Hyperbaric Hyperbole

An Israeli study came out last week that has been described as rejuvenation via hyperbaric oxygen. I’m not taking it very seriously, and I owe you an explanation why.

  • The main claim is telomere lengthening. I used to think of telomeres as the primary means by which aging is programmed, but since the Danish telomere study [Rode 2015], I think that telomeres play a minor role.
  • I think that methylation age is a far better surrogate than telomere length. The study doesn’t mention methylation age, but reading between the lines…
  • I think the study’s results can be explained by elimination of senescent white blood cells. This might explain the observed increase in average telomere length, even without expression of telomerase. 
  • Are there signs of senolytic benefits in other tissues? That’s the big question going forward.

A study was published in the Aging (Albany) last week claiming to lengthen telomeres and eliminate senescent cells in a test group of 20 middle-aged adults using intermittent hyperbaric oxygen treatment. It was promoted as age reversal in popular articles [for example], apparently with the encouragement of Tel Aviv University.

Telomeres as a surrogate marker for aging

Several years ago, I was enthusiastic about the use of telomere length as a measure of biological age. Telomeres shorten progressively with age, and I thought this mechanism provided a good candidate for a mechanism of programmed aging. But when the Rode study came out of Copenhagen (2015), I saw that the scatter in telomere length was too large for this idea to be credible.

I came to think that telomere shrinkage plays a minor role in aging. Around the same time, I became enthusiastic about methylation clocks. Methylation changes with age are correlated far more strongly with less scatter.

So I think that methylation is plausible as a primary cause of aging, and telomere shrinkage, less so.

Telomere length vs age, new data

 

The Treatment

The air we breathe is only 21% oxygen. Breathing pure oxygen, five times as concentrated as in air, is a temporary therapy (hours at a time, but not days) for people who have impaired lungs. But prolonged exposure to pure O2 can injure the lungs and other tissues as well. Oxygen is highly reactive, and the body’s antioxidant system is gauged to the environments in which we evolved, so oxygen therapy is not to be taken lightly.

Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT) is oxygen at double full strength. The patient breathes pure oxygen at twice atmospheric pressure. If you just put a tube in your mouth with that much pressure, you wouldn’t be able to hold it, or to exhale. But the body can withstand high pressures as long as it’s all around, not just inside the lungs. If you SCUBA dive, at 30 feet below the surface the ambient pressure is two atmospheres, and SCUBA tanks adjust to feed air into your mouth at a pressure that is matched to the surrounding water.

(Incidentally, pressure varies a lot with altitude, so that in Denver it’s 20% lower than New York. Two years ago, I trekked in the Himalayas at 17,000 feet, where the air pressure is only half the standard (sea level) value, and of course there is only half as much oxygen.)

HBOT needs to arrange higher ambient pressure, not just in the oxygen tank. The patient has to be enclosed in a chamber where the ambient pressure is twice atmospheric pressure. Pure oxygen is expensive enough that the ambient air is just normal air at high pressure, and the patient is given oxygen to breathe from a tank. The patient can be in a pressurized room or lying in a personalized chamber.

HBOT has been around for a century, and standard medical uses are for detoxification, gangrene, and chronic infections.  More recently, HBOT has been used with success for traumatic injury, especially nerve damage. There are studies in mice in which HBOT in combination with a ketogenic diet has successfully treated cancer.

In the new Israeli study, subjects received 90 minutes of HBOT therapy 5 days a week for 12 weeks. For 5 minutes of every 20, patients breathed ordinary 21% air. The intermittent treatment was described as inducing some hypoxia adaptations. Apparently, the body adjusts to the high oxygen environment, and then it senses (relative) oxygen deprivation for those 5 minutes.

How does it work?

There is no accepted theory for how HBOT works, so I feel free to speculate. The primary role of a highly oxidative environment is to destroy. That’s probably how HBOT treats infections, since bacteria are generally more vulnerable to oxidative damage than cells of our bodies. Another thing that HBOT does well is to eliminate necrotic tissue, and I wouldn’t be surprised if it turns out to be an effective cancer treatment, since tumor cells thrive in an anaerobic environment. But the body also uses ROS (reactive oxygen species) such as H2O2 as distress signals that dial up chemical protection and repair. This is akin to hormesis, and I’m inclined to think that when HBOT promotes nerve growth, it is via a distress signal.

