dopamimetic
Bluelighter
Just happened yesterday to read a really interesting journal article at the library about rapamycin and the related research about ageing and the prevention / reversal thereof. Of course had to think of the ketamine-related antidepressant activity that seems to be, at least partially, mediated through that mechanistic target of rapamycin (mTOR) pathway and dissociatives / NMDA antagonists in general.
Seems to be a somewhat complex matter, as always, and things aren't that clearly understandable at least for me - that rapamycin tends to make organisms like yeasts or the fruit fly to live longer, but also probably increases the cancer risk or at least growth of already existing cancers etc. because it dampens parts of the immune response.
So do dissociatives now potentially rejuvenate you or keep your cells vital but increase the risk of getting cancer a bit or the opposite (oversimplified)?
mTOR is a key modulator of ageing and age-related disease
The TOR pathway comes of age
Ketamine modifies mood through mTOR
Seems to be a somewhat complex matter, as always, and things aren't that clearly understandable at least for me - that rapamycin tends to make organisms like yeasts or the fruit fly to live longer, but also probably increases the cancer risk or at least growth of already existing cancers etc. because it dampens parts of the immune response.
So do dissociatives now potentially rejuvenate you or keep your cells vital but increase the risk of getting cancer a bit or the opposite (oversimplified)?
mTOR is a key modulator of ageing and age-related disease
The TOR pathway comes of age
Ketamine modifies mood through mTOR
