Fenbendazole Cancer Success Stories: 218 Case Reports Compilation (August 2025 Edition)
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In high school and college biology courses, we're taught to think of mitochondria as mindless energy generators that take in the food we eat, mostly carbs and fats, and then pump out cellular energy in form of the ATP. However, in the past five to 10 years, we've gained a whole new understanding of mitochondria, largely thanks to the work of Dr. Robert Naviaux, who runs a mitochondrial medicine lab at the University of California, San Diego.
"Naviaux, I think, is one of the most brilliant scientists and has created one of the biggest breakthroughs in medicine in the last century, arguably. He figured out that mitochondria have a second role, other than energy production, and that is in cellular defense.Common threats your mitochondria might be responding to if you feel fatigued include oxidative stress, poor nutrition, environmental toxins, psychological stress and sleep deprivation, just to name a few.
Most if not all stressors can be boiled down to oxidative stress, reactive nitrogen species, inflammation and purinergic signaling (a situation in which energy molecules leak out of the cell). Even something like psychological stress can cause this kind of reaction. But whether the stressor is serious enough to cause fatigue depends on your resilience threshold. What wipes one person out might not affect another.
"I like to think of fatigue as having two fundamental causes," Whitten says. "One is all of these different kinds of environmental and lifestyle stressors. The other thing that interplays with, and is often left out by a lot of people, is what is happening at the cellular level inside of your body.While mitochondrial dysfunction is a central issue in fatigue, other factors also come into play, including:
Naturally, your diet has a central influence on your energy level. One key driver of low energy and ill health is excessive omega-6 linoleic acid (LA) intake. LA contributes to insulin resistance, obesity and chronic inflammation, and as mentioned earlier, when mitochondria detect inflammation, they dial down energy production to shift resources toward self-defense.
High LA consumption has also been implicated in neurodegenerative diseases, cancer and many other chronic diseases. Processed food, which is not only high in LA but also sugar, can also considerably impact your energy levels by impairing your hormone regulation.
According to Whitten, arguably one of the most important things you can do to improve your energy level is to optimize your circadian rhythm by consistently going to bed and rising in the morning at the same times. Another crucial factor is to get plenty of daytime sunlight exposure and to minimize artificial light exposure at night. As explained by Whitten:
"The circadian clock in your brain learns to distinguish what is day and what is night based on the differences in light intensity, along with the color of the wavelengths of that light. When you start your morning in indoor environments, under indoor lighting, looking at screens, and end your day in indoor environments with indoor lighting, looking at screens, you don't have a big [light intensity] differential."Your circadian rhythm is also influenced by nutrient sensors throughout your body. While you use light to optimize the central clock in your brain, you use nutrition to optimize the peripheral clocks and sync them with the central clock. One way to do this is through time-restricted eating (TRE), where you eat all your meals within a six- to 10-hour window.
Light deficiency is another extremely common cause for fatigue. Sun exposure triggers vitamin D production, which is important, but it also has many other functions and benefits that can directly impact your energy level.
For example, the vast majority of melatonin, some 95%, is produced in your mitochondria in response to sunlight (specifically red near-infrared light, which is what provides warmth). Melatonin is a potent anti-inflammatory, so sunlight allows you to target oxidative stress right where it's needed the most.
"Melatonin is absolutely vital for protecting your mitochondria from harm and preventing them from accumulating damage as you age," Whitten says. But swallowing melatonin is useless for this, as oral melatonin cannot reach the mitochondria.
Red and infrared light directly stimulate ATP production at the mitochondria level. These wavelengths also create a transient increase in reactive oxygen species, which are signaling molecules that instruct the mitochondria to grow bigger and stronger.Sunlight also allows for the conversion of retinol (vitamin A) to retinoids, which is crucial for the function of vitamin D, and interacts with your malanocortin system, which involves alpha-melanocyte-stimulating hormone that helps regulate inflammation and appetite.
Sunlight also creates a surge of nitric oxide, which helps normalize your blood pressure and reduce your cardiovascular disease risk. Whitten cites a Swedish study that showed women with the lowest sun exposure had a cardiovascular disease risk equivalent to smoking a pack of cigarettes per day. Red and infrared light also have a long list of other health benefits.
Importantly, red and infrared light directly stimulate ATP production at the mitochondria level. These wavelengths also create a transient increase in reactive oxygen species, which are signaling molecules that instruct the mitochondria to grow bigger and stronger.
Red and infrared wavelengths also stimulate tissue-specific growth factors. So, in muscle cells, it increases insulin-like growth factor 1, which is a key growth factor for muscle growth. In your thyroid, it stimulates growth factors that help regenerate thyroid gland tissue in the brain.
In your skin, fibroblasts are stimulated by red and near-infrared light to increase collagen production. So, essentially, red and infrared light act as signals that trigger growth and regeneration at the cellular level, throughout your whole body.
"Our biology has evolved for millions of years to require adequate sun exposure in order to express normal health," Whitten says. "Just to function normally, we require these different bioactive wavelengths and red and infrared light ...Methylene blue is the parent molecule for hydroxychloroquine and chloroquine, an off-patent drug commonly used to treat not only malaria but also COVID-19. Interestingly enough, this molecule has been shown to have antiaging benefits when used topically. There's even a new cosmetics brand that uses it in their formulas. While it has a blue tint, when mixed with a carrier oil it does not stain your skin blue. According to Whitten, methylene blue:
"... has profound antiaging effects, anti-wrinkle effects and protects that skin from damage. It has mitochondrial protective effects ... it's neuroprotective, combats neurological disease and improves long-term brain health. It can also help increase energy ...Methylene blue also contains important copper enzymes called ceruloplasmin, which acts as a copper storage in your body. Copper is extremely important from mitochondrial energy production, and methylene blue forms a buffer to oxidation, which allows the copper to work better.
To learn more, be sure to pick up a copy of "Eat for Energy: How to Beat Fatigue, Supercharge Your Mitochondria, and Unlock All-Day Energy." The book addresses several foundational nutritional causes of fatigue and how to fix it, including:
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