intracellular Communication. The ability of your cells to talk to each other diminishes as we age. Think hormones, etc.

  • Protects against Macromolecular damage. The damage to your DNA and other macromolecules like proteins and lipids.

  • Delays Stem Cell Ageing. All healing is induced by stem cells. Ageing results from stem cell exhaustion.

  • Enhances Mitochondrial Function. The Mitochondria in your cells are the energy factories for your body.

  • Regulates Transcription. This is the process by which DNA creates RNA to orchestrate gene activity. It becomes faulty with age.

  • Lowers Telomere Attrition. Telomeres protect your DNA when your cells replicate, shortening with each replication, eventually reaching the Hayflick limit (human cells stop dividing) and dying. Most cells replicate 50-70 times. Protecting the telomeres will increase the limit and extend your life.

  • Reduces Cellular Senescence. The damaged cells and those that reach the Hayflick limit are supposed to die and be recycled. Some cells remain alive even though they no longer function for their purpose, known as senescent cells. These zombie cells wreak havoc, producing toxins and inflammatory elements known as cytokines. Their buildup causes age-related chronic inflammation, which in turn causes chronic diseases.

Any one of these nine effects would make considering Metformin worth it, taken together the argument becomes seriously compelling. My goal is to introduce you to information that will slow or even reverse your ageing. Stem cell therapy, given four times a year, is the absolute gold standard for Regenerative Medicine, but it remains prohibitively expensive.

Metformin, now a generic, is inexpensive and can cost as little as a few dollars a month. Talk to your Doctor, most will prescribe off label because of its high safety profile. Hopefully, the TAME trial will usher in the era when Doctors regularly prescribe Metformin for its anti-ageing characteristics rather than just an intervention for prediabetics. We don’t know yet but imagine how many years you can add to your health span with this one intervention, especially if you don’t have Diabetes.

Western medicine has done a great job extending lifespan but not health span. Treating the symptoms of age-related chronic disease rather than its cause, the disease of ageing, we are now simply sick longer. I don’t want to live a few extra decades being ill and frail. It’s not worth it. The newest science shows that we can be vital right up until our last few months of life. A healthy death occurs over a matter of months, not years. Our health span should last almost as long as our lifespan. Metformin might be the most remarkable single intervention that we have to shorten the gap between healthspan and lifespan based on cost.

Therefore, it is my first suggestion to you because it will cost you almost nothing. I take it, and like David Sinclair, the author of “Lifespan” suggests, “I don’t leave home without it”.

The only downside to Metformin is that it can reduce your regular exercise-related muscle mass gain, yet we know now your strength increases progressively. According to Dr David Sinclair (my hero), this effect can be mitigated by not taking Metformin on days you exercise. For those of us who exercise every day, there is the one week on then off method.

Sinclair surmises with the statement that it’s vanity vs longevity. For once, I don’t entirely agree with him. I think Metformin will extend your longevity and will keep you looking younger for longer. That’s not just vanity rather longevity with vanity, and it’s smart. I work out regularly, and my muscles may not bulk as they used to, pre-Metformin. However, I like the idea of being strong and lithe, and my suits fit better.

This is the first of a series of blogs that will expose you to the leading interventions available in the industry today based on cost, effectiveness and simplicity of application. They are all safe, and the data supports it.

Metformin, the most common drug prescribed for type II diabetes, was discovered in 1922 and first used clinically in France in 1957. It wasn’t until 1972 that it was approved in Canada, followed by the US 23 years later for the treatment of Diabetes. Over the years, millions of diabetic patients have been prescribed Metformin. Now, almost 100 years after its discovery, we have the data and understanding of all the amazing ways that Metformin can slow your ageing.

The wheels of change turn slowly in medical treatments, despite clear evidence of their effectiveness and high safety profile. The first written record of a controlled clinical trial occurred in 1747 aboard a naval ship, the HMS Salisbury. During this age of discovery, it was commonly accepted that after eight weeks at sea, ones’ mouth would begin to rot as Scurvy took hold, leading to open sores and eventual death. Scurvy killed more mariners than anything else. On the Salisbury, Dr James Lind took 12 cases and tried six different remedies. It was apparent after only six days that the two patients given citrus fruits were recovering nicely, while the other remedies were ineffective. It was almost 50 more years before the Royal Navy adopted fruit as a protocol to prevent Scurvy. After all, it was expensive.

TAME (Targeting Ageing with Metformin) 2020 was the first large-scale clinical trial where the drug was tested for its anti-ageing efficacy. The new findings helped shed light on Metformin’s apparent ability to promote healthy ageing. Although the FDA doesn’t even recognize ageing as a legitimate target for clinical trials, let alone accelerating research or development of regenerative medicines. An initiative such as TAME is inspiring and can hopefully facilitate changes within the FDA to begin addressing the core problem of ageing as a disease, rather than the chronic illness that is simply a symptom of the disease of ageing.

