So I've been taking TA-65 at a dose of 6 a day for nearly 3 months now and have noticed in the last few weeks an exponential growth of new moles on my skin. I hadn't noticed any new ones in many years now. Obviously, people can grow new ones will into their 40's, so this N=1 experiment can't have much merit, but it is very noticeable and seems to continue. I actually went to the dermatologist twice just to make sure they weren't cancerous. I don't particularly like moles, aesthetically speaking so in a way it's a bummer, but the article below suggests it at least has a possible up side and my experience may not be sheer coincidence.
Anyone else any experience with this?
http://www.examiner....d-to-age-slowly
"According to a 10-year study at the University of London King's College, people with more moles age at a slower rate. The study researched over 900 sets of twins and found that people with more than 100 moles on their body have an an average biological age of 6-7 years younger than people with less than 25 moles on their body. Biological age was estimated by researchers by using telomere length."
"To produce a visible mole from a signal cell requires about 30 cell doublings," explains Dr. William Andrews, CEO of Sierra Sciences, LLC. "People with shorter telomeres wouldn't be able to produce visible moles, while those with longer telomeres often have many moles."
With that being said, it should be no surprise that the study found that people with a lot of moles were found to have longer telomeres.
"I would go further than saying that those people with longer telomeres 'looked' up to seven years younger; I'd say that, biologically, they were up to seven years younger," says Dr. Andrews. "Because they have longer telomeres than average people, their 'clock of aging' runs a little longer than the average."