I want to make sure I understand your formula. You used 1.7 oz. Olay eye cream, 1.7 oz. Transcutol, and 6 milligrams of Zydus rapamycin. Multiply 2 * 1.7 to get 3.4 ounces, then round that up to 3.5 ounces to match Dr. Green’s work. 3.5 ounces is roughly 99,000 milligrams. So, divide 6 mg rapamycin by 99000 mg of cream+transcutol to get 0.00006060606 which rounds to 0.006% strength. Did I get it right?
Of course, in this process I noticed Dr. Green also mentions using 15 capsules (3 * 15 = 45 mg rapamycin) mixed with 3.5 ounces of Aquaphor to get a 0.045% strength cream. Hmmm … that’s worth thinking about! I wonder which approach I will eventually take?
Hi Jay, that is way too much Transcutol. If you referred to my photos above, you will see that I initially use 2-3 mL of Transcutol to dissolve the powder from six 1 mg Zydus tabs. I pour this into the Olay bottle and then add another 2-3 mL of Transcutol to the test tube to pick up the dregs and pour that in as well. Too much more Transcutol will cause the lotion to be too watery. The little paint mixer is a very important part of the process so that you will completely mix the rapa into the lotion. The concentration I use it almost identical to Doctor G’s.
It seems that rapamycin is absorbed better in some kinds of tissues than in others. One of the reasons I started taking it was thinking it might do my arthritic knees some good. After a year, there’s been nothing noticeable. In the last week, I’ve begun a more direct approach with topical applications, front, side and back of the knees.
The mixture I made isn’t very precise. It’s similar to what others have been making - about 4 ounces - 20% or 30% transcutol in aloe gel with 3 mg of rapamycin powder. A bottle of DMSO is on the way. For deep absorption, it may be better than transcutol, so I may alter the mix.
Topical application for joints or other tissues near the skin surface could be a way to get the rapamycin to them more effectively than orally. Any thoughts?
Unless you use a super high concentration and the right vehicle, there is NO systemic absorption of rapamycin in topical applications, see below papers.
“No blood samples collected contained detectable levels of rapamycin as assessed by LC/MS/MS analysis (limit of detection, 1 ng/ml).”
“Twenty-three subjects completed the study. There was no detectable systemic absorption of rapamycin (all blood concentrations were <1.0 ng/mL).”
“Topical mTOR inhibitors were well tolerated, with only mild or moderate local side effects (mostly irritative) reported. Blood level of sirolimus was not detected in 90% of patients.”
Not at all. Systemic means it’s throughout your vasculature and penetrates eventually into different tissues, at varying levels, depending on vascularity, amongst other things. It’s very clear, topical means SKIN contained.
If you want to get rapamycin into your body, take it orally, NOT topically.
Sorry to hear about your arthritis, but this is a systemic inflammatory disease. If you believe rapamycin reduces inflammatory cytokines, etc (generally it does), then I would focus on systemic dosing in an attempt to alleviate, NOT topical.
This is indeed true, but at the systemic level from non transdermal delivery.
You’re probably right that my knees are sore because of systemic inflammation. However, there may be tissues around and in the joints that are unrelated to arthritis that are part of the cause. Baldness and wrinkles may have systemic elements too, but topical rapamycin may make a difference there that oral dosing doesn’t.
You’ve made a valiant effort to relieve me of my delusions, but I still imagine that there are outlying tissues that systemic dosing doesn’t reach as fully as might be done with more shallow, more direct application.
Don’t be concerned though, a few weeks of bed rest and my mind will clear.
Achieving therapeutic levels of a drug in a specific joint (or other tissue) via local application is not only possible, it’s routinely done. It’s the whole idea behind Voltaren gel (topical NSAID for knees), for instance. You achieve relatively high local levels of the drug but decreased systemic exposure. It’s not all-or-nothing. Did any of those topical rapa studies use DMSO as a carrier? Because that would seem to be your best bet, if anything.
Of course, that’s not to say it would necessarily be safe and/or effective in actually helping the arthritis.
I have been using OneSkin on my left arm. I will try my rapamycin skin cream on my right arm. In a scientific study that OneSkin funded, they said that OneSkin had a higher efficiency against senescence and inflammatory markers than rapamycin. So far it has been doing very well against the untreated arm.
I haven’t seen anyone mention emu oil in a skin or hair formula. Emu is supposed to facilitate penetration of ingredients. Maybe someone here has some experience with emu.
