Dr Peter Attia on Rapamycin
Peter Attia is somebody I follow after seeing him in discussions with Dr Rhonda Patrick, both of whom are researchers in longevity. He switched from surgery to longevity and has practices in NYC and San Diego.
Anyhow he was on Joe Rogans podcast and talked at length about longevity and Rapaymycin, including dosages, what biomarkers to look at and side effects (including possible mouth sores). They talk about a number of things, but return to the Rapaymycin over the following half hour with lots of useful information. In here he talks about how he is getting set up to self experiment with this (he still has to get FDA approval for that kind of experiment).
Joe Rogan & Peter Attila starting at 1:06:16
My takeaway, Rapamycin is a "4 day fast in a pill" as he says. There are multiple effects to test for, one glucose resistance (which if is already good then you are unlikely to see an improvement), two immune function (which we have no clinical test for) and three immunoscence (again we have no clinical test for). He mentions that these are all three known benefits you get from a multi day fast. At any rate its only the glucose resistance you can easily measure.
Which makes me wonder what is being accomplished by doing the RAADfest announced blood panel, since (if true) it's only your glucose response that can be measured. Also, I'd put in another plug for multiday water only fasting as a sure fire experimentally verified modality to achieve the same effects and more. But you have to do the fast.
At any rate if you're taking or contemplating Rapamycin you should watch it. The rest of the podcast is talking about sports and such, but still with a longevity interest. For example around 1:45 he talks about how high performance sports actually eats away at longevity. Again getting to a post I wrote about balance in longevity - with some things like exercise, you don't want too little and you don't want too much. They talk about supplementation in general at around 1:54, and lifespan 2:13
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Interesting Dan. I followed Peter Attia for some time when I was interested in ketosis. This is the first time I've heard him talk about rapamycin.
There are some potentially undesired hormonal problems that can come with the caloric restriction of a 4-day fast (reduction of leptin and thyroid hormone T3, an increase in reverse T3, among others), that I suspect won't happen while taking rapamycin. So rapamycin may be a way to get the inhibition of mTOR and enhancement of autophagy without actually restricting calories.
There are some other factors relevant to rapamycin that are being assessed in the Age Management Panel besides glucoregulatory markers, with inflammation being one of them, and IGF-1 being another. Fasting reduces IGF-1, and it may be that rapamycin also reduces IGF-1 even if you continue eating, which some people suspect may be good for human longevity.
Then, inflammation reduction might reasonably be seen after taking rapamycin, in part because it it seems to be a senolytic, or may support the actions of senolytics. A reduction in the prevalence of senescent cells, which contribute to increased inflammation, might also reduce markers of inflammation, which are also in the Age Management Panel.
At this stage of research, it seems really important to me to measure many biomarkers as we self-experiment, because we don't know exactly what these compounds do or how they work in humans, and changes in biomarkers will help us understand these effects. -
I don't think I saw the following mentioned yet in this thread. Dr Attia did 2 podcasts a month or 2 ago that were with some of the top rapa researchers. I found these interviews to be very interesting:
https://peterattiamd.com/davidsabatini/
https://peterattiamd.com/mattkaeberlein/