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Why Autoimmune Diseases Rise Sharply After 50 (wsj.com)
atombender 76 days ago [-]
khelavastr 76 days ago [-]
Thymus atrophy and T cells with 40 year lifespans is the easy answer.
erentz 76 days ago [-]
Yet residual or enlarged thymus is seen as a potential cause for autoimmune conditions like Myasthenia Gravis. And it’s often removed in these cases. So is it really good to have a thymus after 30 or not?
inglor_cz 76 days ago [-]
Thymus involution can be reversed in humans (see TRIIM and TRIIM-X trials by Gregory Fahy).

It seems that this intervention has a moderate systemic rejuvenating effect, too.

SilentM68 75 days ago [-]
I actually suffer from Autoimmune issues, i.e. Rheumatoid Arthritis. Which I could have known about that Trial, few years back though given my luck, I'd probably not be accepted into the Trial. Still, it's good to know that there might be some hope in the horizon. My Rheumatologist says there is no real cure in the meantime, so taking pills is the only solution, unfortunately.
tifkap 73 days ago [-]
CAR-T-cell therapy might help in the future:

https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2024/11/lupus-car...

SilentM68 60 days ago [-]
ty :)
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