Prodrome Sciences

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Prodrome Sciences

Prodrome Sciences

@ProdromeScience

Advancing cellular health by supporting practitioners through lipid science. Membranes, signaling, and the biology that drives brain & metabolic function.

Temecula, CA Beigetreten Kasım 2019
66 Folgt816 Follower
Prodrome Sciences
Prodrome Sciences@ProdromeScience·
“Individuals in the highest plasmalogen group had about a 34% lower risk of death compared to the lowest group.”
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Prodrome Sciences
Prodrome Sciences@ProdromeScience·
Most supplements don’t actually do anything. Because they never touch the systems that run your cells. This breaks down what actually matters: → Energy production (mitochondria) → Cellular repair systems → The membranes everything depends on If it doesn’t plug into real biology… it doesn’t work. Read Part 1: prodrome.com/blogs/science/…
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Prodrome Sciences
Prodrome Sciences@ProdromeScience·
Your body isn’t random. It gives signals—track them early.
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Prodrome Sciences
Prodrome Sciences@ProdromeScience·
Disease doesn’t just appear; it follows the loss of health. Longevity isn’t random; it’s measurable. Up to a 30-year difference linked to plasmalogen levels and all-cause mortality. #longevity #plasmalogen #healthjourney
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Prodrome Sciences
Prodrome Sciences@ProdromeScience·
Plasmalogens aren’t just linked to dementia—they predict overall lifespan. Studies show a 30-year difference in life expectancy based on your plasmalogen levels. This changes everything. Instead of chasing disease, we can focus on creating true health. #Longevity #CellularHealth #Plasmalogens #HealthyAging
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Prodrome Sciences
Prodrome Sciences@ProdromeScience·
We don’t just talk about advancing health — our practitioners are out there doing it. Proud to support one of our Prodrome Science Elite Practitioners, Dr. John Whitcomb.
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Prodrome Sciences
Prodrome Sciences@ProdromeScience·
Brain imaging is becoming advanced. This depiction of sleep + Blood flow is absolutely fascinating.
China Now@ChinaNow24

“Scientists capture the full ‘brain-cleaning’ process during sleep” Sleep is crucial for the brain. When a person is in deep sleep, cerebrospinal fluid flows between neurons like waves, clearing metabolic waste and “resetting the system” for thinking and learning the next day. But what happens if you don’t get enough sleep? Scientists at Boston University in the United States have captured this “cleaning” process. Red represents blood, and blue represents cerebrospinal fluid. After falling asleep, neurons become quiet, and within a few seconds, blood flows out of the head. Then a watery fluid called cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) flows in, washing the brain in rhythmic pulses. What’s remarkable is that it was previously unknown that blood periodically flows out of the brain in large amounts. Each time this happens, cerebrospinal fluid takes the opportunity to surge in. Once inside the brain, cerebrospinal fluid clears toxins, such as beta-amyloid, which is linked to Alzheimer’s disease. This cleaning process only occurs during sleep, allowing the brain to feel refreshed upon waking. When awake, cerebrospinal fluid doesn’t get enough opportunity to do this effectively. Researchers also found a connection between brainwave activity and the cleaning process, meaning brainwaves help drive the movement of these fluids. So, it’s better to go to bed earlier—don’t stay up too late! If the “cleaning” doesn’t work well, you might actually get dumber…

