Saturday, November 21, 2020

Study finds hyperbaric oxygen treatments reverse aging process



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This is important.  Two critical biological pathways are radically changed out in a way that directly restore youthful vitality.  There will be many more.

The patients got a treatment essentially every day.  Thus the blood oxtgen content was surged and this likely laste in its effect for perhaps an hour or so.  We need to pin this down.

An alternative is biological oxygen which is nob available yet.  This therapy fully enriched the blood for at least two hours with a slow decline after.

However HBOT can now be marketed as a spa based option in which the individual spends pethaps as little as thirty minutes every day.

This should allow a steady decline of senescent cells in particular along with a natural cycle of restoration..




Study finds hyperbaric oxygen treatments reverse aging process


NOVEMBER 20, 2020

Human chromosomes (grey) capped by telomeres (white). Credit: PD-NASA; PD-USGOV-NASA

https://medicalxpress.com/news/2020-11-hyperbaric-oxygen-treatments-reverse-aging.html


A new study from Tel Aviv University (TAU) and the Shamir Medical Center in Israel indicates that hyperbaric oxygen treatments (HBOT) in healthy aging adults can stop the aging of blood cells and reverse the aging process. In the biological sense, the adults' blood cells actually grow younger as the treatments progress.


The researchers found that a unique protocol of treatments with high-pressure oxygen in a pressure chamber can reverse two major processes associated with aging and its illnesses: the shortening of telomeres (protective regions located at both ends of every chromosome) and the accumulation of old and malfunctioning cells in the body. Focusing on immune cells containing DNA obtained from the participants' blood, the study discovered a lengthening of up to 38% of the telomeres, as well as a decrease of up to 37% in the presence of senescent cells.


The study was led by Professor Shai Efrati of the Sackler School of Medicine and the Sagol School of Neuroscience at TAU and Founder and Director of the Sagol Center of Hyperbaric Medicine at the Shamir Medical Center; and Dr. Amir Hadanny, chief medical research officer of the Sagol Center for Hyperbaric Medicine and Research at the Shamir Medical Center. The clinical trial was conducted as part of a comprehensive Israeli research program that targets aging as a reversible condition.


The paper was published in Aging on November 18, 2020.


"For many years, our team has been engaged in hyperbaric research and therapy—treatments based on protocols of exposure to high-pressure oxygen at various concentrations inside a pressure chamber," Professor Efrati explains. "Our achievements over the years included the improvement of brain functions damaged by age, stroke or brain injury.


"In the current study, we wished to examine the impact of HBOT on healthy and independent aging adults, and to discover whether such treatments can slow down, stop or even reverse the normal aging process at the cellular level."


The researchers exposed 35 healthy individuals aged 64 or over to a series of 60 hyperbaric sessions over a period of 90 days. Each participant provided blood samples before, during and at the end of the treatments, as well as some time after the series of treatments concluded. The researchers then analyzed various immune cells in the blood and compared the results.


The findings indicated that the treatments actually reversed the aging process in two of its major aspects: The telomeres at the ends of the chromosomes grew longer instead of shorter at a rate of 20% to 38% depending on the cell type; and the percentage of senescent cells in the overall cell population was reduced significantly—by 11%-37% depending on cell type.


"Today, telomere shortening is considered the 'holy grail' of the biology of aging," Professor Efrati says. "Researchers around the world are trying to develop pharmacological and environmental interventions that enable telomere elongation. Our HBOT protocol was able to achieve this, proving that the aging process can in fact be reversed at the basic cellular-molecular level."


"Until now, interventions such as lifestyle modifications and intense exercise were shown to have some inhibiting effect on telomere shortening," Dr. Hadanny adds. "But in our study, only three months of HBOT were able to elongate telomeres at rates far beyond any currently available interventions or lifestyle modifications. With this pioneering study, we have opened a door for further research on the cellular impact of HBOT and its potential for reversing the aging process."

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