Eat broccoli sprouts for your liver, Part 2

A 2023 review cited Part 1 and caught up other relevant research on sulforaphane effects through early 2023:

“A growing number of studies have reported that sulforaphane (SFN) could significantly ameliorate hepatic steatosis and prevent development of fatty liver, improve insulin sensitivity, attenuate oxidative damage and liver injury, induce apoptosis, and inhibit proliferation of hepatoma cells through multiple signaling pathways.

SFN inhibits lipogenesis and oxidative stress while enhancing lipid droplet degradation through modulating expression of genes involved in lipid synthesis, metabolism, and oxidation. SFN modulates autophagy, lipolysis, mitochondrial function, and ER stress to alleviate fatty liver through AMPK-, AHR-, PGC1α-, and FGF21-mediated pathways.

fphar-14-1256029-g001

There is still a gap between basic research and clinical application of SFN. More efficient delivery systems and precise dose schedules of SFN are expected to be developed in future studies, which would improve its solubility, stability, and bioavailability, and reduce inter-individual variations in humans.”

https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fphar.2023.1256029/full “Therapeutic potential of sulforaphane in liver diseases: a review”


These reviewers did alright gathering papers. That’s only part of what needed to be done, with the other part being reading, understanding, and interpreting these papers.

First example: Sulforaphane in the Goldilocks zone was cited [reference 12], but applicability to this review with its main point “The stimulatory zone for in vitro studies proved to be consistently in the 1-10 μM range” as in Figure 10 “Effects of R-sulforaphane on phase II enzyme activation in precision-cut liver slices of young adult male Albino Wistar rats” wasn’t understood:

figure 10

These reviewers complained:

“Few dose-response studies on SFN have been reported, and the range of its effective doses is unclear. Doses used in most animal studies have exceeded the highest dose of SFN used in humans.”

So it might have taken a little bit more effort, but these reviewers could have highlighted studies where sulforaphane liver treatments were in the 1-10 μM potentially therapeutic range.

Another example: these reviewers said “The half-life of SFN is very short due to its rapid metabolism in the human body.” They missed a point that the second paper in How much sulforaphane is suitable for healthy people? [reference 46] made in section 6.4. “NQO1 Pharmacokinetics following SFN Ingestion:”

“Maximal induction of NQO1 occurred at around 24 hours, declining thereafter (Figure 8). This peak represents an approximate 2.8-fold induction over baseline.

These findings are useful when considering the effect of SFN as an intervention material in acute compared with chronic conditions. A significant increase in NQO1 occurred between 6 and 12 hours, a timeframe that may not be sufficiently responsive for management of an acute state, leaving one to conclude that NQO1 induction is best suited to chronic conditions where a rapid response may not be necessary.”

OMCL2019-2716870.008

Sulforaphane’s effects of inducing NQO1 for its cytoprotective, antioxidant, and other functions lasts for days, regardless of when sulforaphane leaves the bloodstream.

Taurine’s effects on healthspan and lifespan, Part 2

Four 2023 papers that cited Part 1, starting with a review of hypothetical parameters for taurine clinical trials that aren’t going to happen because:

  • Drug companies can’t make money from a research area that’s cheap, not patentable, and readily accessible.
  • Government sponsors are likewise not incentivized to act in the public’s interest per their recent behavior.

“We propose the rationale that an adequately powered randomized-controlled-trial (RCT) is needed to confirm whether taurine can meaningfully improve metabolic and microbiome health, and biological age.

taurine hypothetical trial

Using long-term survival as a primary outcome is desirable but difficult; any demonstrable difference in this outcome will require a substantial sample size with prolonged follow-up (e.g., 5 years or longer) if the effect size is relatively small (or modest at best). Biological age based on DNA methylation biomarkers according to the Levine PhenoAge or newer biological age models is increasingly being recognized as an important dynamic health parameter, and hence it can also be used as a surrogate outcome in assessing benefits of taurine supplementation.

The recent taurine trial on nonhuman primates used an equivalent dose that was between 3 and 6 g per day for an 80-kg person, and this could represent a reasonable dose range for any human RCTs. We believe that a 6-month or longer interventional period matching what was successfully done on nonhuman primates will be an acceptable time frame in assessing potential efficacy of taurine on human metabolic health in a RCT.”

https://www.sciopen.com/article/10.26599/1671-5411.2023.11.004 “Flattening the biological age curve by improving metabolic health: to taurine or not to taurine, that’s the question”

A six-month duration and a 6 grams per day dose were in the above table’s desirable features column, but epigenetic clock measurements weren’t included as an outcome. I’d guess that its omission reflected disagreements among coauthors, because the desirability of using epigenetic clocks as surrogate measures of human healthspan and lifespan was mentioned several times.


Another review:

“As described in the first half of this review, recent advances in omics analysis technology have led to research to detect the causative gene of dilated cardiomyopathy. It has been found that rare mutations in the taurine transporter gene contribute to the development of dilated cardiomyopathy in humans. It is unlikely that a taurine-deficient diet is a factor in dilated cardiomyopathy, but taurine intake may have positive cardiovascular effects.

The second half summarizes the relationship between taurine and healthspan and lifespan. It is difficult to summarize the effect of age in whole body taurine content, which may vary in species, strain, sex, and age of animal models. Future human studies will clarify the relationship between dietary taurine intake and healthy life expectancy.”

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1347861323000749 “Taurine deficiency associated with dilated cardiomyopathy and aging”


A human study investigated brain chemicals that fluctuate with our circadian rhythm:

“We conducted a MRS study at 7 T, where occipital NAD content, lactate, and other metabolites were assessed in two different morning and afternoon diurnal states in healthy participants. Salivary cortisol levels were determined to confirm that the experiment was done in two circadian different physiological conditions.

Although no significant differences in NAD+, NADH, and NAD+/NADH were detected between the morning and afternoon sessions, there was a significant variance difference in NAD+/NADH, with a higher variance of NAD+/NADH redox ratio in the morning.

None of the over 30 measured brain metabolites were significantly affected by the circadian rhythm (CR) except for taurine, which decreased in the afternoon. Further CR studies should consider the prospective measurement of taurine levels in different regions of the human brain, and explore how taurine supplements could impact brain CR metabolism in health and diseases.”

https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fphys.2023.1285776/full “Effect of circadian rhythm on NAD and other metabolites in human brain”

I omitted findings regarding this study’s pathetic Balloon Analogue Risk Task (BART) test. Older studies that drew spurious findings from this video game include:


A rodent study modeled human childhood cataracts:

“Our analysis identified targets that are required for early normal differentiation steps and altered in cataractous lenses, particularly metabolic pathways involving glutathione and amino acids. Glutathione and taurine were spatially altered, and both taurine and the ratio of reduced glutathione to oxidized glutathione, two indicators of redox status, were differentially compromised in lens biology.