Results

Authors of the new study make two claims: that telomeres are lengthened in several classes of white blood cells, and that senescent white blood cells are eliminated. Let’s take them in reverse order.

Elimination of senescent cells has been a promising anti-aging therapy since pioneering work of van Deursen at the Mayo Clinic. A quick refresher: telomeres get shorter each time cells replicate, and in our bodies, some of the cells that replicate most (stem cells and their offspring) develop short telomeres late in life that threaten their viability. Cells with short telomeres go into a state of senescence, in which they send out signals (inflammatory cytokines) that increase levels of inflammation in the body and can also induce senescence in adjacent cells, in a chain reaction. Senescent cells are a tiny proportion of all cells in the body, and Van Deursen showed that the body is better off without them. Just by selectively killing senescent cells in a mouse model, he was able to extend their lifespan by about ~25%. But to do the experiment, he had to genetically engineer the mice in such a way that the senescent cells would be easy to kill selectively. Ever since this study, the research community has been looking for effective senolytic agents that could kill senescent cells and leave regular cells alone (without having to genetically engineer us ahead of time).

The new Israeli study demonstrates that senescent white blood cells have been reduced. (Red blood cells have no chromosomes, so they can’t have short telomeres and can’t become senescent in the same way. They just wear out after a few months.) The effect continued after the 60 hyperbaric sessions were over, suggesting that HBOT kills the cells slowly, or damages them so that they die later. Apparently, the reduction was measured by separating different cell types and counting them. There was a great deal of scatter from one patient to the next.

The first claim is that average telomere length was increased in some populations of white cell sub-types. Again, there was a great deal of scatter in the data, with some of the subjects decreasing telomere length and others. For example, when they say that B cell telomeres increased by 22% + 40%, I interpret that to mean that the mean telomere length increased by 22%, but the combined standard deviations from the before and after measurements was 40% of the original length. Hence, a great deal of scatter.

Aside about statistics (With apologies — this from my geeky side)

First, what does that mean 22% + 40% ? How can that be statistically significant? Answer: The standard deviation of a set of measurements is a measure of the scatter. It tells you how broadly they differ from one another. If you’re looking for the average of that distribution, you can be pretty sure that the average isn’t out at the edges, so the uncertainty in the average is a lot smaller than the standard deviation. How much smaller? The answer is the square root of N rule. The “standard error of the mean”, or SEM, is the standard deviation divided by the square root of the number of points, or √N. So the 40% standard deviation gets divided by the square root of the number of subjects in the study, √26=5.1, and “22% + 40%” should really be reported as 22% + 8%. The mean is 22% and the uncertainty in that 22% is 8%.

The way this group did the statistics was based on

  • Finding the average telomere length among 26 subjects after the study
  • Dividing by the average telomere length among 26 subjects before the study

First they average, then they divide.

But it’s well-known (to statisticians) that the most sensitive test is to reverse the operations. First divide, then average. In other words, compare each subject’s telomeres after the study with the same subject before the study. If you do the statistics this way, then the original scatter among the different subjects all cancels out. You can start with subjects of vastly different telomere lengths, and it doesn’t matter to the statistics, so long as each one of them changes in a consistent way.

If you average first (before dividing), the scatter among the initial group imposes a penalty in statistical significance, even though that has nothing to do with effectiveness of the treatment.

So this raises the question: Why did the authors do the statistics this less-sensitive way? They hint at an answer: “repeated measures analysis shows a non-significant trend (F=4.663, p=0.06)” They seem to be saying that the test which normally gives a better p value, in this case gives a worse p value.

That can only happen if the the people who had the longest telomeres at the end of the study were not the same as the people who had the longest telomeres at the beginning.

Here’s what I think is really going on

Telomerase is the enzyme that increases telomere length. We think of telomerase as anti-aging, and supplements such as astragalus and gotu kola and silymarin are gobbled up for their telomerase activation potential. When we think of longer telomeres as a result of a study, we imagine that telomerase has been activated.

But in this case, I think that the average has gone up simply because the cells with short telomeres have been killed off. The authors are telling us that there are less senescent cells as a result of the treatment. Senescent cells are the ones with the shortest telomeres. At the beginning, the average telomere length is an average of a wide range of cells with long and short telomeres. At the end, you have the same long telomeres in the average, but the shortest ones are gone, so the average has increased.