Davin and vegas, for now I’m using aloe gel to hold the other ingredients together because it’s not oily and dries quickly. I don’t doubt that emu oil would work well, but like Dr. Green’s Aquaphor and other oily creams and lotions, it would ruin my jeans.
DMSO alone has been used for athletic aches and pains, and I want to see if I’m getting some effect that could be attributed to rapamycin before substituting it for transcutol. DMSO should penetrate better. But it could pull whatever impurities lurked in the cloth along with it. I saw somewhere that nothing should touch the area for half an hour or so after application.
The solution, which I’ll probably get around to eventually, is to use DMSO and wear shorts until it dries.
So, I think I’m going to try an approach very similar to what was done with this skin cream, but for the “RiverTown” gray hair reversal topical serum, as covered in this post: Reverse Gray Hair, Growing More Hair
My approach would be:
Crush up the tacrolimus, cyclosporin, and minoxidil tablets together into a fine powder (need to calculate the therapeutic doses, have not yet done that)
Dissolve powder into transcutol base (again, need to figure out exact amount) and mix thoroughly
Apply twice a day for X months and report results.
For a 100 gram (3.5 oz) concoction I’d use something like: 120 mg (approx. 5 of the 25mg tablets) of cyclosporin, 500 mg (50 X 10mg tablets) of minoxidil, and 100 mg (50 X 2mg tablets) of tacrolimus, powdered, then dissolve and mix up the powder in 20ml or so of transcutol, then add some other liquids to dilute it. In the typical minoxidil formulation (and the Rivertown formula) they use: 50:30:20 propylene glycol : ethanol : H2O.
Note: Its possible to make the above formulation using the common off-the-shelf Minoxidil liquid (instead of the minoxidil tablets as identified above) that you can buy in pretty much any drugstore or Costco, etc. I tried the liquid minoxidil by itself years ago but it seemed to irritate my scalp and didn’t do much else, so I gave it up. I’ve found that transcutol, which is widely used in the cosmetics industry as a skin-friendly vehicle for “nutraceuticals” and drugs, is much easier on my skin and the research says it helps the drugs or nutraceuticals penetrate the skin.
There are a list of other compounds that have been reported to increase hair growth (see below), but I also want to keep it simple to see the results of just the Rivertown protocol initially.
As a phase 2 of my trial I would look at adding these additional compounds (same approach as above) to the topical serum mix (we’ll optimistically call this the “Wookie Mix” due to its hoped-for effects):
Dutasteride or finasteride
Metformin
Tofacitinib
Ketoconazole
bimatoprost
ECGC
Rapamycin
valproic acid
Tretinoin (topical Mixture - Gel form) - this is a little more complex because I can only seem to find tretinoin gel that would work, not something I can readily mix with the rest of the compounds, so perhaps this needs to be a separate step / application layer.
I really like Transcutol over DMSO. Transcutol delivers deep into the skin without the danger of transporting unwanted contaminates into the bloodstream. Personally, I find it much more pleasant than DMSO. I also think mixing stuff with various “creams” tends to defeat the purpose. With creams, a lot of rapamycin will be left on the skin surface.
A reasonable assumption that supports my recommendation for appx four times the the strength that achieved dramatic results in the Drexel University study. My formula is based on the concentration that Dr. G compounds.
OneSkin is still trouncing my rapamycin cream in my left arm/right arm test. I did start the left arm first so it’s not a fair fight, but I’m not seeing any signs that the right arm is catching up. I may shift the focus of my next batch of rapamycin cream to my scalp. I could swear that both creams are darkening my eyebrows and facial hair but I don’t have way to document that.
Transcutol (an excellent permeation agent that enhances drug diffusion through the skin) is not too expensive (around 15$/250 grs.) and the Excipial Hydrocrème (10$/50 ml.) either. This formulation is for a 0,1% compound while we need a 0,001% mix. The most direct way to convert the table above to our needs of a 0,001% mix is to divide the amount of rapamycin by 100 to transform the 0,1% into a 0,001% mix. In other words 0,03 grs. of rapamycin would turn into 0,3 mg. The critical point is how to measure such a minimal amount. And the only way is to get a cheap digital scale on Amazon.
To overcome the precision scale shouldn’t you have it, another option to get a 0,001% formulation is 3 mg. of rapamycin in 15 grs. of Transcutol (at a cost of less than one dollar) and 300 grs. of Excipial Hydrocrème (at a cost of 60$). That makes a total of 61$ to add to Rapamycin 3 mg. costs (from 40$ and above, depending on provider). Just my two cents.