My Ur-Peat Moment came while listening to an interview with Dr. Peat
in which he described how, as a a graduate student,
he contemplated the Yellow Fat
or Age Pigment
or Lipofuscin
present in dissecting aged and diseased bodies,
human and animal.
To come to the point here:
that Lipofuscin was composed, says Peat, mainly of
PUFA (PolyUnsaturated Fatty Acids) and
Iron.
The pervasiveness of that yellow fat/age pigment/lipofuscin could be observed
in greatest volume in the bodies of aged people
and in people who had very high estrogen levels.
--Ray Peat
from "Iron's Dangers"
Iron tends to be stored in greater amount in hypothyroid people.
Many of us here on this forum tend to be hypothyroid.
We focus a lot here on the dangers of PUFA and estrogen,
but I think Iron is a sortuv overlooked villain.
About 8 months ago my ferritin (the lab test that is used to estimate iron stores)
was around 350.
About 4 months ago it was around 850.
For starters,
it would be interesting to hear ferritin levels from posters....
in which he described how, as a a graduate student,
he contemplated the Yellow Fat
or Age Pigment
or Lipofuscin
present in dissecting aged and diseased bodies,
human and animal.
To come to the point here:
that Lipofuscin was composed, says Peat, mainly of
PUFA (PolyUnsaturated Fatty Acids) and
Iron.
The pervasiveness of that yellow fat/age pigment/lipofuscin could be observed
in greatest volume in the bodies of aged people
and in people who had very high estrogen levels.
"Q: How does excess iron accelerate our aging process?
Peat: During aging, our tissues tend to store an excess of iron. There is a remarkably close association between the amount of iron stored in our tissues and the risk of death from cancer, heart disease, or from all causes. This relationship between iron and death rate exists even during childhood, but the curve is downward until the age of 12, and then it rises steadily until death. The shape of this curve, representing the iron burden, is amazingly similar to the curves representing the rate of death in general, and the rate of death from cancer. There is no other relationship in biology that I know of that has this peculiar shape, with its minimum at the age of 12, and its maximum in old age at the time of death.
One of the major lines of aging research, going back to the early part of this century, was based on the accumulation of a brown material in the tissues known as "age-pigment." The technical name for this material, "lipofuscin," means "fatty brown stuff." In the 1960s, the "free radical theory" of aging was introduced by Denham Harman, and this theory has converged with the age-pigment theory, since we now know that the age-pigment is an oxidized mass of unsaturated fat and iron, formed by uncontrolled free radicals. Until a few years ago, these ideas were accepted by only a few researchers, but now practically every doctor in the country accepts that free radicals are important in the aging process. A nutrition researcher in San Diego suspected that the life-extending effects of calorie restriction might be the result of a decreased intake of toxins. He removed the toxic heavy metals from foods, and found that the animals which ate a normal amount of food lived as long as the semi-starved animals. Recently, the iron content of food has been identified as the major life-shortening factor, rather than the calories. [Choi and Yu, Age vol. 17, page 93, 1994.] "
--Ray Peat
from "Iron's Dangers"
Iron tends to be stored in greater amount in hypothyroid people.
Many of us here on this forum tend to be hypothyroid.
We focus a lot here on the dangers of PUFA and estrogen,
but I think Iron is a sortuv overlooked villain.
About 8 months ago my ferritin (the lab test that is used to estimate iron stores)
was around 350.
About 4 months ago it was around 850.
For starters,
it would be interesting to hear ferritin levels from posters....