Estrogen steals oxygen from mitochondria, shifting patterns of growth and adaptation
Negation: Estrogen does not steal oxygen from mitochondria, shifting patterns of growth and adaptation 0 0 0
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Argument #781c92ae 1 0 2
If it is true that...
Estrogen steals oxygen from mitochondria, shifting patterns of growth and adaptation 1 0 2and
The balance between what a tissue needs and what it gets governs the way that tissue functions 1 0 2and
A cell emits lactic acid and free radicals when it isn't getting everything it needs, such as oxygen and glucose 1 0 2Then it must be true that...
In aging, tissues generally atrophy, with loss of both substance and activity 1 0 2Mentions
Ray Peat/Aging, estrogen, and progesterone
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Related Propositions
Toxic effects of estrogens were known by the middle of the 20th century 1 0 2Unpleasant consequences of estrogen excess resemble some events of aging 1 0 2Stimulation by estrogen doesn't produce the normal amount of carbon dioxide, leading to tissue experiencing oxygen deprivation, swelling, and cell division 1 0 2All maladies caused by estrogen excess develop in the same way that it interferes with pregnancy, by driving the tissue to require more energy and oxygen than can be delivered to it 1 0 2Estrogen creates an oxygen deficiency, stimulates first swelling, and then collagen synthesis 1 0 2Estrogen increases the blood flow to particular organs, but apparently less than it increases their oxygen demand 1 0 2Estrogen's stimulation of non-mitochondrial oxygen consumption with the production of lactic acid stimulates blood vessel formation 1 0 2The electron transfer process of the mitochondria is interrupted by the futile redox cycling catalyzed by estrogens 1 0 2Estrogen affects our energetics and structure, and how those processes relate to aging, atrophy, cancerization, etc 1 0 2Estrogen and unsaturated fats can interact in ways that change restraint and adaptation into sudden self-destruction 1 0 2