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Dietary amino acid supplementation has been shown to prevent cataract development, and dietary intake of taurine was protective in a glutathione depletion-derived opacity model. This opens up the possibility that dietary supplementation of taurine could be used as a strategy to prevent human congenital cataracts.

Our findings shed light on molecular mechanisms associated with congenital cataracts, and point out that unbalanced redox status due to reduced levels of taurine and glutathione, metabolites already linked to age-related cataracts, could be a major underlying mechanism behind lens opacities that appear early in life.”

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2213231723002707 “Unbalanced redox status network as an early pathological event in congenital cataracts”


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The TMAO meme

A common dilemma for researchers is how to follow the herd enough to get a paper published, while simultaneously presenting replicable evidence of tested hypotheses. But unlike study researchers, reviewers are free to:

  • Express their beliefs as facts;
  • Over/under emphasize study limitations; and
  • Disregard and misrepresent evidence as they see fit.

Reviewers also aren’t obligated to make post-publication corrections for their errors and distortions.

Here’s one of a dozen 2023 papers I read this week on TMAO. I picked this review because they attempted to come clean at the end of several sections.

I rated it as Wasted resources rather than Detracted from science as there might be a slight sniff of facts underneath the stench. Facts do not include “is associated with” or “is correlated with.”

The meme (repeated many times):

“Overall diet, lifestyle choices, genetic predisposition, and other underlying health conditions may contribute to higher trimethylamine N-oxide (TMAO) levels and increased cardiovascular risk. This review explores the potential therapeutic ability of resveratrol (RSV) to protect against cardiovascular diseases (CVD) and affect TMAO levels.”

Sections starting with premises that contained contradictions included:

2.2. TMAO and cardiovascular disease

Higher TMAO levels raise the risk of adverse cardiovascular events.

Overall, eating fish with high TMAO levels has relatively few adverse effects on CVD.

2.2.1 Relationship between TMAO and atherogenesis

Collectively, these findings provide a possible link between gut bacteria, platelet activation, and the risk of thrombosis.

More research is required to show the function of TMAO in the formation of CVD.

3. Application potential of phytochemicals such as polyphenols, RSV and its modified derivatives in regulating CVD

TMAO is a unique and independent risk factor for developing AS, partly through suppression of hepatic bile acid production.

Eating plants in general affects TMAO levels.

3.1. TMAO-lowering phytochemicals

Since the discovery of TMAO as a pro-atherogenic metabolite is relatively recent, only relatively small numbers of polyphenol-rich extracts and single phenolic compounds have been investigated as TMA/TMAO lowering agents.

Cardioprotective function of phytochemicals may arise from a combination of different mechanisms.

And so on.

https://febs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/2211-5463.13762 “Cardiovascular risk of dietary trimethylamine oxide precursors and the therapeutic potential of resveratrol and its derivatives”


How many people would be healthy after they stopped eating fish, meat, and foods that had choline, carnitine, betaine, or ergothioneine? There are no clinical trials that omit all of these “TMAO precursors” from human diets because people would die.

Propagating the TMAO meme is dumb. It isn’t politically driven AFAIK, though, so doesn’t drop to the sub-basement evidence levels of politically correct memes.

2016 meme

Take acetyl-L-carnitine if you are healthy

Eight 2023 acetyl-L-carnitine / L-carnitine papers, starting with three healthy human studies:

“Thirty healthy volunteers aged between 19 and 52 years were divided randomly into two equal groups, one of which received 1000 mg of L-carnitine (LC) per day over a 12-week period. Total cholesterol and HDL-C increased significantly after supplementation. LC could be useful in impeding development of heart diseases in subjects with low HDL-C.”

https://journaljammr.com/index.php/JAMMR/article/view/5166 “L-Carnitine Increases High Density Lipoprotein-Cholesterol in Healthy Individuals: A Randomized Trial”

Rationale for dose selection wasn’t provided, and the possibility of limited results due to poor study design wasn’t mentioned.


“This study examined effects of 12 weeks of LC supplementation on bone mineral density (BMD) and selected blood markers involved in bone metabolism of postmenopausal women participating in a resistance training (RT) program. Participants’ diets were supplemented with either 1 g of LC-L-tartrate and 3 g of leucine per day (LC group) or 4 g of leucine per day as a placebo (PLA group), in a double-blind fashion.

Because the study protocol consisted of both exercise and supplementation, some favorable changes in the BMD could be expected. However, it was not possible to detect them in the short study period. No significant modification in BMDs of the spine, hip, and total skeleton and no differences between groups in one-repetition maximum could be due to the relatively short duration of the RT intervention.”

https://nutritionandmetabolism.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12986-023-00752-1 “Effect of a 3-month L-carnitine supplementation and resistance training program on circulating markers and bone mineral density in postmenopausal women: a randomized controlled trial”

Same comments as the first study regarding no rationale for dose selection, and no mention that limited results were possibly due to an inadequate dose.


In a letter to the editor, a researcher took issue with a study’s methodology:

“Based on finding that intravenous provision with carnitine alone does not increase muscle carnitine accretion, and on the above-reevaluated data, it appears that the basis for carnitine with caffeine being able to increase muscle carnitine levels, and thereby manipulation of muscle metabolism and exercise performance, is uncertain.

Carnitine bioavailability in any group would have been 9.5%. This assessment would be in line with previously recorded values of 5%–18% carnitine bioavailability. It is firmly believed that low carnitine bioavailability is attributable to the inability of kidneys to reabsorb carnitine when the threshold concentration for tubular reabsorption (about 40–60 μmol/L) has passed this value.

The authors’ proposed long-term use of carnitine supplementation as an aid to improve fat oxidation in type II diabetes also seems to lack provision.”

https://physoc.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.14814/phy2.15736 “LTE: Does caffeine truly raise muscle carnitine in humans?”


Two genetic studies:

“Our findings suggest that humans have lost a gene involved in carnitine biosynthesis. Hydroxytrimethyllysine aldolase (the second enzyme of carnitine biosynthesis) activity of serine hydroxymethyl transferase partially compensates for its function.”

https://www.researchsquare.com/article/rs-3295520/v1 “One substrate-many enzymes virtual screening uncovers missing genes of carnitine biosynthesis in human and mouse”


“Reported prevalence of primary carnitine deficiency (PCD) in the Faroe Islands of 1:300 is the highest in the world. The Faroese PCD patient cohort has been closely monitored and we now report results from a 10-year follow-up study of 139 PCD patients.

