Fisetin to Clear Senescent Cells
Following studies with mice that showed significant senolytic clearance of senescent cells following large doses of the readily available flavenoid supplement Fisetin, my wife and I (ages 79 and 84) decided to try it. We have just completed two sets of massive Fisetin doses.
We had Life Extension blood-work done in October before the start, and we will have more again next week to observe any changes. The first set of Fisetin doses was on October 22-25 with 800 mg/day for three days followed by 600 mg on the fourth day, for a total of 4 g. I didn't notice much in the way of effects. Perhaps some reduction of small aches and pains and some increase in energy and mental acuity.
For the second set of doses done November 22-26, since we experienced no negative side effects in the first set we decided to increase the dosage a bit and to add 10 mg of BioPerine, a supplement that is reputed to magnify the effects and potency of flavenoids. For five days starting on Thanksgiving we took 500 mg of Fisetin and 10 mg of BioPerine twice per day, for a total of 5 g of Fisetin.
This time. I did experience one negative side effect. A few months ago, about 2 AM in the morning I awoke from a deep sleep and experienced a severe episode of vertigo. I turned over in bed, and the the whole room seemed to tilt. Suddenly, I didn't know which way was up. I staggered to the bathroom and vomited. The symptoms tapered off and disappeared in a few days, but it was a very distributing experience.
On the 2nd day of our 2nd Fisetin series, I experience a recurrence of that vertigo in the middle of the night, not as bad as my initial experience but still rather disturbing. I tolerated this mild vertigo and continued the treatment. My wife had no similar symptoms, and after my last dose I experienced no further vertigo symptoms.
On the positive side, following the second set of dosages I did feel very well, and very sharp and alert. This past weekend I ran my Shetland Sheepdog Taliesin in an AKC Canine Agility Trial in Mt. Vernon, WA, and we did very well, qualifying in 7 runs out of 15 and getting various colored placement ribbons. I was feeling quite sharp, and I even invented a new dog-handling technique that fixed an ongoing problem we were having.
Next week we will do the blood-work again, and I'll report any changes.
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This encompasses 3 senolytics, Fistein, Azithromycin, and Dasatinib.
Dr. Green has a new website targeting https://senolyticstreatment.com/. He points out that there are 4 different types of senolytics. (zombie cells) and there are different treatments which target each one. He suggests using Fistein 1500 mg x 3 consecutive days x every 3 months for aging purposes. (they are using 20mg/kg in Mayo Clinic trials x 2 consecutive days in elderly patients, as yet unpublished results) Azithromycin 500 mg x 3 spread over 1 week x every 3 months. (targets fibroblast) Dasatinib 100 mg x 3 consecutive days x every 3 months. He has set up a compounding pharmacy to make Dasatinib affordable for his patients. I order powder from China. The frequency is more often for treating specific diseases. He believes that Rapamycin slows down senescence, but cannot remove them. Please refer to his website for additional info.
The following is an interview by Dr. Blagosklonny for his Aging article.
Aging, COVID-19 and more Interview with Alan S. Green, M.D., who practices medicine in New York state, and who, in 2016, began to treat patients with rapamycin (Sirolimus), an anti-aging drug. Interview was taken via email on March 31, 2020, by Editor Dr. Blagosklonny for the journal Aging. Question 1: How many patients and for how long have you treated with rapamycin? Answer 1: Patient number 1 is myself, treated for 4 years. An additional 480 patients treated from 3 years to present. Question 2: Rapamycin (Sirolimus) and its analog Everolimus are FDA-approved drugs used in millions of patients with several severe diseases for many years. Based on a few murine models, some people believe that rapamycin may have unacceptable side effects, even though rapamycin extended the health span and life span of mice in these studies. Have you noticed side effects in your patients? Answer 2: Rapamycin in older persons is very beneficial for the brain, heart, muscle, joints, insulin sensitivity, decreasing visceral fat, and prevention various age-related diseases. Rapamycin is a very potent drug and good results dependent on proper dose and interval. My patients show good results with sirolimus [rapamycin] 2 to 8 mg once a week. Major side effect in that range is decrease in activity innate immune system. To extent chronic inflammation is harmful in aging, this is generally beneficial. The basic researchers I follow are Matt Kaeberlein and Veronica Galvan who have recently shown excellent protection against normative aging in heart (dogs) and brain (rats). I have observed those same beneficial results in older humans. Question 3: Z-pak (Azithromycin) that you prescribed to your patients (just in case of possible bacterial complications) is now considered a promising drug to treat COVID-19. Would you like to comment? Also, it was published in Aging by Sargiacomo et al, that Azithromycin and hydroxychloroquine are senolytics, drugs that selectively kill senescent cells. Answer 3: A natural tension always exists between treating physicians who use standard of "reasonable degree of medical certainty" and government scientists who use standard of "definitive proof" and dismiss anything short of definitive proof as "anecdotal". (Perfect is the enemy of Good). As regards recent paper in Aging by Sargiacomo et al, that was an extraordinary important paper connecting COVID-19, aging, senescent cells and senolytics. In 2017 paper, Blagosklonny noted role of Doxycycline and other antibiotics as anti-aging drugs. Azithromycin looks like major drug in prevention and treatment COVID-19. I use same dose used in Cystic fibrosis study (500 mg 3 times a week) in which Azithromycin appears to be acting as senolytic.
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Hello Van. Thanks for this info. Are you able to advise the name of your Chinese supplier for dasatinib? Being in Canada, I cannot see, or be prescribed drugs by Dr. Green and don't know of any age-reversing docs up here. At the moment I am using several "natural" products that replicate a natural rapalogue from Germany as well as berberine/PQQ, Niagen and resveratrol. Due to almost daily migraines, I cannot fast beyond 12 hours. Applying apocynin to specific areas but not seeing or feeling any difference. My main problem seems to be lack of energy, which I attribute to having a few too many zombies. Many thanks!
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I ordered my Dasatinib and Fisetin powders from the following Alibaba supplier. https://hhdpharm.en.alibaba.com/company_profile.html?spm=a2700.galleryofferlist.0.0.362a73f6ugETpH#top-nav-bar. Used Emily. This is the same supplier that furnished Rapa for other members in this forum. Need to make sure that you get 98% Fisetin vs 50%. Both are sold. Dasatinib is 99% only, I believe. I paid $245 for 5 grams Dasatinib, and 50 grams of Fisetin. That includes $50 Fedex shipping. So cost is Dasatinib = 120/5= $24 gram Fisetin = 120/50 = $2.40 gram. This includes shipping. Saved on shipping by ordering both at same time. This does not include Visa CC charge of 3% = $7.20 which is really the cheapest way to pay, and you have CC guarantees. Will update group once I receive it. Noticed that Fisetin on line is starting to get expensive vs just a few months ago. The word is getting out. It takes around 5 grams for one quarterly dose of Fisetin, so those little 30 tab bottles (100mg) they sell are worthless, and expensive. I had no problem with receiving my Rapa order from China which was only a business size envelope delivered by Fedex, but this one is going to be larger. Will have to wait and see. For those without experience using powders, this is the way to go. Buy a jewelers scale that measures to .001 gm. = 1 mg. for about $30. Usually includes calibration weights. The lower the max weight, the more accuracy you get. Mine has a max weight of 20 grams, but goes to 1/1000. You only need to weigh once a week for Rapa and quarterly for senolytics.