Some fascinating conclusions emerged from the massive amount of data collected over treating type II Diabetic patients with Metformin. Despite the fact that Diabetes shortens your life expectancy, diabetics treated with Metformin were living 15% longer than the people without Diabetes and were 30% less likely to develop cancer. Metformin reduces the incidence of almost all age-related chronic diseases, including the horrific pathologies of Alzheimer’s and early onset of dementia.

While we are well on our way to unravelling the mystery of ageing, Lopez-Otin et al. have characterized nine distinct pathways that cause ageing and are generally acknowledged by the people who study this emerging science. Metformin basically turns down the dial on all of them, reducing the speed of ageing.

We now know that Metformin has the following nine effects that are interconnected to all nine ageing pathways:

  • Improves Nutrient Sensing. Deregulated nutrient sensing is a symptom of most age-related metabolic disorders. One significant example would be the hypothalamus telling us we are hungrier than we should be… weight gain as we age is not just a product of slowing metabolism.

  • Enhances Autophagy. The process by which the body clears out damaged cells and recycles the proteins.

  • Strengthens Intracellular Communication. The ability of your cells to talk to each other diminishes as we age. Think hormones, etc.

  • Protects against Macromolecular damage. The damage to your DNA and other macromolecules like proteins and lipids.

  • Delays Stem Cell Ageing. All healing is induced by stem cells. Ageing results from stem cell exhaustion.

  • Enhances Mitochondrial Function. The Mitochondria in your cells are the energy factories for your body.

  • Regulates Transcription. This is the process by which DNA creates RNA to orchestrate gene activity. It becomes faulty with age.

  • Lowers Telomere Attrition. Telomeres protect your DNA when your cells replicate, shortening with each replication, eventually reaching the Hayflick limit (human cells stop dividing) and dying. Most cells replicate 50-70 times. Protecting the telomeres will increase the limit and extend your life.

  • Reduces Cellular Senescence. The damaged cells and those that reach the Hayflick limit are supposed to die and be recycled. Some cells remain alive even though they no longer function for their purpose, known as senescent cells. These zombie cells wreak havoc, producing toxins and inflammatory elements known as cytokines. Their buildup causes age-related chronic inflammation, which in turn causes chronic diseases.

Any one of these nine effects would make considering Metformin worth it, taken together the argument becomes seriously compelling. My goal is to introduce you to information that will slow or even reverse your ageing. Stem cell therapy, given four times a year, is the absolute gold standard for Regenerative Medicine, but it remains prohibitively expensive.

Metformin, now a generic, is inexpensive and can cost as little as a few dollars a month. Talk to your Doctor, most will prescribe off label because of its high safety profile. Hopefully, the TAME trial will usher in the era when Doctors regularly prescribe Metformin for its anti-ageing characteristics rather than just an intervention for prediabetics. We don’t know yet but imagine how many years you can add to your health span with this one intervention, especially if you don’t have Diabetes.

Western medicine has done a great job extending lifespan but not health span. Treating the symptoms of age-related chronic disease rather than its cause, the disease of ageing, we are now simply sick longer. I don’t want to live a few extra decades being ill and frail. It’s not worth it. The newest science shows that we can be vital right up until our last few months of life. A healthy death occurs over a matter of months, not years. Our health span should last almost as long as our lifespan. Metformin might be the most remarkable single intervention that we have to shorten the gap between healthspan and lifespan based on cost.

Therefore, it is my first suggestion to you because it will cost you almost nothing. I take it, and like David Sinclair, the author of “Lifespan” suggests, “I don’t leave home without it”.

The only downside to Metformin is that it can reduce your regular exercise-related muscle mass gain, yet we know now your strength increases progressively. According to Dr David Sinclair (my hero), this effect can be mitigated by not taking Metformin on days you exercise. For those of us who exercise every day, there is the one week on then off method.

Sinclair surmises with the statement that it’s vanity vs longevity. For once, I don’t entirely agree with him. I think Metformin will extend your longevity and will keep you looking younger for longer. That’s not just vanity rather longevity with vanity, and it’s smart. I work out regularly, and my muscles may not bulk as they used to, pre-Metformin. However, I like the idea of being strong and lithe, and my suits fit better.

This is the first of a series of blogs that will expose you to the leading interventions available in the industry today based on cost, effectiveness and simplicity of application. They are all safe, and the data supports it.

Ready to experience

Your Best Self?

 Book a Free Consultation

Узнайте, как клиника Демареста может помочь вам вернуть контроль над своим здоровьем и оптимизировать ваше благополучие. Свяжитесь с нами для персонализированной консультации.

Moo 2, Thepkasattri Road Koh Kaew, Muang

+66 76 390 141

cs@demarestclinic.com

Ready to experience

Your Best Self?

 Book a Free Consultation

Узнайте, как American Clinic может помочь вам вернуть контроль над вашим здоровьем и оптимизировать ваше благополучие. Свяжитесь с нами для персонализированной консультации.

Moo 2, Thepkasattri Road Koh Kaew, Muang

+66 76 390 141

cs@demarestclinic.com

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