I’m suggesting that telomerase has not been activated. There has been no elongation of telomeres, but the average length has increased because cells with the shortest telomeres have been eliminated.

It’s only a hypothesis, but it might help explain why the people who had the longest average telomere length at the beginning were not the same as the people who had the longest average telomere length at the end. The senescent cells that were being eliminated had no relationship to the telomere length in other cells.

Next steps

One thing I’d like to know is whether the HBOT treatment affected methylation age by any of the Horvath clocks. I’ve written to the authors with this question, and haven’t received a response. Maybe they did the methylation testing and didn’t report the results because they were negative—just a guess.

But even without reprogramming methylation, the therapy can be valuable if it is eliminating senescent cells generally, and not just in white blood cells. An easy first test would be whether inflammatory cytokines in the blood decreased after the treatment. Confirmation would come from the kind of test van Deursen did, assaying senescent cells in different tissues.

If hyperbaric oxygen can be shown to decrease methylation age, that would be a promising finding. If not, but the treatment has general senolytic effects (not just in white blood cells), it may yet have value as an anti-aging treatment. Maybe the authors already know the answers to these questions; if not, they should be busy finding out.

42 thoughts on “Hyperbaric Hyperbole

  1. Nice Josh, I agree. However, it is possible that hyperbaric oxygen might pick off senescent cells that are highly metabolically active and may not have the safeguards that normal cells do to increased ROS levels (my guess is that ROS levels increase) with hyperbaric oxygen.

  2. Josh:

    Kudos to you for being the first life scientist to evidence a rudimentary understanding of arithmetic. “Telomere lengthening” is a nonsensical concept. As you observe, average telomere length is nothing more than a measure of how effective our maintenance systems have been in eliminating senescent cells (those with such short telomere lengths that they have reached the Hayflick limit). When those cells are replaced by stem cells (cells that have optimal telomere lengths), average length goes up. That’s how arithmetic works.

    Where I differ from your reasoning is in your apparent belief that the replacement of senescent cells with healthy new stem cells is not significant. Decreasing telomere length is associated with age-related diminution in physiological functionality precisely because it is a function of how many senescent cells (i.e. how much intrinsic damage) we’ve accumulated.

    There is no anti-aging value in “telomerase expression”. As a believer in the Theory of Evolution, I believe that if we did not benefit (most likely, cancer avoidance) from the telomere attrition we suffer as a result of not expressing telomerase, then humans would produce and express plenty of telomerase and we would not suffer from telomere attrition.

    Nonetheless, I do agree with your overall assessment that telomere length is a symptom, rather than a major cause, of aging.

    • ” “Telomere lengthening” is a nonsensical concept. As you observe, average telomere length is nothing more than a measure of how effective our maintenance systems have been in eliminating senescent cells (those with such short telomere lengths that they have reached the Hayflick limit).”

      That is not true. Telomere lengthening is not nonsensical and average telomere length is not just a measure of elimination of senescent cells. It is entirely possible for two individuals to have the same number of senescent cells yet differ widely in the average length of their telomeres.

      “Decreasing telomere length is associated with age-related diminution in physiological functionality precisely because it is a function of how many senescent cells (i.e. how much intrinsic damage) we’ve accumulated.”

      That’s a simplification. It is more than just a marker of senescent cell burden and it is also a cause of senescent cell burden.

      “There is no anti-aging value in “telomerase expression”. As a believer in the Theory of Evolution, I believe that if we did not benefit (most likely, cancer avoidance) from the telomere attrition we suffer as a result of not expressing telomerase, then humans would produce and express plenty of telomerase and we would not suffer from telomere attrition.”

      I disagree. There is anti-aging value in telomerase expression, just not as much as many people think. There is an evolutionary reason for why telomeres aren’t maintained much longer and that is to prevent cancer. Note that evolution doesn’t care if you live to 100, it only cares about whether the species lives on and you pass your genes on to your offspring.

      • Olafur:

        Thanks for responding to my comment.