PCD is an autosomal recessive disorder that affects the function of organic cation transporter 2 (OCTN2) high-affinity carnitine transporters, that localizes to the cell membrane and transport carnitine actively inside the cell. Without proper functioning OCTN2 carnitine transporters, renal reabsorption of carnitine is impaired, and as a consequence, patients suffering from PCD have low plasma levels of carnitine. This can disturb cellular energy production and cause fatigue, but also in extreme cases lead to cellular dysfunction and severe symptoms of coma and sudden death.

PCD patients seem to adhere well to L-carnitine treatment, even though they have to ingest L-carnitine tablets at least three times a day. Overall mean L-carnitine dosage was 66.3 mg/kg/day.”

https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/jmd2.12383 “Patients with primary carnitine deficiency treated with L-carnitine are alive and doing well—A 10-year follow-up in the Faroe Islands”

The average daily dose is (66.3 mg x 70 kg) = 4,641 mg. A third of this dose would be about 1.5 g.

The first study of Acetyl-L-carnitine dosing also suggested dosing L-carnitine three times a day because of 10-20% bioavailability.


A study with unhealthy humans:

“This retrospective study analyzed medical records of adult patients between March 2007 and April 2019, with presenting complaints of fatigue and lethargy. Acetyl-L-carnitine has physiological functions similar to L-carnitine but has higher bioavailability and antioxidant properties. This study confirmed that a triple combination therapy with γ-linolenic acid, V. vinifera extract, and acetyl-L-carnitine can improve arterial stiffness in patients.

Our study had some limitations:

  1. The study population may not be representative of the entire Korean adult population.
  2. The study did not have a medication-free control group. Instead, the comparison group comprised patients with medication compliance <80%.
  3. Drop-out rate of the triple-combination therapy (46.2%, 147/318) was relatively high, indicating the possibility of bias due to loss to follow-up.
  4. The study did not consider lifestyle factors such as smoking, diet, and physical activity level, which may affect arterial stiffness.
  5. The study did not examine interactions among drugs comprising the combination therapy, although all drugs are known to positively impact blood vessels.”

https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/jch.14708 “Efficacy of γ-linolenic acid, Vitis vinifera extract, and acetyl-L-carnitine combination therapy for improving arterial stiffness in Korean adults: Real-world evidence”

This study’s acetyl-L-carnitine dose was 500 mg three times a day.


Wrapping up with two rodent studies:

“Acetyl L-carnitine (ALCAR) has proved useful in treatment of different types of chronic pain with excellent tolerability. The present work aimed at evaluating the anti-hyperalgesic efficacy of ALCAR in a model of persistent visceral pain associated with colitis.

The acetyl group in the ALCAR molecule can enhance cholinergic signalling by promoting synthesis of neurotransmitter acetylcholine, which plays an important role in both the enteric and central nervous systems. Acetylcholine signalling has significant antinociceptive effects in development of visceral pain, so it has been proposed as a therapeutic target.

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ALCAR significantly reduced establishment of visceral hyperalgesia in DNBS-treated animals, though the interventive protocol showed a greater efficacy than the preventive one.

  • The interventive protocol partially reduced colon damage in rats, counteracting enteric glia and spinal astrocyte activation resulting from colitis.
  • The preventive protocol effectively protected enteric neurons from inflammatory insult.

These findings suggest the putative usefulness of ALCAR as a food supplement for patients suffering from inflammatory bowel diseases.”

https://www.mdpi.com/1422-0067/24/19/14841 “Anti-Hyperalgesic Efficacy of Acetyl L-Carnitine (ALCAR) Against Visceral Pain Induced by Colitis: Involvement of Glia in the Enteric and Central Nervous System

This study cited multiple animal studies that found acetyl-L-carnitine was effective for different types of pain. I’ve taken it every day for nineteen years, and haven’t noticed that effect.


“Repetitive mild traumatic brain injuries (rmTBI) may contribute to development of neurodegenerative diseases through secondary injury pathways. Acetyl-L-carnitine (ALC) shows neuroprotection through anti-inflammatory effects, and via regulation of neuronal synaptic plasticity by counteracting post-trauma excitotoxicity. This study aimed to investigate mechanisms implicated in etiology of neurodegeneration in rmTBI mice treated with ALC.

ALC is an endogenously produced carnitine metabolite present in tissue and plasma, and readily crosses the blood brain barrier, unlike its unacetylated form. ALC is also a commonly available nutritional supplement, with a known safety profile, and had been well-studied for its role in aiding β-oxidation of long chain fatty acids in the mitochondria.

While some studies have shown promise for improving clinical and psychometric outcomes in individuals with probable Alzheimer’s disease (AD) and mild cognitive impairment, other studies that included participants with moderate AD progression were less conclusive. It may be that this lack of improvement is related to a therapeutic window of opportunity. Once neurodegenerative mechanisms have commenced, a reversal of these processes is not attainable.

There is currently a lack of evidence for safe therapeutics that can be administered long-term to reduce the risk of individuals developing cognitive and neuropsychological deficits after rmTBIs. Prophylactic ALC treatment in a paradigm of neurotrauma may be a way to maximize its therapeutic potential.

While brain structures display differential vulnerability to insult as evidenced by location specific postimpact disruption of key genes, this study shows correlative mRNA neurodegeneration and functional impairment that was ameliorated by ALC treatment in several key genes. ALC may mitigate damage inflicted in various secondary neurodegenerative cascades – confirmed by improvements in behavioral and cognitive function – and contribute to functional protection following rmTBI.”

https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fphar.2023.1254382/full “Repetitive mild traumatic brain injury-induced neurodegeneration and inflammation is attenuated by acetyl-L-carnitine in a preclinical model”

I read many traumatic brain injury papers earlier this year, but only curated two in Brain endothelial cells. I came away thinking that there’s no permanent recovery from TBIs, as just symptoms are effectively treated.

Most TBIs happen to old people who have diminished brain reserves. I didn’t see studies that factored in evidence of what happened earlier in injured people’s lives that created TBI susceptibility but wasn’t remembered.

Unlike other years, I haven’t watched any football this season. It’s unsettling that transient entertainment value continues to take precedence over permanent effects on players’ lives.


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Oat sprout stressors

Two 2023 Avena sativa oat sprout studies, starting with one that found different effects during germination from varying temperature and relative humidity:

“This study evaluated effects of temperature (20, 25, and 30°C) and relative humidity (RH, 55, 60, and 65%) as abiotic stressors during oat germination. We identified eighty polyphenols, nine avenanthramides, twelve lignans, and five phytosterols.

