It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
originally posted by: Caver78
Yet no one noticed the aging mice were only 200 days old?
I've had a pet mouse for 5 years with no such physical symptoms such as alopecia and only little stiffness. I'm suspicious about the mice used in this study. And NO I'm NOT kidding.
Are there breeds of mice that age in less than 1/2 the normal time out there?
...the average mouse lifespan is only about 12 months outdoors, indoors, this number can climb to 2 to 3 years.
originally posted by: Caver78
Yet no one noticed the aging mice were only 200 days old?
I've had a pet mouse for 5 years with no such physical symptoms such as alopecia and only little stiffness. I'm suspicious about the mice used in this study. And NO I'm NOT kidding.
Are there breeds of mice that age in less than 1/2 the normal time out there?
originally posted by: Caver78
Yet no one noticed the aging mice were only 200 days old?
I've had a pet mouse for 5 years with no such physical symptoms such as alopecia and only little stiffness. I'm suspicious about the mice used in this study. And NO I'm NOT kidding.
Are there breeds of mice that age in less than 1/2 the normal time out there?
originally posted by: Scorpiogurl
And really all one has to do is follow a CRON (Calorie restrict with optimal nutrition) plan. A good whole plant-based nutrition plan will delay the aging process as well as prevent, treat and cure illness in many cases.
Molecule
In 2004, a new substance called SkQ1 was synthesized in the group of professor Vladimir P. Skulachev in the Moscow State University. ” The name SkQ1 was given to the substance as the first representative of a particularly potent class of molecules named “SkQ” – the term introduced by the team to describe molecules containing ion Sk an a quinone.
A part of SkQ1 coined “Skulachev ion” or Sk functions as a molecular “locomotive” or “towing truck” carrying the other part of the molecule – an extremely active antioxidant plastoquinone – into mitochondria. Both theoretical calculations and experimental results showed that SkQ1 is delivered into mitochondria in an extremely targeted and efficient manner. The physics of mitochondrial membrane and the unusual properties of “Skulachev ions” direct SkQ1 into the inner leaflet of the inner mitochondrial membrane with high precision.
Molecule
Presence of SkQ1 in mitochondrial membrane enables mitochondria to protect itself from reactive oxygen species (ROS) by breaking chain reaction of lipid destruction. This ability of our molecule to protect cells against oxidative stress plays a very important role in treating patients suffering from various age-related disorders such as cardiovascular diseases, neurodegenerative disorders and various ophthalmic conditions.
But our technology does not end there. Developing methods for effective delivery of mitochondrially addressed antioxidants into organism is another challenging task. Mitotech successfully solved this complex problem for a variety of therapeutic areas and designed several SkQ1-based pharmaceutical products going through various stages of clinical development.
www.kalinka-store.com...
originally posted by: NerdGoddess
a reply to: rickymouse
I don't think I've ever heard that before. Guess I get something fun to look into tonight.
Thanks man, cool!
-Alee
originally posted by: Caver78
Yet no one noticed the aging mice were only 200 days old?
I've had a pet mouse for 5 years with no such physical symptoms such as alopecia and only little stiffness. I'm suspicious about the mice used in this study. And NO I'm NOT kidding.
Are there breeds of mice that age in less than 1/2 the normal time out there?