I just think it's sad that so much anecdotal evidence found here, and elsewhere, is discarded based on limited clinical studies. The Medwatch reporting process is broken, and the real science often falls in-between the scientific method and Wall Street. Maybe simple vitamin D3 isn't sexy enough, and needs better marketing.
If anyone's curious, statins are an analog/ue to vitamin D3 in the sense that they appear molecularly similar. Taking statins increases vitamin D3 receptors, and therefore vitamin D3 indirectly. Discontinuing statins means vitamin D3 levels drop without supplemental vitamin D3. Both vitamin D3 and statins are similar in that they both lower LDL cholesterol. However while vitamin D3 can increase immunity, statins create immune deficiencies. The effect could change based on the lithophilic or hydrophilic nature of the statin drug.
This happens somewhat in whole amino acid families, where they can be substituted for one another and still maintain identical activity. This is mainly due to the index of their hydropathic nature. Hydrophobicity is what determines how these aminos interact with other molecules, enzymes and receptors etc. This would allow an equal substitution between aminos like arginine, glutamate, and lysine for instance. And it might make the most difference in how each is able to penetrate the mitochondria.
That's perhaps why the more hydrophobic lysine is so often paired with the more hydrophilic vitamin C, to better penetrate the mitochondria. This is the same principle behind making carnitine more effective when paired with the much more hydrophobic arginine, or acetyl-l-carnitine-arginate or Argino Carn. Lysine and Arginine are the more hydrophobic aminos on the index, and compliment each other very well.
In the same way, cAMP (cyclic adenosine monophosphate) is an analogue which convinces the body into accepting it as NGF (nerve growth factor) CAMP directly increases NGF signaling. Elevating cAMP, and therefore NGF, is a huge step in regenerating nerves. One of the best known ways to elevate cAMP is through Forskolin supplementation. Although, dissolving glial scars is the first step, though perhaps chondrotinase ABC and lithium orotate. Lithium especially helps to increase WNT signalling. The WNT protein in itself is a growth factor increased upon injury. This would allow nerves to grow past the initial scar, and yes, partially regenerate nerves in humans. This beneficial response could furthered with an increase in fluctuating stem cells.
Adult stem cell proliferatation activity could be gained from the synergistic effect of substances like vitamin D3, green tea extract, blueberry extract, carnosine (or histadine and beta-alanine,) resveratrol, chondrotin sulfate, DHA, blue-green algae, and brown seaweed extract (fucoidan.) Of course pluripotent stem cells have the potential to differentiate into any cell in the human body. Other scientifically proven ways to regenerate nerves is through high dose vitamin B12 and inosine therapy etc. This could go beyond helping someone with just neuropathy, but potentially help reverse some of the most serious neurodegenerative diseases... many curiously caused by a weakened immune response.
I had already proven nerve regeneration a possiblity in my mom's own case of retinal artery occlusion (eye stroke.) She had already fully recovered from statins, but one particularly sinister problem lurked. This eventually left her completely blind (central + peripheral) in one eye after damage went unnoticed for two weeks. Yet within six months she was able to read the first 5 lines on the eye chart, with a blind spot in the middle.
I also formulated eye drops based in acetyl-l-carnosine, msm, sodium ascorbate, and other factors. In her good eye vision increased to 20/25 from 20/40. We were able to eventually unblock the retinal artery, using nattozimes, lumbrokinase, and serrapeptase, an impossiblity within itself. But regenerating the retinal nerve is considered the even bigger medical impossibility. This is when one particular glaucoma specialist started to see some appreciable credence based on ocular scans. And then two straight specialists nearly lept up from excitement, based solely on the improvements, no exaggeration. Too little too late.
There's more to the story (both good and bad) too long and involved for the forum. But getting medical science to believe in the possibility of optic nerve regeneration was the hardest part. Medical science refuses to stray outside of the accepted norm, and always wants to be right.... to a fault. I only care about knowing the truth; even if this means constatly questioning myself, and stepping outside the already established norm. The hardest part is just believing in your own intuition, beyond what all-mighty medical science demands of us.
Perhaps that's why so many cling to CoQ10 as the one true panacea. CoQ10 is the only somewhat studied and medically sanctioned treatment for statin induced damage, and keeps patients within their comfort zone. I so wanted CoQ10 to be the one answer, make mine and my mom's life easier; yet continuing to believe this might have killed her. She was definitely in the top percentile of statins sufferers on the forum. I honestly believed in my gut she'd be dead within the year. Those mini-strokes don't just go away because CoQ10 suddently starts recirculating.
I now know I could have prevented my mom's eye stroke and eventual blindness. This is what has kept me motivated to incessantly read and absorb every/any piece of imaginable scientific literature, to find the root causes and unifying theory. And now today she has reversed every single condition (and even reversed the aging process) except for partial blindness in her left eye, with a now reduced diagnosis of some remaining retinal nerve apathy. What a complicated mess we fallible humans are trying to unravel here. Sorry for rambling.