        I don’t pretend to be as knowledgeable as the other people who visit Josh’s site. That’s why I like simple explanations and tend to oversimplify my comments. I commented on this article because Josh provided a simple arithmetical explanation as to how average telomere length can increase without the telomere length of any particular cell increasing.

        I agree with you that telomere attrition is a cause of senescent cell burden. I also agree that average telomere length is associated with diminished physiological performance (what you call aging). You reject my conclusion that the likely explanation for that association is that lower average telomere length is likely to be correlated with the accumulation of a larger number of cells with extremely short telomeres.

        Are you suggesting that it is possible to increase the telomere length of individual cells?

        Are you also suggesting that a cell with longer telomeres is inherently more functional than one with shorter telomeres?

        With regard to how long evolution wants me to live, I agree with you completely. However, I disagree with the assertion that evolution does not care how many offspring I have (as long as I have one). Natural selection will choose traits that result in the maximum number of healthy offspring. The critical issue is functionality, not longevity. If one’s reproductive system is fully functional through the age of 70, that person is likely to have more offspring than one whose reproductive system starts deteriorating in his 30’s. That’s why I’ve never been able to buy into the concept that we are genetically programmed to start losing functionality once we reach reproductive maturity.

        • Mark,
          I agree with your view on telomere not being a a cause of aging nor its increase being neccessarily an increase in lifespan. But as a response to your last comment in your reply to Olafur evidence does show Nature begins deliberate moves to destabilize important processes just after we achieve reproductive maturity. Prof Richard Morrimoto’s paper showed us how just after puberty a molecular switch origibating from germline stem cells increases repressive marks on the stress response heat shock proteins. This amongst many repercussions causes higher chances of misfolding of proteins as HSPs are part of the chaperones that support ubiquitin proteasome systems involved in protein production. Another team of Prof Michael Inouye showed that the same genes which are important in male and female fertility being expressed in testes and ovary after puberty switch to genes that lead to coronary artery disease our number one killer. I cant guess Nature’s ir evolutionary strategy but can only speculate that it wanted us to be at our peak when we reproduce, are bombarded with hormones to love our children at the risk of life and then live long enough to protect them till they reach puberty. The average lifespan may be matching this cycle before we invented medicines to beat mortal infections in a system where progressively immune function, metabolic efficiency, repair efficiency all are in deliberate decline due to progressive epigenetic and other regulatory factors blocking key genes, or proteins. Due to regular exercise providing hormetic boost and medicines we are able to prop up a dying animal but eventually the highly conserved assassination always succeeds. The more I have studied the regulation of genes and proteins the more I realize how Nature makes unending cuts till we succumb. For example we saw above first of all protein formation support system is in decline on top of that a time comes when 60% of the post transcriptional RNA is negatively regulated by miRNAs. As soon as one understands the complexity of regulation one will realize that single interventions targeting one symptom/outcome of such regulation can not prolong lifespan.

          • Hi Akshay,
            An admirer of you and Dr. Haorld’s thinking. Also admire Vince’s analysis and passion for longevity. In one of your comments below, you mention despite controlling the inflammation very strongly Vince may still have aging onslaught gong on in the background. Do you think elixir addresses this onslaught more profoundly and Harold and you have managed to intuit what is going on in the background?
            Thanks

        • @Mark. Vince Giuliano agrees with Akshay as to the time the body starts to abandon its homeostatic repair mechanisms. You might find his “YOUNGING” articles interesting.

          • I too would recommend reading his Younging post. Vince is brilliant and with full mental faculties in his 90s with shockingly normal chronic inflammation scores.

          • Thanks to both Wayne and Akshay. I’ll check out Vince’s series.

            Akshay’s mention that Vince is still remarkably functional in his 90s is pertinent to my core issue.

            If we are genetically hard-wired to lose functionality (because our repair processes are designed to become less effective) once we turn 20 or so, then it would be impossible for Vince to remain as functional as he is in his 90s.

            Also, from my first glance at Vince’s materials, it appears that he is talking about “lounging” by modifying environmental factors. That also suggests that aging is not hardwired into our genes.

            Contrast the human experience with that of domesticated animals. No matter how you modify environmental factors, they will weaken and die at some point. That is certainly not true of humans until much later in life.

