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Is deuterium one of the most overlooked variables in cancer and metabolism? | Gábor Somlyai
Episode 99

Is deuterium one of the most overlooked variables in cancer and metabolism? | Gábor Somlyai

degrees of health

Degrees of Health · Benjamin Hopkins

March 11, 202644m 1s

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Show Notes

In this episode, Ben speaks with Gábor Somlyai, one of the earliest researchers to investigate the role of deuterium depletion in cancer biology.

Gábor argues that while mainstream oncology has focused heavily on genes, mutations, and targeted drugs, a deeper regulatory layer may have been missed: the ratio between deuterium and hydrogen inside the body. He explains why he believes this matters for cell division, mitochondrial function, metabolic health, and cancer progression.

The conversation covers the origins of his research, the early experiments that convinced him deuterium was influencing cell growth, and why he believes deuterium depletion should one day become part of standard oncology care.


They also explore:

  • why deuterium may matter at a sub-molecular level
  • how mitochondria produce deuterium-depleted metabolic water
  • the possible connection between ketogenic metabolism and lower deuterium states
  • why deuterium depleted water has become such a focus of his work
  • how he thinks about relapse prevention and long-term metabolic health
  • the potential implications beyond cancer, including diabetes, aging, and cognition

Whether you agree with the framework or are hearing about deuterium for the first time, this is a fascinating conversation about scientific paradigms, unconventional ideas, and the possibility that one missing variable could change how we think about disease.



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