Summary

Bryan Johnson, a 46-year-old tech multimillionaire focused on anti-aging, stopped using rapamycin—a supplement he took for five years—after research suggested it might accelerate aging.

Johnson cited side effects like skin infections and glucose issues, as well as findings from a recent study showing rapamycin could worsen epigenetic aging.

Known for extreme anti-aging experiments, Johnson also created the health startup Blueprint, which markets pricey supplements.

His controversial methods, including teenage blood transfusions and genital shock treatments, have raised skepticism about their effectiveness and safety.

  • @Fedizen
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    271 month ago

    this guy sucks. He’s conducting essentially a thousand uncontrolled trials on himself making them all useless unless he dies of a new contraindiction

    • @[email protected]
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      fedilink
      161 month ago

      Why does he suck though? Aren’t we all conducting uncontrolled trials on ourselves? Better that, than doing it on other people, right?

      • @NotMyOldRedditName
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        1 month ago

        I think what they meant is even if he finds something that works, the data can’t be trusted, which will heavily delay things like doing it properly.

        • FaceDeer
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          81 month ago

          If the tests aren’t being done on anyone else yet then he’s not going to delay anything by trying it himself.

          Frankly, I admire his daring. When people pilot experimental aircraft or climb a mountain nobody’s climbed before they’re considered to be adventurers, he’s doing the pharmaceutical equivalent.

      • @Fedizen
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        030 days ago

        He’s doing what all of us are doing which is why the whole article is just ego fellatio for a rich dullard.