          • Mark,
            I shared two evidences with you read Morrimoto’s research. Also Jean-Pierre Issa’s paper https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3871228/
            Josh’s posts here. Vince is a very rare exception as his own deep analytical research figured out about programme of aging and began taking interventions to counter the key precursor chronic inflammation. In fact he has developed a liposomal natural extracts product for chronic inflammation which he sells. I do recommend readers here to evaluate using it. Despite this he does look close to his age so the onslaught continues in the background. Mark I thought you were in the school of thought with Josh, Harold, Paul about programmed aging. Without the medicines in the last century many of us would succumb to infections by what we call now our middle age. There is a complex but linear drift of changes that starts after puberty and is slowly moving us closer to our death. Because it is slow doesnt mean its not happening. If you are in your 40s can you eat a full extra cheese pizza and a Magnum in one meal couple of times a week? As a teenager you could with no difference but in your 40s you will spike your LDL. From 50s it can lead to heart attack. Why do we feel we were at our peak in early 20s? There are studies by good scientists who have uncovered the temporal origins of these changes. We are working hard to reverse that drift.

          • @Mark. You really need to spend a few days reading Vince’s stuff. He attributes his good health to epigenetic changes induced by liberal use of supplements. Keyword: epigenetic. Specifically, reversal of post-reproduction-age epigenetic changes, primarily histone methylation.

            Both Vince and Kurzweil take scads of supplements. I can’t afford to take a tenth as many, so I need to puzzle out which ones are having the most effect. For example, I have learned that curcumin demethylates specific CpG sites in the promotor region of Nrf2 (once you’ve solved the bioavailability problem (liposomal, micellar, etc.)).

            I completely disagree with your assertion that aging cannot be “genetically hard-wired.” Why does development stop in the first place? Is it not genetically hard-wired, to use your term, that we stop growing? So, why can’t what comes after be programmed epigenetically as well, to use my term?

            We advocates of a programmed theory of aging are as yet in the minority to the damage theorists, but we’re gaining adherents rapidly. As they say, medicine advances when doctors die.

    • Josh Mitteldorf, I tried making a comment to the article but when I try to post it I get the message “Duplicate comment detected; it looks as though you’ve already said that!” even though the post is nowhere to be seen. Can you check if it went into some spam filter or something?

  3. Thank you very much for your analysis. Telomere shortening is just one of the Nine Hallmarks of Aging and thusI don’t believe it is the Gold Standard of Aging that is claimed by the Israeli researchers. The nutrients which you mentioned which is believed to lengthen telomeres can be taken or administered to millions, while the Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy can only be given to a few patients at a time.

  4. josh, thanks for this and also so glad to see you back to the subject matter that brought me here in the first place, even just temporarily.

  5. A very good evaluation of the results Josh. It debunked quite a few claims. The mathematical analysis gave an insight on their statistical method selected and its relevance which we would have missed otherwise. All your deductions were convincing. Lay readers of the PR execise should not rush to buy/rent/get HBOT without reading this post. Questions about safety on regular use remain. Whether a few sessions do provide any lasting benefit too remains ambiguous. On a separate note I read that our microbiome has 150 to 400 times genes than our own and have huge number of their RNAs in our circulation. It would good to get a post from Josh on contribution of our microbiome in aging.

  6. High pO2 caused oxidative stress. This signaled the nuclear aging program, which reacted changing the levels of hundreds of aging effectors, including but not only antioxidants, also apoptosis, telomers, etc

    This is what I think it happened

  7. Josh an excellent evaluation of the research, I bought a HBOT around 3 years ago I’ve done both tests methylation inflammation and telomere’s. my inflammation increased in the begging I think this may be due to killing off of senescent cells but after 12 months inflammation went down, my telomeres are longer than a person my age, my methylation test I was 4 years older than my test I am currently 50 and it said 54, I will be respecting these tests in January so I can compare, Unfortunately I didn’t do the telemetry test prior to starting so my next test will be interesting.

    cheers George

  8. Put me in the totally agree column. I am distressed, but not surprised, at the uncritical acceptance of the study’s conclusions in the popular press and forums.

  9. telomere shrinking leading to Hayflick’s limit cell cycle arrest is not a ‘mean telomere’ length hence the lack of correlation.