  • 100% germination was achieved at 25°C/60% RH from day 3, yielding the longest radicle size.
  • The highest content of most phenolic acids, avenanthramides, and lignans occurred at 30°C/65% RH, where 100% germination was attained by day 5, but with a shorter radicle size.
  • The best flavonoid and phytosterol profile was obtained at 20°C/55% RH, achieving only a 67% germination rate by day 5.

sprouted oat temp rh

By considering germination conditions, end-users can harness the versatility of oat sprouting to meet their specific needs and maximize potential benefits of this promising cereal crop. For instance, manufacturers of functional foods and beverages could consider using sprouts from conditions that yield high polyphenol content for products targeting antioxidant benefits, whereas nutraceutical manufacturers could focus on sprouting conditions that result in elevated levels of avenanthramides, well-known for their health-promoting properties.”

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0308814623027917Impact of temperature and humidity conditions as abiotic stressors on the phytochemical fingerprint of oat (Avena sativa L.) sprouts” (not freely available) Thanks to Dr. Iza F. Pérez-Ramírez for providing a copy.


Another study compared and contrasted eight sprouted grains to their ungerminated grains and to each other. I’ll highlight oat sprout results:

“The method used was germination for up to 72 h at temperatures ranging from 19–23°C. Oat germination rate was 80%.

Linoleic acid (omega-6) was the predominant fatty acid in oat grain powder, followed by similar amounts of oleic and palmitic acids and smaller amounts of stearic and linolenic (omega-3) acids. Since omega-6 content remained unchanged and omega-3 quantity increased slightly in sprouted oats, the omega-6/omega-3 ratio decreased.”

https://www.mdpi.com/2304-8158/12/17/3306 “Effect of Germination on Fatty Acid Composition in Cereal Grains”


My kitchen cupboard’s oat sprouting conditions are closer to this second study’s temperature, where relative humidity wasn’t specified. I doubt that kitchen winter-time relative humidity ever rises to the 55% lower threshold of the first study for more than a few minutes.

At this time of year in Sprouting hulled oats, I got a 97% germination rate over three days with an estimated 21°C (70°F) and a relative humidity closer to 30% than 55%. Couldn’t tell you why the first study’s germination rate with 20°C/55% RH was only 67% at day 5, or why the second study’s germination rate was only 80% at day 3 with 19–23°C.


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Suboccipital release

Here’s a 2023 paper on the subject, but let’s first see what it is, from Michigan State University:

https://hal.bim.msu.edu/CMEonLine/Autonomic/Sympathetic/Treatment/SuboccipitalRelease/start.html

and University of Wisconsin:

https://www.fammed.wisc.edu/suboccipital-release-technique/


An instruction paper for osteopaths:

“This technique treats migraines, headaches, and neck pain. It can also be used as an adjunct for treating conditions with autonomic dysfunction.

Before performing a suboccipital release, the patient should have a neurologic and musculoskeletal exam of the neck and upper extremities. Ensure that the patient does not have contraindications such as: Acute cervical fractures; concern for neurovascular compromise; focal neurologic deficit.”

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK582126/ “Osteopathic Manipulative Treatment: Suboccipital Release”


I read a half-dozen other 2023 papers comparing this technique with other suboccipital techniques. I’m not posting links because these papers didn’t completely specify their technique, what was its history, and what was its safety. It’s extremely easy to traumatize this area of our bodies.

I similarly won’t post links to other 2023 papers that claimed this technique improved other body problems, such as ankle range of motion, hamstring tightness, and lumbar pain. Mechanistic explanations are required, not just “they are connected by one neural system,” hand-waving, and woo.


This search for recent research was disappointing. I’ve performed suboccipital release on myself at least twice a day for years the same way I saw physical therapists do it to their patients while I was in physical therapy 13 years ago. Maybe there’s a video about self-suboccipital release that didn’t involve gadgets, but I couldn’t find it.

The point of this technique is to evoke a relaxation response. It usually relaxes areas from the neck to my feet. Sometimes it works quickly, other times it takes a while.

In any event – you and I are different, and I’m definitely not recommending suboccipital release for you. It isn’t a cure-all for neck pain, sitting most of the day, bad posture, poor ergonomic setup, being stuck in traffic, being glued to your phone, etc.

Guardians at your gates

This post emphasizes human agency in training our innate immune system. Otherwise, we are like agentless jellyfish I see almost every day on the beach, moved by tides and blown by winds, to their stranded graves.

I don’t cite studies here because none have been published regarding recent developments in human innate immune responses. Researchers keep their jobs by going along with the current narrative, no matter the evidence. I’ve presented evidence for taking personal responsibility for your own one precious life many times this decade.

There’s a JN.1 variant now that has emerged due to being evolutionarily driven to escape people’s adaptive immune systems who had one or more of the 2+ billion experimental gene therapy injections worldwide. People who are focused on this variant “tree” and missing the “forest” are allowing themselves to be herded for at least the tenth time this decade.


What can people who didn’t initially trust their innate immune systems, and subsequently slammed its functionality, do now in late 2023?

One avenue for redemption may be that taking off-patent anti-virals proven decades ago will work prophylactically. Even if people wait until they experience symptoms, luckily, the same proven anti-virals when administered early will also work therapeutically. Maybe people’s innate immune systems will recover, maybe they won’t, in which case they’ll hopefully keep taking anti-virals instead of unproven gene therapies.

Those who didn’t allow themselves to be propagandized this decade, and who initially trusted their innate immune systems’ functioning to maintain their health, will be fine. If they haven’t subsequently trained their innate immune systems, though, they may take longer to recover from another outbreak caused by people who acquiesced to experimental gene therapies.

I’ve trained my innate immune system every day for the past 19 years with yeast cell wall β-glucan because every disease is connected to the immune system. I’ve also exercised my endogenous antioxidant responses with weak pro-inflammatory isothiocyanates in broccoli sprouts every day for 3.5+ years.

Daily drills with weak threats will keep our body’s evolved systems tuned up and ready for real emergencies. Being sick takes away our ability to act independently, while simultaneously making us dependent on the broken medical care system.

So what is your preference? Be energized at sunrise?

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Or washed up on the beach?

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What you expect may not be what you find

I’m halfway through a 90-day trial of plasmalogens coincident with improving peroxisomal function via resistance exercise and time-restricted eating. I haven’t curated related 2023 papers I’ve read concerning plasmalogens, peroxisomes, sphingolipids, ceramides, and mitochondrial interactions with these, mainly because I haven’t seen human-pertinent aspects similar to Dr. Goodenowe’s efforts.

