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Алексей Фитин
Unified theory of human and animals aging. Bioenergy concept aging as a disease
1. Part One
One of the principal objects of theoretical research in any department of knowledge is to find the point of view from which the subject appears in its greatest simplicity.
My Comment to the Epigraph of the Famous Thermodynamicist (Energeticist) Josiah Willard Gibbs
A distinctive feature of biology is the incredible diversity (heterogeneity) of elements and an even greater variety of co
Obviously, the maximum simplicity of representing such a global phenomenon as aging should not be achieved due to primitive concepts, that is, due to neglect of the complexity of the organism structure.
Obviously, the maximum simplicity of representing such a global phenomenon as aging should not be achieved due to primitive ideas about it, that is, due to neglect of the complexity of its structure. It was energy that turned out to be that golden key, with the help of which I was able to penetrate into the essence of one of the central problems of biology and medicine – aging. Consideration of this complex problem from the standpoint of bioenergetics revealed the very, truly divine simplicity, which made it possible to unravel the complex tangle of numerous facts regarding this phenomenon and predict a number of consequences of energy deficit for the body. I believe that one of the most important results of the bioenergetic approach to aging became the identification of the leading role of the autonomic nervous system in the pathogenesis of this disease.
Science is built up of facts, as a house is built of stones; but an accumulation of facts is no more a science than a heap of stones is a house.
Introduction. How the Bioenergy Concept of Aging Was Born
In co
I will cite only the most important facts necessary for an adequate understanding of the Concept and will try not to overload the text with references to facts widely known to gerontologists and geriatricians. The modern possibilities of the Internet allow readers to quickly find the most recent works available in the open access and concerning any fact mentioned in the review.
There are no new facts concerning aging in this work. The Concept offers a new look at this disease, its etiology and pathogenesis. A patient has a chance to be healed if the pathogenic factor that caused his disease (etiology) and the sequence of events in the mechanism of the development of his disease (pathogenesis) are known.
Treatment of aging, like any other disease, blindly or by symptoms, without knowledge of the etiology and pathogenesis, is not only useless, but also harmful (pathogenic) occupation. Many modern authors have already called aging a disease, and not a process, as has been accepted since the second century AD. However, most of them are limited only by etiology and often scattered elements of pathogenesis, linking them to its terminal stages. We do not know anything about the early stages of the pathogenesis of aging. Most of the clearly formulated aging hypotheses are based on pathogenic factors causing chaos in the metabolism of cells and tissues: – on numerous toxic metabolites of the intestinal bacterial flora [1]; – on highly reactive metabolites – free radicals of oxygen and nitrogen, entering into chemical reactions with biological polymers [2] and on chemically active aldehyde – glucose, which modifies amino groups of proteins, with excessive consumption of sugars. The hypothesis of accumulation of mutations is also based on chaos [3].
All of the above hypotheses, in fact, are one-act (primitively simple) and are suitable for explaining only pathological, but in no way physiological aging. Chemical or physical (energy quanta: electrons, photons, alpha particles) impact of a set of pathogenic factors on a huge list of targets in the human body – enzymes, transmembrane carriers, structural proteins, nucleic acids and phospholipids should lead to an unimaginable variety of effects on everyone levels of the organization.
The first stage of pathogenesis, with a similar begi
Trying to explain this paradoxical phenomenon, I came to the conclusion that the listed pathogenic factors on their own can hardly be the cause of physiological aging.
As for pathological aging, which can be influenced by a huge number of pathogenic factors of a very different nature, even in this case, I doubt that each pathogenic factor that provokes or aggravates pathological aging has its own unique mechanism of action on this disease. I assumed that a huge variety of pathogenic factors of the most diverse nature affects pathological aging through a unified mechanism.
The path to the main and unique pathogenic factor, the same for physiological and pathological aging, which not only initiates, but also prolongs this disease at different stages of pathogenesis, turned out to be quite long and with numerous dead ends.
Analyzing the research results of V. M. Dilman [4] regarding age-related coarsening of the sensitivity of the hypothalamus functions to peripheral regulatory signals of negative feedback (peripheral hormones and key metabolites), accompanied by an increase in the basal level of one of the stress hormones, cortisol, I suggested that in addition to hormonal and metabolic signals that determine this phenomenon, there is a more powerful and significant regulator of the activity of the hypothalamus – the peripheral part of the autonomic nervous system (ANS) – evolutionary metabolic regulation system No. 1, which ensures the rapid adaptation of the body to changing conditions as the environment and the internal environment of the body. I was convinced of this by the results of experiments W. B. Ca
Such an operation did not lead to any significant disturbances in the normal life of animals at rest and under constant environmental conditions. However, such animals lost the ability to quickly adapt and died from insignificant stressful influences. The behavior of the operated animals with a distant peripheral sympathetic nervous system reminded me of the behavior of elderly people. This similarity was expressed in a low threshold of a stress response to what seemed to be the most insignificant, both external and internal influences, manifested in humans in inadequately strong and unreasonable feelings, fears and worries.