• Log in with Facebook Log in with Twitter Log In with Google      Sign In    
  • Create Account
  LongeCity
              Advocacy & Research for Unlimited Lifespans

Photo
- - - - -

Supplements that work after you stop taking them

long-term

  • Please log in to reply
4 replies to this topic

#1 lemon_

  • Validating/Suspended
  • 200 posts
  • -16
  • Location:EU

Posted 03 November 2015 - 05:02 PM


Hi,

 

Any supplements to take that after you take them for a couple of days, after you stop taking them, they will have a positive effect on you? 

 

thanks. 



#2 lemon_

  • Topic Starter
  • Validating/Suspended
  • 200 posts
  • -16
  • Location:EU

Posted 05 November 2015 - 06:00 PM

beep beep



sponsored ad

  • Advert
Click HERE to rent this advertising spot for SUPPLEMENTS (in thread) to support LongeCity (this will replace the google ad above).

#3 Nickotin

  • Guest
  • 33 posts
  • 5
  • Location:Florida

Posted 07 November 2015 - 05:48 PM

Uridine seems to have it's best effects 12-24 hrs after taking it. I notice that it doesn't fully wear off until 72+ hrs

#4 jroseland

  • Guest
  • 1,117 posts
  • 162
  • Location:Europe

Posted 08 November 2015 - 12:30 PM

What kind of Uridine did you take?

Uridine seems to have it's best effects 12-24 hrs after taking it. I notice that it doesn't fully wear off until 72+ hrs

 



sponsored ad

  • Advert
Click HERE to rent this advertising spot for SUPPLEMENTS (in thread) to support LongeCity (this will replace the google ad above).

#5 niner

  • Guest
  • 16,276 posts
  • 2,000
  • Location:Philadelphia

Posted 08 November 2015 - 08:31 PM

Lemon_, it sounds like you're looking for something that will cause a more or less permanent state change.  Is that it?  If so, I can think of a few ways you might do that.  The first would be anything that modifies your epigenetics, like altering CpG methylation or histone acetylation states.  Anyone have suggestions for substances that would do such things?  Loren Pickart has made claims about GHK-Cu "resetting" genes to a more youthful state, which sounds like an epigenetic change.

 

Another possibility is a telomerase activator.  Cycloastragenol comes to mind there.  You might want to keep an eye on Liz Parrish's AAV HTERT gene experiment.

 

If you have any sick mitochondria, you might be able to improve them with a mitochondrial antioxidant.  (C60oo, MitoQ)  Such changes might be persistent.

 

If you're old enough to have a significant number of senescent cells, you could try the Dasatinib / Quercetin protocol that's been talked about here.  If it works, that would be a state change.


  • WellResearched x 1
  • like x 1





Also tagged with one or more of these keywords: long-term

0 user(s) are reading this topic

0 members, 0 guests, 0 anonymous users