I know a lot of people who take DNP, not quite 100 though
The issue is compounded by the fact that reports of PN over the last decade have been significantly higher than when it was used legally in the 30s. That makes me think something else might be going on in relation to the raw quality of the stuff BUT that is complete speculation on my part.
To answer your question, yes it is more prevalent than discussed. Especially when you consider most clueless folks focus on discussing side effects that are complete bullshit instead, which leads me to...
I watched the whole video. Beyond the 8min point Dave is talking complete and utter bullshit. That's not my opinion by the way, that's a fact.
1) DNP has been shown to
REDUCE oxidative stress within the cells. So that's his whole theory on how it might cause long term problems down the drain. To quote myself:
"The recommendation to run tons of antioxidants is given my bros who know jackshit about DNP.
DNP, as with most artificial uncouplers, lowers the rate of superoxide production by mitochondria. In other words, it reduces ROS (oxidative stress) and therefore there is no need for an anti-OXIDANT. This is well established in the literature, which is why I'm saying that those bros who recommend tons of antoxidants do indeed know jackshit about the compound:
Comparison of the effect of a mitochondrial uncoupler, 2,4-dinitrophenol and adrenaline on oxygen radical production in the isolated perfused rat l... - PubMed - NCBI
"Tissue ROS level decreased and oxygen uptake increased soon after 2,4-DNP infusion"
The mitochondrial uncoupling agent 2,4-dinitrophenol improves mitochondrial function, attenuates oxidative damage, and increases white matter spari... - PubMed - NCBI
"Relative to vehicle-treated animals, pretreatment with DNP maintained mitochondrial bioenergetics and significantly decreased reactive oxygen species levels, lipid peroxidation, and protein carbonyl content following spinal cord injury."
Novel neuroprotective, neuritogenic and anti-amyloidogenic properties of 2,4-dinitrophenol: the gentle face of Janus. - PubMed - NCBI
"Some of these effects appear to be due to mild mitochondrial uncoupling and prevention of cellular oxidative stress"
2) DNP has also
never been shown to be carcinogenic in humans or animals and believe me, they've looked into it a bunch of times.
Both hamster & rat models were tested with the sole aim of seeing if it induced cancer. They ended up either dying from the higher doses or getting shredded - none got cancer.
The latest EPA report shows that it is
not classified as a carcinogen because there is zero human data to suggest it and the animal models used:
https://www.epa.gov/sites/production/files/2016-09/documents/2-4-dinitrophenol.pdf
I have no idea where these sudden DNP = cancer opinions have come from in recent weeks but it is certainly
not supported by the evidence. It's, as usual, scare mongering bullshit from people who know next to nothing about the compound (yes, Dave included).