The 2023 papers I’ve read have more to do with researcher incentives rather than actual human benefits. I’d guess that researchers care about these related subjects to the extent that they want to be the first to publish arcane details about them, like peroxisomes in the parotid salivary gland.

One area I expected to see a difference at the regimen’s beginning was in my peripheral nervous system Schwann cells. Instead, I had taste and smell improvements in my primary olfactory nervous system olfactory ensheathing cells, which are highly similar to Schwann cells. I was also happy to experience an immediate halt to my ulnar nerve elbow pain after what I interpret as ProdromeNeuro effects and perhaps coincident ProdromeGlia effects on items upstream of Schwann cells.

Here are three papers on Schwann cells that I haven’t yet seen as applicable to my current regimen, starting with a 2022 review:

“We summarise contributions of neurotransmitter receptors in regulation of morphogenetic events of glial cells, with particular attention paid to the role of acetylcholine receptors in Schwann cell physiology. This redundant and complex integrated regulation system could be explained as a mechanism of preserving glial cell physiology. In case of a single receptor signalling dysfunction, other neurotransmitters can overcome the deficit, preserving functions of glia and health of the nervous system.

Increased knowledge in medicinal chemistry and in bioinformatics accompanied by drug delivery studies might open a fascinating therapeutic perspective for cholinergic mimetics for treatment of several nervous system pathologies, and in reducing neuroinflammation both in the central and peripheral nervous systems.”

https://www.mdpi.com/2227-9059/11/1/41 “Emerging Roles of Cholinergic Receptors in Schwann Cell Development and Plasticity”


A 2023 study investigated the vagus nerve’s Schwann cells’ impact with gut function:

“The vagus nerve is the longest extrinsic cranial nerve in the body. It regulates gut physiology through the intrinsic nervous system (myenteric and submucosal plexus) and enteric glial cells interactions, which participate in controlling intestinal absorption, secretion, immune homeostasis, and motility.

Normal intestinal motility is critical for nutrition assimilation and several biological functions. The loss of normal gut function aggravates inflammation, oxidative stress, and other cellular stressors.”

https://bmcbiotechnol.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12896-023-00781-x “A critical role for erythropoietin on vagus nerve Schwann cells in intestinal motility”


I haven’t curated a Buck Institute for Research on Aging sponsored study for a while, since their 2015 A study of how “age” itself wasn’t a causal factor for wound-healing differences detracted from science and their 2020 Linear thinking about biological age clocks wasted resources.

This 2023 rodent study couldn’t investigate anything outside of Buck’s limited paradigm’s echo chamber. This sponsor would rather break their arms patting themselves on their backs pretending they’re advancing science than fund relevant human research successes that do advance science:

“Following peripheral nerve injury, successful axonal growth and functional recovery require Schwann cell (SC) reprogramming into a reparative phenotype. This work provides the first characterization of senescent SCs and their influence on axonal regeneration in aging and chronic denervation.”

https://www.embopress.org/doi/full/10.15252/emmm.202317907 “Senescent Schwann cells induced by aging and chronic denervation impair axonal regeneration following peripheral nerve injury”


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Building your plasmalogen savings account

A webinar from earlier this week with Dr. Goodenowe, a clinical trial facilitator, and a physician:

From the Q&A segment:

“Is there a particular age where it’s recommended to test for plasmalogen levels? And what levels would be considered normal?

That’s a good question. That actually raises this whole concept of optimal health and this concept of aging.

The best way to think about it – we talked about this paycheck-to-paycheck situation, where as long as our bills are paid every day, technically we think we’re normal. But we still feel this sense of health anxiety – if you will – like we just don’t know if my car breaks down, or my water heater breaks down, do I have enough money to pay these events in my life?

That’s what health feels like to a lot of people, because they’re just kind of getting by. From a health perspective, they’re considered normal, but they have no reserve capacity, and they have no vitality in terms of health.

Plasmalogens are a type of molecule that you build a savings account of, over years, over decades. Your heart builds them up, your brain builds them up, and you slowly accumulate them. Then when you get an oxidative stress like what’s happening now in today’s world with all the covid and myocarditis and brain fog – a lot of these things are being caused because that reserve of plasmalogens has been depleted.

We want plasmalogens for a longevity perspective. There are other situations that can have low plasmalogens, other things can really knock your plasmalogens down.

So you want to start early, you want to build a savings account, and you want to maintain it. Maintain health and function, and create a sustained surplus for optimal health, for optimal neuromuscular performance.”


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Another reason to chew broccoli sprouts

This 2023 review explored a naturally produced antimicrobial:

“This review focuses on the role of abundant hypothiocyanous acid (HOSCN), a potent oxidant that kills bacteria but is non-toxic to human cells. Produced from thiocyanate (SCN) and hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) in a variety of body sites by peroxidase enzymes, HOSCN has been explored as an agent of food preservation, pathogen killing, and even improved toothpaste.

Lactoperoxidase (LPO) is considered the main producer of HOSCN, and is secreted in saliva, tears, breastmilk, and lacrima of mammals. LPO regulates the oral microbiome and keeps breastmilk free of pathogens during the first few weeks after delivery. LPO has long been understood to play a role in prevention of dental caries.

Thiocyanate is mostly acquired from diet. Many food plants contain glucosinolates – precursors to isothiocyanates – found in vegetables of order Brassicales (broccoli, cabbages, turnips, mustard, horseradish, etc.).

HOSCN is likely to exist at substantial concentrations in the oral cavity and the respiratory tract, and is probably present under any inflammatory circumstances. Oxidative damage caused by HOSCN is largely reversible, since HOSCN cannot oxidize thiols to sulfinic or sulfonic acid.

mmi15025-fig-0002-m

The study of bacterial HOSCN stress response is in its infancy. Results summarized above suggest overlaps with both ROS and RCS responses, particularly in the areas of redox homeostasis (e.g., glutathione metabolism), cysteine metabolism, and prevention of protein aggregation, but considerable work needs to be done to more fully characterize this response.”

https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/mmi.15025 “Hypothiocyanite and host–microbe interactions”


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What is the health utility of white blood cell type count ratios?

This post explores CBC ratios of neutrophils-to-lymphocytes (NLR) and lymphocytes-to-monocytes (LMR) as healthy biomarkers.

Uses of the neutrophils-to-lymphocytes ratio asserted:

A normal range of NLR is between 1–2, and values higher than 3.0 and below 0.7 in adults are pathological.

I saw only one study out of 151 references, reference 61 from 2017, that demonstrated a “below 0.7” range. All of its sampled subjects had sepsis or septic shock, though. Not exactly people from which to derive healthy parameters for the general population.