  10. Excellent article! It would be interesting if the patients too take or astragalus too see if there was a difference…..I have a 1.5 Hbo…..will do pretelomere length testing per kit(100usd) and after using hyperoxic hypoxic paradox. Throw in red wine high in reservertrol to help with hbo clausterphobia!

  11. I would expect a therapy that clears out old cells through increased ROS to lead to increased replacement from the stem.cell pool, and this would naturally lead to longer telomeres on average AND also a reduction in methylation age, because differentiating stem cells will naturally be younger epigenetically than the cells they are replacing.

    Unfortunately that is where the good news ends as using up more stem cells would be expected to reduce lifespan, even if it leads to a temporary improvement in health. Likewise with senolytics.

    This is of course predicated on telomere length in stem cells being vitally important, quite contrary to the popular view Josh holds that telomere length doesn’t matter – even as Josh rightly points out this is reflected only with great scatter in cross sectional studies when looking at various somatic tissues like white blood cells.

  12. I am not a scientist, just an 74 year old guy who has used his own HBOT for a couple of years. Here is just a singular experience, I have a lot of tools to maintain my health. I developed CTE, that was why I purchased the HBOT. It has done a great job in that area. Here are some my observations from using HBOT:
    1. I used to have to trim the hair in my ears regularly, now I do not. It hardly grows there anymore.
    2.Some regions of my head hair have returned to their original color.
    3. My sexual performance is way, way better.
    4. I can get much deeper in my meditation practice.in the HBOT
    5. I can hold my breath in the HBOT for 5 minutes and my SPO2 doesn’t go below 92%.
    6. My heart rate variability improves after a HBOT session
    7. I had some wounds (just scabs) that never went away, now they are gone.
    8. My low level lasers are more effective inside of the HBOT
    9. I don’t do recreational drugs, but regular drugs (i.e. Tramadol) are much more effective inside of the HBOT.
    I won’t bore the readers with any more details. I love double blind studies that are done effectively. I use them to evaluate health options for myself. However, I also evaluate their effect on me, we are all different. I am predominately a slow twitch muscled person, if I use a running training program that has been designed for predominately fast twitch muscled person I usually get injured (smiling).
    I am very grateful to the scientific community for providing accurate/truthful analysis of tools/therapies/supplements that can help lay people like myself.

  13. HBOT
    I am not a scientist, just an 74 year old guy who has used his own HBOT for a couple of years. Here is just a singular experience, I have a lot of tools to maintain my health. I developed CTE, that was why I purchased the HBOT. It has done a great job in that area. Here are some my observations from using HBOT:
    1. I used to have to trim the hair in my ears regularly, now I do not. It hardly grows there anymore.
    2.Some regions of my head hair have returned to their original color.
    3. My sexual performance is way, way better.
    4. I can get much deeper in my meditation practice.in the HBOT
    5. I can hold my breath in the HBOT for 5 minutes and my SPO2 doesn’t go below 92%.
    6. My heart rate variability improves after a HBOT session
    7. I had some wounds (just scabs) that never went away, now they are gone.
    8. My low level lasers are more effective inside of the HBOT
    9. I don’t do recreational drugs, but regular drugs (i.e. Tramadol) are much more effective inside of the HBOT.
    I won’t bore the readers with any more details. I love double blind studies that are done effectively. I use them to evaluate health options for myself. However, I also evaluate their effect on me, we are all different. I am predominately a slow twitch muscled person, if I use a running training program that has been designed for predominately fast twitch muscled person I usually get injured (smiling).
    I am very grateful to the scientific community for providing accurate/truthful analysis of tools/therapies/supplements that can help lay people like myself.

  14. Josh:

    Thank you for this timely article.

    I recently read an article detailing this research and a lot of questions were left unanswered.

    Your article has provided much food for thought.

  15. Josh maybe you can help me understand the statistics associated with this study a little better?

    How are they calculating their statistical significance? Normally you look for the probably that their result (i.e. telomere elongation of 22%) could be explained by natural variation without intervention. But there doesn’t seem to be a control group to allow them to do this?

    Are they simply using the average telomere length before the intervention as the ‘population mean’ and then subtracting that from the average telomere length after the intervention and then using this and their sample standard deviation and size to calculate p?

  16. Your speculation at the end is interesting, but I don’t think you can extrapolate that “the most sensitive test” wasn’t used as way of determining the telomere delta in the population was because the authors were trying to show a reduction in senescent cells Nor is there was an implication of a reduction in them.

