For Thymus Fat Fraction regeneration by 7 years with Human Growth Hormone caused "Blood Glucose Imbalance" symptoms of :
Looking pale (Pallor : lack of color in the skin)
Shakiness
Dizziness or lightheadedness
Sweating
Hunger or nausea
An irregular or fast heartbeat
Difficulty concentrating / intracranial pressure
Feeling weak and having no energy (fatigue)
Calcium Alpha-Ketoglutarate (Ca α‐KG)
Side effects are heartburn, an irritating burning sensation in the chest caused by stomach acid travelling up towards the throat (acid reflux) called gastroesophageal reflux (backflow from the stomach irritating the esophagus). Gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) is a risk factor for esophageal cancer
Bioavailability is a measure of how much a substance is able to access the circulation and reach the target area, and it depends on absorption (how much we get it) and secretion (how much we get out). Nutritional scientists are well aware of the importance of bioavailability. Absorption is the movement of drug from the site of drug administration to the systemic circulation. Bioavailability is the extent to which absorption occurs. Bioavailability is the fraction of the administered drug that reaches the systemic circulation in the unchanged form
Chronic Inhibition of mTOR can cause High Serum Triglyceride and Glucose Intolerance so requires calculated dosing. High triglycerides increase the risk of heart disease and stroke, including obesity and metabolic syndrome of high blood sugar (hyperglycemia) and abnormal cholesterol levels. Glucose intolerance (GI) can be defined as dysglycemia that comprises both prediabetes and diabetes.
Plasmapheresis
The procedure typically lasts one hour. Side effects are that doners can feel some mild numbness, tingling, light-headedness or faint, muscle cramps, low blood pressure, or a feeling of cold.
Anticoagulant Citrate (Warfarin or Heparin) decreased Calcium
Overdosing Dedifferentiation Therepy (OSKM)
Dedifferentiation | is a transient (short-lived) process by which cells become less specialised and return to an earlier cell state within the same lineage
Partial Reprogramming is the result of large-scale changes in the epigenetic profile and gene-expression pattern of a cell, induced by the over-expression of key transcription factors, which regulate and maintain the pluripotent cell state (CpG sites, histones : a type of protein found in chromosomes). Potentially removing "non genetic damage" with "waste products" yield better results in combination with partial reprogramming.