I looked through all 2023 papers of the 223 papers that cited this review. I didn’t see any that questioned a healthy status of a low neutrophils-to-lymphocytes ratio in humans. Almost all 2023 papers focused on diseases, not health, as if that’s what we want from researchers and medical professionals.

So if a review gets enough citations, its assertions become a fait accompli, elevated to an indisputable fact. Nevermind that unlike study researchers, reviewers aren’t bound to demonstrate evidence from tested hypotheses. Citing paper writers also aren’t obligated to actually read and understand what they cite.


I looked at papers that cited any of the four papers in Uses of the lymphocytes-to-monocytes ratio. There were hundreds of citations over the years, but I didn’t see any 2023 papers that related the LMR to health rather than disease.

The reciprocal monocytes-to-lymphocytes ratio may have prognostic value or “association with” other disease conditions. But do patients care about abstract values such as area under the curve?

Are hormone ratios useful in explaining health? Behavior? Neurobiology? Anything? had a similar situation:

“Analysis of individual variables offers more information and a more accurate picture of underlying relationships.”

This paper suggested by analogy that researching treatments to increase lymphocyte and/or decrease monocyte absolute counts rather than change ratios should be emphasized for health.


Labcorp blood tests from earlier this week came back yesterday. I’ll repeat a paragraph from another blog post that illustrates my viewpoint on them:

“Every explanation of those reference ranges, and optimal ranges built from all-cause mortality statistics, requires a suffix “of people who didn’t positively change their healthspan and lifespan.”

  • What value is there in optimizing (pick a measurement) against those outcomes?
  • Why compare my efforts, or results, or any other aspect of my life, to people who didn’t actionably care about their one precious life?”

Relevant white blood cell type counts and ratios from the current and three previous blood tests are:

nlr lmr

I’ve trained my innate immune system every day for the past 19 years with yeast cell wall β-glucan because every disease is connected to the immune system. I also haven’t been sick even one day this decade.

Let’s start with high-specificity C-reactive protein (hsCRP). Bookend values show very low inflammation over the past 2.5 years. Missing and regular CRP <1 values were due to medical professionals ignoring my written instructions.

Next are innate immune system monocytes, counts of which haven’t changed over the past 2.5 years. There have been no viruses, bacteria, fungi, or parasites that survived initial defenses. So monocyte-derived dendritic cell and macrophage activity hasn’t changed.

Next are adaptive immune system lymphocyte (T cells, natural killer cells, and B cells) counts that had a steady 31% increase from 1.6 to 2.1. It would be interesting to see which lymphocyte subtypes responded to the various therapeutic regimes I’ve implemented over these past 2.5 years. But I won’t become a lab rat to find out.

Last are innate immune system neutrophil counts, which our bone marrow makes copious amounts every day to fight infections. Mine have undergone a 43% decrease over the past 2.5 years. My bone marrow apparently doesn’t have metabolic imperatives to produce more short-lived neutrophils, probably because there isn’t a health emergency to immediately defend against.

To summarize, focusing on white blood cell type counts rather than their ratios better serves health purposes. The CBC test has coarse measures, though, so more refinement could be achieved.


Here’s an epigenetic clock summary of this week’s metabolomic results:

2023 epigenetic age

This summary from 2.5 years ago used the same calculations:

2021 epigenetic age

Maybe the additional 5.6 year difference in this first measurement instead of an opposite 2.5 year change along with chronological age is a signal that I’m getting more healthy. Maybe it’s noise. Recent memories argue against phenotypic age having anywhere near the impact of chronological age.

Comparing my two results against people who didn’t positively change their healthspan and lifespan has limited value, although this could reduce their denominator’s influence. We each have our life at stake, and bad things will happen on their own. If we want good things to happen, we have to make them happen.


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A good activity for bad weather days

A free educational series recorded in 2021-2022 available at https://drgoodenowe.com/dr-goodenowes-educational-seminars/ takes the viewer through underlying research and principles of Dr. Goodenowe’s approach to health. It’s advertised as lasting four hours, but took me two days to view.

The series’ discussions and references are background material to better understand later presentations and interviews. Points of interest included:

  • Seminar B100 shows that the metabolomic profile of people who regularly eat broccoli is different than others.
  • B109 clarifies how peroxisomal function is improved through resistance exercise and intermittent fasting.
  • C103 and C104 show how plasmalogens act against neurodegeneration (Parkinson’s disease and multiple sclerosis).

Texts below videos are additional information, not transcripts. C101 text is historically informative.


The B200 ProdromeScan tutorial will take more study. But unlike Labcorp tests, ordering a ProdromeScan requires using a practitioner in Dr. Goodenowe’s network.

I sent the following to Prodrome customer service earlier this month:

Please add me to your approved list for ProdromeScan.

Customer service replied:

“We only add health professionals to an approved list, not individuals.”

I responded:

Good morning. I looked at the websites of doctors who are associated with Dr. Goodenowe who are near me. All of them are too compromised for me to establish a doctor / patient relationship. But I’m glad they left up their blog posts from earlier this decade so I could see who they really were before I reached out to them.

I request an exception to the policy.

Customer service replied:

“There is no exception that can be made to this policy. You need to be a patient of a certified practitioner.”

I’ll escalate my request before my 90-day trial of Prodrome Glia and Neuro products ends so I can get an appropriate metabolomic status. Right now, I won’t involve someone I can’t trust just to know my ProdromeScan information that’s additional to next week’s Labcorp tests.

My treatment-result metabolomic data is probably not mature today on Day 29 of ProdromeGlia and ProdromeNeuro supplementation, resistance exercise, and intermittent fasting. I otherwise wouldn’t have experienced these two events:


I have a quibble with the series’ recommendations for taking N-acetyl cysteine. Relevant views and research:

Switch on your Nrf2 signaling pathway pointed out:

“We use NAC in the lab all the time because it stops an Nrf2 activation. So that weak pro-oxidant signal that activates Nrf2, you switch it off by giving a dose of NAC. It’s a potent antioxidant in that right, but it’s blocking signalling. And that’s what I don’t like about its broad use.”

If someone bombs themself everyday with antioxidants, they’re doing nothing to improve training of their endogenous systems’ defensive functions. What happens when they stop bombing? One example was a 2022 human study that found GlyNAC-induced improvements dissolved back to baseline after supplements stopped.

Also, Precondition your defenses with broccoli sprouts highlighted NAC’s deleterious effects on autophagy and lysosome functions:

“TFEB activity is required for sulforaphane (SFN)-induced protection against both acute oxidant bursts and chronic oxidative stress. SFN-induced TFEB nuclear accumulation was completely blocked by pretreatment of cells by N-acetyl-cysteine (NAC), or by other commonly used antioxidants. NAC also blocked SFN-induced mRNA expression of TFEB target genes, as well as SFN-induced autophagosome formation.”