    To my layman’s eyes, the test used is actually more sensitive at detecting a delta in the telomere lengths of a population than the one you suggest using; criticizing your word choice here as I think you didn’t mean “most sensitive” but “most accurate to meaningful results”.

    You’ve shown the study proves little. That’s a bummer. There might have been some value if they’d genetically tested the population and found some meaningful segregations between the people who’s telomeres lengthened and those who’s telomeres shortened.%0D%0A%0D%0AWith regard to telo-length changes in general, I’ve wondered if most testing on this is of ambiguous value. Very effective senolytics might result in an average lengthening. I think we really want more than one number – we want a volume, and to compute the space within it. one axis represents telomere length, another is the percent of telomeres at that length, a third represents the “total number of telomeres” indicated by a single point on the plane described by the other two… it would essentially be a line at 45 degrees) – That would likely give us the best picture of a person’s telomere situation

  17. There is a more direct, specific connection between hyperbaric oxygen treatment (HBOT) and Vince Giuliano’s (and Steve Buss’s) YOUNGING blog posts on the Anti-Aging Firewalls site. They do not discuss oxygen in the context of telomere length, but Vince and Steve mention “exercise with oxygen” (known as EWOT) as an intervention that may be anti-aging, and they note that Steve has been practicing this for years and reaping health benefits from it. EWOT is obviously different from HBOT, but the physiological effects of EWOT supposedly overlap with the effects of HBOT. I have no idea if this is true (I am not a scientist or physician), but proponents of this practice cite the original 1980s research out of Germany (by a scientist named Manfred von Ardenne) as verifying a plethora of health benefits including reduced inflammation and improved microvascular function. There are tons of anecdotal accounts of EWOT benefits, but many of these come from physicians and chiropractors selling EWOT equipment for home use. Regardless, the dearth of studies following up on von Ardenne’s “Oxygen Multi-step Therapy” studies is a mystery to me. Then again, I’m also baffled by the dearth of studies on such things as fecal transplants for conditions other than c. difficile. etc.

    Giuliano and Buss note that “[b]reathing oxygen in combination with exercising may promote YOUNGING” because “oxygen is [a] . . . promoter of JMJD3.” They reference “an older but significant body of science behind achieving healthful results via interventions that involve routine breathing of oxygen while exercising” and note that they plan a future blog entry that will “cover the science and historical background of the exercise-oxygen approach, recent related research, how the practice works in detail . . . and the benefits of the approach that Steve has personally experienced.”

    I did not see anything in the YOUNGING discussion about stem cell exhaustion or depletion of a finite pool of stem cells as a tradeoff between EWOT benefits and lifespan. By tradeoff, I am referring to Mark’s statement above that “[u]nfortunately that is where the good news ends as using up more stem cells would be expected to reduce lifespan, even if it leads to a temporary improvement in health.” Do any of you, including Mark, have any thoughts about any of this? There are studies showing that exercise mobilizes hematopoietic and endothelial progenitor cells from the bone marrow. Does that mean that exercise reduces life span by depleting the stem cell pool and that EWOT probably reduces lifespan even more?

    • I don’t believe there is a finite pool of stem cells and when we use them up we die. Stem cells are self-renewing when we are young, but not when they receive signals from an old body. That’s the story from which I try to explain what we see.

      • Sadly, I don’t believe this to be true. Although the picture is complicated the most pluripotent stem cells do decrease in number, being all but gone by age 40.

        Check out Figure 2 from ‘Identification of Human Very Small Embryonic like Stem Cells (VSELS) in Human Heart Tissue Among Young and Old Individuals’, you’ll need to access it from the usual free site.

        It is not clear exactly what the mechanism is for the reduction in stem cells. It may simply be insufficient telomerase.

        Downstream of this in some tissue stem cell pools, such as in the skin, stem cells do not decrease in number, but those more likely to self renew via symmetric division rather than dividing asymmetrically with one daughter cell differentiating, come to dominant the pool, starving the tissue of new cells over time. See ‘Stem cell competition orchestrates skin homeostasis and ageing’.

