No hero will be rescuing your and your children’s neurodegeneration for you

Starting this blog’s twelfth year by curating a poorly-done 2026 review of Nrf2 and its capability to change a person’s development of Parkinson’s disease. I’ll emphasize precedent conditions that if not effectively dealt with in youth, can’t prevent PD from occurring at some later life stage.

“This review explicitly examines how age-associated decline in NRF2 responsiveness intersects with redox imbalance, mitochondrial dysfunction, proteostatic failure, and neuroinflammation, core mechanisms shared between aging and PD. PD unfolds through a complex interplay of cellular stress and immune responses. Oxidative stress, mitochondrial dysfunction, and chronic neuroinflammation converge to damage dopaminergic neurons, with microglia playing a central role in amplifying this injury.

NRF2 emerges as a key regulator of antioxidant defenses, inflammatory balance, and mitochondrial protection, offering a promising target for clinical intervention. NRF2 activity favors the anti-inflammatory microglial over the pro-inflammatory phenotype. Decline in NRF2 inducibility with age impairs microglial clearance, promotes neuroinflammation, and reduces antioxidant defenses, while NRF2 activation restores protective functions and offers a promising therapeutic target.

Strategies aimed at restoring or enhancing NRF2 activity hold significant promise as disease-modifying interventions, not only to slow PD progression but also to promote resilience against the broader spectrum of age-associated neurodegenerative and inflammatory conditions.”

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0891584926000316 “NRF2 AT THE CROSSROADS OF PARKINSON’S DISEASE AND AGING: MECHANISTIC INSIGHTS AND TRANSLATIONAL PERSPECTIVES”


This review only gave lip service to PD progression outside of the brain, as if the importance of prodromal factors to a person’s neurodegeneration such as dysfunction in gut, eyes, skin, and olfactory systems can be minimized. But failure to recognize early what will doom a person to be unable to recover health in later decades is disingenuous. Since these reviewers omitted early interventions into PD prodromal factors, the best they came up with was interventions to “slow PD progression.”

Maybe these reviewers felt it would be outside the scope of this review to discuss early non-brain PD factors for more than one sentence? However, while PD is defined by striatal brain neurons, Nrf2 activity is much less in brain and central nervous system neurons than elsewhere in the body per Nrf2 Week #2: Neurons.

I disagree with these reviewers’ self-imposed emphasis on aging. Repeating ‘age-associated’ numerous times seemed as if they wanted to influence the reader into thinking age in and of itself was a cause for PD, rather than an imputed mathematical correlation. Their emphasis led to dumb mentions such as senolytics for no apparent reason than senescence is a ‘hallmark of aging’, and to meaningless ‘diseasome of aging’ characterizations, and to ignoring the existence of early non-age-associated PD diagnoses in 20- and 30-year-olds.

Whatever it takes to get published, I’d guess. Or maybe it’s that the number of omissions and useless points a review paper makes increases with the number of reviewers and their sponsors’ agendas.

For example, why was it permissible to dedicate lip service to ‘exposome’ factors like microplastics, environmental pollution, and viruses, but it’s still not permitted in 2026 to discuss research into the impacts on vascular disease and neurodegeneration of lipid nanoparticles and DNA contamination in what a large number of humans were exposed to by injected pharmaceuticals starting in late 2020? Not to mention two studies published in 2024 of over 2.5 million people whose incidences of neurologic issues, mild cognitive impairment, and Alzheimer’s disease rapidly increased after ‘vaccination’?

I’ve mentioned in this blog many times how it’s every human’s choice whether or not we take responsibility for our own one precious life. I suggest, if it’s not too late, do that for your children’s lives, too.

3 thoughts on “No hero will be rescuing your and your children’s neurodegeneration for you

  1. Totally agree with this. I was recently diagnosed with REM sleep disinhibition, which I’m told can be an early warning sign for Parkinson’s, so I’m very much in the ‘proactive action over late crisis care’ camp. It’s frustrating that more researchers, physicians, and even the general public don’t lean into that same mindset, because early awareness and prevention could make such a big difference.

    Congrats on the blogging milestone!

    • Thanks Erin! It’s been a well spent twelve years, learning things I didn’t know about every day.

      I had high hopes for the https://surfaceyourrealself.com/2023/08/12/reversing-biological-age-in-rats/ series of studies. The way forward stopped due to intellectual property tangles, though.

      But because incentives determine outcomes, I still have a glimmer of hope for health resets which might help you, too. Altos Lab started by Jeff Bezos employs Steve Horvath and other scientists. Calico was started by Google’s owners.

      I don’t think the world’s richest person cares about health-company status among mere multi-billionaires right now, though, because he hasn’t started a health-related venture AFAIK. Maybe one day in the middle of building a million robots and satellites, he’ll have a health emergency that will change everything for everybody else. Or maybe one day he’ll realize that Earth-adapted human physiology can’t survive trips to and life on Mars, and focus back to what can be done on this planet.

      • It seems like there are always hurdles in medicine, aren’t there?

        There are so many exciting, legitimate anti-aging projects out there, including all those you’ve listed. I’m especially intrigued by Dr. Fahy’s work on thymus regeneration. And I suspect Dr. Goodenowe is working toward the XPrize, which might eventually make plasmalogens more accessible. We live in exciting times! And hopefully more folks with deep pockets will recognize that and start contributing to research…

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