If a secondary goal of taking NAC per is also necessary for the formation of glutathione, taurine can do that without an antioxidant bomb. Taurine supplementation will free up cysteine to do things other than synthesize taurine, like synthesize glutathione.


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Week 189 of Changing to a healthy phenotype with sprouts

1. I started eating 3-day-old microwaved Sango red radish sprouts ten weeks ago, but stopped two weeks ago due to stomach irritation. Earlier this year I tried them for a week using a different microwaving method, and found their glucoraphasatin pungency too much to stomach.

A technique of putting red radish sprouts in a bowl then into a Ziploc bag and using 40% power on my 1000W microwave for 10 seconds tamped their pungency down enough for a while. I use that technique every morning for a 3-day-old microwaved broccoli / red cabbage / mustard sprout mix.

I stopped eating Avena sativa oat sprouts in the evening because they don’t fit into a time-restricted eating regimen of ≤ 8 hours started last month. I still eat 3-day-old Avena sativa oat sprouts begun with 20 grams of hulled grains in the morning along with hulless Avena nuda oats.

I consider Avena nuda oats to be a sprouted grain food. After soaking 18-20 hours, about a quarter of the 82 g starting grains have visible sprouts when I eat them. 91% of Avena nuda oats visibly sprouted given a three-day germination period. So most of the Avena nuda oats that don’t show sprouts after soaking 18-20 hours have already started to germinate.

2. I’ve reduced food intake with TRE, and usually finish eating for the day before 4:00 p.m. This first item was reduced and the others deleted due to volume – too much food within 8 hours:

  • Advanced glycation end products-less chicken vegetable soup stretches for the prep day and three more days instead of two more days.
  • A daily avocado.
  • 85 g hard tofu.
  • 85 g precooked garbanzo / dark red kidney / pinto / black bean mix with untoasted sesame seeds. Will probably restart this the next time TPTB cause empty grocery store shelves.

I changed these two items after my sense of smell and taste improved:

  • I split 283 g of sliced white, crimini, portobello, and shitake mushrooms into the three leftover AGE-less chicken vegetable soup servings rather than into all four servings. Don’t need an umami bomb for prep day soup to taste good.
  • Stopped adding 3 g inulin daily to green tea. Don’t need a sweet taste.

Usually drink three cups of green tea and a cup of aluminum-free coffee before noon.

3. Supplements changed with TRE. Although the ProdromeNeuro loading dose and the 3-day-old broccoli / red cabbage / mustard sprout mix both have about 30-35 calories, I use the later mix as the start of TRE.

When I think an item’s desired results could be antagonized by having other items in the stomach, I’ll take it without eating anything else an hour before or an hour after. I’ll use meal numbers below rather than breakfast / lunch / dinner nomenclature as divisions among them are compressed.

Before Meal 1
– 3.2 g ProdromeNeuro, with nothing else an hour before or after
– 1.5 g yeast cell wall β-glucan (Glucan 300), with nothing else an hour before or after

Meal 1
– 3-day-old microwaved broccoli / red cabbage / mustard sprouts started from 10.7 g of seeds, with nothing else an hour before or after

Meals 2, 3, and 4
– 5 g total taurine
– 3.75 g total glucosamine hydroxychloride / 3 g total chondroitin sulfate, Kirkland Signature
– 3 g total acetyl-L-carnitine, Now
– 1.8 g total chondroitin sulfate, Now
– Hyaluronic acid, Nature’s Lab, 1 serving total
– 9 mg total boron, Swanson Triple Boron Complex

Meals 2 and 4
– Balance oil (total 1400 mg linoleic acid / 350 mg linolenic acid)
– 3 g total betaine anhydrous (TMG), Now
– 2 g total arginine alpha-ketoglutarate, Swanson

Meal 2 only
– Minerals and vitamins (RDA mainly), Kirkland Signature Daily Multi
– 25 mcg D3

Meal 3 only
– 56.7 g desalted capers
– 28.35 g walnuts
– 5 g creatine
– 600 mcg Vitamin K2 MK-7, Now

Meal 4 only
– 1.2 g lecithin, Now
– 30 mg zinc monomethionine / 0.3 mg copper, Now
– 25 mg lutein / 5 mg zeaxanthin
– 50 mcg D3

After Meal 4
– 3.2 g ProdromeGlia, with nothing else an hour before or after

4. I’ll get blood tests next week without involving medical professionals other than Labcorp employees. I’ll compare results to a May 2023 annual physical done in the week I started retirement to see whether I’ve changed my phenotype to be more healthy during these less-stressful past six months.


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An ulnar nerve anecdote

Two 2023 papers demonstrated the weak-sauce treatments currently offered to resolve elbow ulnar nerve pain:

“This case report investigated the use of ultrasound-guided nerve hydrodissection and platelet releasate injection for treating ulnar neuritis at the elbow.

  • The patient’s symptoms were first managed with home exercise and ulnar nerve hydrodissection at the elbow, which decreased but did not resolve her pain.
  • Platelet releasate injection of the ulnar nerve at the elbow was subsequently performed. Six weeks post-procedure, the patient reported additional pain improvement.

Despite these results, the patient was not completely symptom-free. Persistent symptoms were attributed to her concomitant neurogenic thoracic outlet syndrome.”

https://www.cureus.com/articles/133241-platelet-releasate-injection-as-a-novel-treatment-for-ulnar-neuritis-at-the-elbow-a-case-report/ “Platelet Releasate Injection as a Novel Treatment for Ulnar Neuritis at the Elbow: A Case Report”

When a diagnosis concludes with the word ‘syndrome’, we can be assured that medical professionals don’t know any specific cause. Expect physical therapy and/or drugs and/or surgery to be recommended, which will only address symptoms, not causes.

These practitioners proposed two experimental treatments, and somehow, the patient agreed to be a lab rat for both. If they were repeatedly questioned as to whether those two treatments would address causes, I’d expect responses similar to “That’s all we can do for you.”

In line with this decade’s revelations about the medical profession, the patient was also gaslighted. These practitioners asserted “changes to the patient’s lifestyle” as a reason neither treatment worked, although no such lifestyle changes were indicated.

Medical professionals are people whose early life experiences impel them to control other people with a license, among other driving factors. They won’t discuss items outside their ideas and beliefs, because these are defenses against their and their patients’ realities.


Next is a study of 111 elbow neuropathy patients (average age 55, median follow-up period of 880 days), one third of whom had various surgeries:

“There are three main potential mechanisms of recovery after nerve lesion: (1) resolution of conduction block, (2) collateral reinnervation, and (3) nerve regeneration.