        • Mark, in light of the finding in various studies that exercise mobilizes hematopoietic and endothelial progenitor cells from the bone marrow, should we conclude that exercise actually shortens lifespan or healthspan, because it depletes or uses up cells from a finite, non-renewable pool of those cells? Or do we need to make a distinction between progenitor cells and stem cells or between different types of stem or progenitor cells? To a non-scientist like me, it sounds like both exercise and HBOT mobilize stem cells from the bone marrow.

  18. Nice analysis, Josh.

    I’m also highly skeptical of this study, but I have an alternate explanation: observation bias.

    First, there was no control group and the study group was highly aware that it was being monitored. Without randomization of assignment to control/treatment groups, then observation bias becomes a confounder.

    Here’s a nice explanation of observation bias taken from:
    https://www.medschool.umaryland.edu/media/SOM/Departments/Anesthesiology/Resources/Faculty-Development-/Bias,-Confounding,-and-Interaction-Lions-and-Tigers,-and-Bears-Oh-My.pdf

    “Observational Bias
    First described by Landsberger in 1961, the Hawthorne effect is a specific form of observational bias in which the mere awareness of being under observation can alter the way in which a person behaves. The Hawthorne effect is a form of reactivity in which study subjects may improve or modify their behavior, which is being experimentally measured, in response to their knowing that they are being observed, not in response to a specific experimental intervention.”

  19. Good points there Josh. I too don’t think telomere length is as important for life-extension as I used to and not as important as many people think it is, particularly not average telomere length. There is one thing that must be considered with respect to telomeres that you did not touch on.

    The Copenhagen (2015) study you referred to does indeed show a wide variation in telomere lengths and yes the scatter is too large to find much of a meaning in the numbers. I agree with you there. But note that it is a scatter of the average telomere length. The distribution of telomere length may be even more important than the average length since telomere shortage isn’t really a problem until their length is close to critically short. Average telomere length may not give a good measure of how high of a percentage of a persons telomeres are critically short. Individual A could have twice the average telomere length of individual B but if the variation in telomere length is much smaller in individual B then he might have half the number of critically short telomeres, which is what matters more. The Israelian HBOT therapy study also unfortunately used average telomere length as a measure so we do not know whether there was a decrease in the percentage of cells with critically short telomeres or not. If there was then I would consider that potentially beneficial, but again we have the issue you mentioned on the potential removal of senescent cells increasing the average length of the telomeres.

  20. It’s that simple!

    Oxygen activates telomere elongation. And the lengthening of telomeres in senescent cells reduces their number. So there are not two key effects, but one.

  21. Josh,

    What are currently the leading therapies that might have an impact on lifespan/healthspan? It seems that you have come down on the plasma withdrawal (old particles, proteins or toxins?) and/or replacement (with proteins?), the so-called “parabiosis”, as the most promising. I tend to also believe that donating blood could be similar, but perhaps lower level, yet still meaningfully healthy. What other way would, or could, we reduce [CpG] methylation?

    Thanks.

  22. Japanese freedivers Ama practice diving till age 85 and look younger. Probably, variations of Oxygen partial pressure may result in higher ROS production and death of the senescent cells as they are hyperactive in production of proteins and ROS. So, reduction of senescent cells IN BLOOD can be a sign that such variations of Oxygen work.

  23. Telomere length simply looks like expiry date for cells. Even in absence of any external assaults, cells are bound to degenerate with time by doing what they’re supposed to do. So it’s natural for evolution to have learned to discard them and replace with brand new cells from stem cells. I think that’s exactly what happens. Senescence is malfunction of this program. Increasing telomeres artificially will just extend the life of epigenetically and chronologically old somatic cells. That’s opposite of rejuvenation, IMO. If at all telomeres need to be lengthened, that’s for stem cells, but they already do express telomerase themselves when they divide. All in all, telomeres deserve our least attention as compared to reversing epigenetic aging and other focus areas such as signalling molecules.

  24. Since the Isreali results were published, I have been looking for potential explanations and crosschecks. This article ticked both boxes and was easy to follow for someone without higher studies in medicine or biology. Thanks!

  25. 79 year old guy here; took telomere supplement and HBO. Telomeres dropped about 5 years after 2 years and now–4 years later—last test shows mine are the length of 48 year old guy.

    Clearly the 2 together make things happen.

    lw

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