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Brandon Luu, MD
Brandon Luu, MD@BrandonLuuMD·
Board game players have a 15% lower risk of dementia versus non-players.
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Brain
Brain@Brain1878·
Corazzolla et al. used PET-MRI to measure TSPO in the skull bone of patients with MS. TSPO was elevated in secondary progressive disease and correlated with disability, white matter loss and cognitive impairment, suggesting biomarker potential. shorturl.at/sqXkq
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Prodrome Sciences
Prodrome Sciences@ProdromeScience·
This is a major step forward, but it raises a deeper question: Why does network connectivity break down in the first place? Neural networks depend on membrane structure to maintain signal fidelity. When membrane integrity is compromised, signaling becomes unstable, which causes networks to reorganize, which then causes connectivity patterns to shift. SCAN may be less the root cause… and more the system-level expression of underlying cellular dysfunction. This webinar from Dr. Dayan Goodenowe PhD & neuroscientist (and our founder) did a great webinar about this in October '25. Here's the link to watch it: drgoodenowe.com/webinars-on-de…
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Louisa Nicola
Louisa Nicola@louisanicola_·
New research in Nature just changed how I think about Parkinson’s disease. For years, we treated it as a problem in isolated motor areas that control the hand or foot. But brain imaging across 863 participants suggests something bigger. Parkinson’s may involve a whole body control system in the brain called the Somato-Cognitive Action Network (SCAN). Researchers found that deep brain regions like the substantia nigra become overconnected to this network. Treatments that work, like levodopa and deep-brain stimulation, seem to improve symptoms by normalizing this hyperconnectivity. In a small clinical trial, patients who received magnetic stimulation targeting the SCAN improved twice as much as those treated at traditional limb motor areas. This suggests Parkinson’s might not just be a movement disorder of isolated regions. It may be a network disorder of whole body control. Early results, but a fascinating shift in how we may treat the disease.
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Prodrome Sciences
Prodrome Sciences@ProdromeScience·
Really interesting data and apologies for the severely delayed response. One important point to clarify is that circulating plasmalogen levels don’t always tell the full biological story. Plasmalogens aren’t passive lipids in the bloodstream; they’re structural membrane components that are constantly being incorporated into cells, remodeled, and used in oxidative defense. Because of this high turnover, lower circulating levels can sometimes reflect increased utilization, not lack of effect. When membranes are actively remodeling or under oxidative stress, plasmalogens are pulled from circulation and incorporated into cell membranes. Ethanolamine plasmalogens, in particular, act as sacrificial antioxidants, so during periods of higher demand they can be consumed faster than they’re replenished. In those cases, blood levels may temporarily decline even while biological activity is increasing. It’s also important to note that plasmalogens primarily exist in membranes, not in circulation. Plasma levels (which is the ProdromeScan™ you posted) represent a small, dynamic transport pool, while most plasmalogen biology occurs in neuronal, mitochondrial, and immune cell membranes. Because of that, changes in blood levels often reflect shifts in membrane remodeling rather than simple depletion. Another challenge is that total plasmalogen levels alone don’t capture the full picture. Ether lipid metabolism is a pathway, not a single marker. Different plasmalogen pools behave differently depending on factors like precursor availability, membrane demand, and peroxisomal function. That’s why Dr. Goodenowe expanded measurement beyond total plasmalogens with the BioMetrix™ BioScan platform, which looks at multiple components of ether lipid metabolism simultaneously, including ethanolamine and choline plasmalogens, lyso-plasmalogens (turnover markers), and related phospholipid intermediates. Looking at these together provides a clearer view of both steady-state levels and active lipid remodeling. The pattern you shared isn’t unusual, especially in highly optimized individuals. When metabolic demand is high, it’s common to see some plasmalogen pools decrease while others remain stable or increase; reflecting lipid flux through the system, not absence of activity. Another often overlooked factor is precursor biology. Many common lipid supplements (like DHA oils or phospholipids) support fatty acid pools but don’t rebuild the vinyl ether backbone required for plasmalogen synthesis. That process begins in the peroxisome and finishes in the endoplasmic reticulum, so if peroxisomal function is limited, you may shift fatty acid levels without