  • Nerve function in chronic focal compression/entrapment neuropathies seems to improve mainly due to resolution of the conduction block and collateral reinnervation.
  • Contribution of nerve regeneration seems to be minor.

The majority of axons lost in chronic focal neuropathies probably never recover. Further studies using quantitative methods are needed to validate present findings.”

https://www.mdpi.com/2077-0383/12/12/3906 “No Major Nerve Regeneration Seems to Occur during Recovery of Ulnar Neuropathy at the Elbow”


Another interesting thing may have unexpectedly started with my 90-day trial of Prodrome Glia and Neuro products. Here’s an abbreviated look at what I’m tracking that omits intermittent fasting data:

day 7-25

Left ulnar nerve pain stayed the same or decreased two hours after a ProdromeGlia loading dose from Days 11-21. After adding a ProdromeNeuro loading dose at Day 22, my left ulnar nerve pain has unexpectedly stopped.

Any resistance exercise I’ve done during the past month would have aggravated my left ulnar nerve prior to the current regimen. Yesterday I clumped together reverse curls, regular bicep curls, bench presses, and triceps extensions, in that order, two sets each. I used lower weights than in the past, squeezed at the top of concentric motion, and returned slowly with eccentric motion for each rep.

Today on Day 25 the exercised muscles burn as expected, especially due to eccentric motion. But my left ulnar nerve is fine.

At the beginning, I thought that ProdromeGlia might eventually have an effect on left ulnar nerve pain, but not ProdromeNeuro. The first paper noted “The ulnar nerve begins in the axilla as a continuation of the medial cord of the brachial plexus, originally arising from the C8 and T1 nerve roots of the spinal cord.” I’ll guess that something upstream of my left ulnar nerve may also be involved in recent results.

Don’t agree with the second paper’s unevidenced assertion that “The majority of axons lost in chronic focal neuropathies probably never recover.” I’ve had intermittent left ulnar nerve numbness and pain for over five years, which is a lot longer than the 880-day median follow-up period of that paper.

Dr. Goodenowe presented his combined daily plasmalogen precursor dose as ~100 mg/kg. My analogous combined daily plasmalogen precursor loading doses are 7200 mg, appropriate for a person who weighs 72 kg. I weigh 155 lbs. / 70 kg.

More testing is warranted, of course. Maybe I’m just in-between an intermittent occurrence of left ulnar pain. So far, the way my current regimen is playing out, every day has something to make it Thanksgiving Day.

Brain restoration with plasmalogens

In this 2023 presentation for a professional audience, Dr. Dayan Goodenowe showed an example of what could be done (in the form of what he personally did at ages 53-54) to restore and augment brain structure and function over a 17-month period by taking plasmalogens and supporting supplements:

https://drgoodenowe.com/recording-of-dr-goodenowes-presentation-from-the-peptide-world-congress-2023-is-now-available/

Follow the video along with its interactive transcript. Restorative / augmentative supplements included:

1. Nutritional Supplementation Strategy

Forms of MRI used to document brain structure and function changes were:

2. Advanced MRI Technologies

Brain volume decreases are the rule for humans beginning at age 40. Dr. Goodenowe documented brain volume increases, which aren’t supposed to happen, but did per the below slide of overall results:

3. Reversing Brain Shrinkage

“From a global cortical volume and thickness perspective, 17 months of high-dose plasmalogens reversed ~15 years of predicted brain deterioration.”


Specific increased adaptations in brain measurements over 17 months included:

  1. Cortical thickness .07/2.51 = +3%.
  2. White matter microstructure fractional anisotropy +8%.
  3. Nucleus accumbens volume +30%.
  4. Dopaminergic striatal terminal fields’ volume +18%.
  5. Cholinergic cortical terminal fields’ volume +10%.
  6. Occipital cortex volume +10%.
  7. Optic chiasm volume +225%.
  8. Nucleus basalis connectivity.
  9. Neurovascular coupling signal controlled by noradrenaline integrity.
  10. Amygdala volume +4% and its connectivity to the insula, indicating ongoing anxiety and emotional stress response.
  11. Parahippocampus volume +7%.
  12. Hippocampus fractional anisotropy +5%.

No changes:

  1. Amygdala connectivity to the ventral lateral prefrontal cortex, the same part of the brain that relates to placebo effect.
  2. Hippocampus connectivity.

Decreased adaptations in brain measurements included:

  1. White matter microstructure radial diffusivity -10%.
  2. Amygdala connectivity to the anterior cingulate cortex to suppress / ignore / deny anxiety response.
  3. Amygdala connectivity to the dorsal lateral prefrontal cortex.
  4. Entorhinal cortex volume -14%.
  5. Hippocampus volume -6%.
  6. Hippocampus mean diffusivity (white matter improved, with more and tighter myelin) -4%.

The other half of this video was a lively and wide-ranging Q&A session.


The referenced 2023 study of 653 adults followed over ten years showed what brain deterioration could be expected with no interventions. Consider these annual volume decrease rates to be a sample of a control group:

etable 3

https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamanetworkopen/fullarticle/2806488 “Characterization of Brain Volume Changes in Aging Individuals With Normal Cognition Using Serial Magnetic Resonance Imaging”

Also see a different population’s brain shrinkage data in Prevent your brain from shrinking.


The daily plasmalogen precursor doses Dr. Goodenowe took were equivalent to 100 mg softgel/kg, double the maximum dose of 50 mg softgel/kg provided during the 2022 clinical trial of cognitively impaired old people referenced in Plasmalogens Parts 1, 2, and 3.

He mentions taking 5 ml in the morning and 5 ml at night because he used the Prodrome oil products. 1 ml of a Prodrome oil plasmalogen precursor product equals 900 mg of their softgel product.


“My brain is trying to minimize long-term effects of pain/stress by suppressing my memory of it. But this can only go on for so long before it becomes an entrenched state.

I have solved the sustenance side of the equation. I need to work harder to solve the environmental side.”

While I agree that we each have a responsibility to ourselves to create an environment that’s conducive to our health, the above phenomenon isn’t necessarily resolvable by changing an individual’s current environment. My understanding is that long-term effects of pain, stress, and related human experiences are usually symptoms of causes that started much earlier in our lives.

Adjusting one’s present environment may have immediate results, but probably won’t have much therapeutic impact on long-term issues. Early life memories and experiences are where we have to gradually go in order to stop being driven by what happened back then.

See Dr. Arthur Janov’s Primal Therapy for its principles and explanations. I started Primal Therapy at a similar age, 53, and continued for three years.


Continued with Part 2.