restoring key plasmalogen pools tied to membrane structure. Taken together, the data is interesting, but it doesn’t necessarily support the conclusion that there was no systemic effect. A more cautious interpretation is that lipid metabolism shifted, without full restoration of certain plasmalogen pools (or what Dr. Goodenowe describes as the plasmalogen reserve). It would be especially insightful to look at membrane remodeling markers alongside plasma levels. Circulating plasmalogens reflect the transport pool, while most of the biology happens within membranes and those two don’t always move in the same direction. Appreciate you sharing real data — conversations like this are what push better measurement, better precursor design, and a deeper understanding of lipid metabolism. We have even more data today with the BioMetrix™ NeuroMRI where Dr. Goodenowe has shows his brain age reversal by 15 years. You can see this presentation of data and how he did it with the help of plasmalogen precursors. We think you'll love this webinar because of its focus and perspective on longevity that may align with yours - drgoodenowe.com/webinars-on-de… Algae oil alone is not a plasmalogen precursor. We'd love to invite you to 1) get a BioScan 2) come and train on BioMetrix™ BioScan so you can interpret the results. DM us!
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Bryan Johnson
Bryan Johnson@bryan_johnson·
After a year of taking plasmalogens, I stopped. Plasmalogens are a class of lipids essential to brain and cell membrane health. They decline with age and are linked to neurodegenerative conditions like Alzheimer's. I tracked mine after a year of supplementation. Before and after results: -46% Total ethanolamine plasmalogens (PLEs), this is the most direct marker of the supplement’s intended effect -74% EPA- Eethanolamine Plasmalogen -33% Total Phosphatidylethanol amines (PEs) +25% Total Choline Plasmalogens (PLCs) -19% DHA-Choline Plasmalogen Only one subgroup increased. The rest, including the primary targets, dropped. This isn’t a knock on plasmalogens as a concept. Some studies show benefits, especially in early Alzheimer’s. But response depends on baseline levels, absorption, delivery, and genetics. And I had no meaningful upward shift in total levels despite consistent dosing. Possible issues: + Poor absorption? + Conversion bottlenecks? + Tissue-specific uptake not captured by blood tests? Plasmalogens had no systemic effect in my case. I’ll revisit plasmalogens if delivery tech improves or stronger human data emerges. Until then, it's off the stack.
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Prodrome Sciences
Prodrome Sciences@ProdromeScience·
Most “energy supplements” don’t address the underlying drivers of cellular energy. Because energy doesn’t start in your mitochondria. It begins at the level of the cell membrane. When membrane composition is disrupted, cellular signaling and mitochondrial function may be affected. It’s not always exciting to talk about foundational nutrients like vitamin C — but their role in supporting normal cellular processes is well established. Drawing from years of internal data and biomarker insights, we’ve outlined a foundational approach to supporting cellular energy and membrane health. Here’s what actually supports your cells ↓ prodrome.com/blogs/science/… #plasmalogens #CellularHealth #Mitochondria #Biohacking #Longevity #FunctionalMedicine #MetabolicHealth #BrainHealth #NutritionalScience
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Prodrome Sciences
Prodrome Sciences@ProdromeScience·
✨ELITE PRACTITIONER SPOTLIGHT✨ Meet Krishna Doniparthi, MD @DrNKD —where biochemistry meets bold thinking. Board-certified in regenerative, functional, family & obesity medicine, he restores health at the cellular level—targeting root causes, not symptoms. #ElitePractitioner
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Prodrome Sciences
Prodrome Sciences@ProdromeScience·
The intricate link between inflammation & autism. Did you know that inflammation damages cells by releasing harmful molecules, like peroxide, which plays a role in the development & progression of autism? Tune into the discussion of leading experts in the field on April 24.⁠ 🎙️
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Prodrome Sciences
Prodrome Sciences@ProdromeScience·
Autism has a biochemical explanation. This is just a taste of that knowledge & how we might be able to restore health when it goes awry. Dive into the world of cell membrane structure & function with us on April 24 as we unravel the importance of keeping your cells at their best.
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Prodrome Sciences
Prodrome Sciences@ProdromeScience·
We continue Autism Awareness Month with this 2min vid about brain’s 3 parts: water (cerebral spinal fluid), gray matter, & white matter. Myelin is what makes white matter look white, but why is it important in the brain & what does this have to do with Autism? Find out on 04/24!
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