Millionaire who wants to live forever stops taking longevity drug over concerns it sped up aging

midian182

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WTF?! Bryan Johnson, the tech millionaire famed for his many attempts to reverse aging and extend his life, including injecting himself with plasma from his teenage son, has run into an issue with one of the 54 different supplements he takes every day: it was making him older, not younger.

Johnson, who earned over $300 million when his mobile and web payment company Braintree was acquired by PayPal in 2013, has gained plenty of attention in recent times for his Project Blueprint anti-aging quest. He also sells his own (very expensive) supplement stacks and individualized health regimens under the Blueprint name.

47-year-old Johnson is the subject of a Netflix documentary called Don't Die: The Man Who Wants to Live Forever, which reveals that he takes 54 pills every day, among many other things, to try and slow down the natural biological process.

One of those pills was rapamycin, a drug originally used as an immunosuppressant to prevent organ transplant rejection and as a treatment for certain cancers and rare diseases like tuberous sclerosis complex. It works by inhibiting the mTOR pathway, which plays a significant role in aging and age-related diseases, leading to research into its potential anti-aging benefits.

Unfortunately for Johnson, it turns out that rapamycin was having the opposite effect to what he intended: the drug was actually aging him. It was also causing a slew of unpleasant-sounding side effects.

"Despite the immense potential from pre-clinical trials, my team and I came to the conclusion that the benefits of lifelong dosing of Rapamycin do not justify the hefty side-effects," he wrote on X. Johnson explained that these include skin infections, lipid abnormalities, high glucose levels, and increased resting heart rate. "With no other underlying causes identified, we suspected Rapamycin, and since dosage adjustments had no effect, we decided to discontinue it entirely."

"Additionally, on October 27th, a new pre-print indicated that Rapamycin was one of a handful of supposed longevity interventions to cause an increase/acceleration of aging in humans across 16 epigenetic aging clocks."

Johnson had been taking rapamycin for nearly five years, experimenting with various doses. In the Netflix documentary, he called his routine the most aggressive rapamycin protocol of anyone in the industry. Some medical experts who appear in the program shared concerns about humans taking the molecule for longevity purposes.

Johnson is said to spend around $2 million annually on his health regimen, which includes a vegan diet, avoiding the sun, and daily exercise. He's also used shock treatments on his genitals in an apparent effort to gain the erections of an 18-year-old.

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Dude is gonna get old and on his deathbed look back and realize he wasted a ****-ton of his life on this stupid crap.

Funny old joke I heard:
Man goes to doctor, and tells doctor that he wants to live to 150.

"That's laudable" says the doctor " let me ask you some questions to see if you're getting the basics right"

"Do you drink?"

"No" says the man "Haven't touched a drop in my life".

"Do you eat red meat?"

"No" says the man "My body is a temple and I won't pollute it with lesser animals"

"How often do you have sex?"

"Never" says the man "I abstain from temptations of the flesh"

The doctor puts down his clipboard and exclaims "Then what the **** do you want to live to 150 for?!"
 
I might be in the minority over here, but I like this guy. I did not see the Netflix documentary, I saw only an independent documentary by Ordinary Things on YouTube.

I say why not, he clearly has a lot of money to spend, he's not really hurting anyone else in the process, some of his findings are helpful as an experience to other medical cases and drug testing.
He has some kind of health program via the app, but there should not be any drastic advices to users, only regular hints on healthy diet and exercise + of course he's probably selling his own supplements, I would not be surprised at all.

 
Everyone is bashing this guy hard, but in reality, I’m glad he’s doing it, and the government isn’t testing this on us. Who wouldn’t want to live longer? Assuming everyone else around them also lives longer. I don’t see the issue here, let him do it. He doesn’t look his age at all, so something he’s doing is at least keeping his appearance young.
 
Everyone is bashing this guy hard, but in reality, I’m glad he’s doing it, and the government isn’t testing this on us. Who wouldn’t want to live longer? Assuming everyone else around them also lives longer. I don’t see the issue here, let him do it. He doesn’t look his age at all, so something he’s doing is at least keeping his appearance young.

- No harm in him doing it, no harm in us poking fun at him for it.
 
I might be in the minority over here, but I like this guy. I did not see the Netflix documentary, I saw only an independent documentary by Ordinary Things on YouTube.

I say why not, he clearly has a lot of money to spend, he's not really hurting anyone else in the process, some of his findings are helpful as an experience to other medical cases and drug testing.
He has some kind of health program via the app, but there should not be any drastic advices to users, only regular hints on healthy diet and exercise + of course he's probably selling his own supplements, I would not be surprised at all.

The problem with taking 54 different supplements is there's zero data there. You need to isolate individual changes to attempt to generate any kind of hypothesis you can then test.

He's running a couple of orders of magnitude too many tests at once to determine anything.
 
Fun fact very few in fable blue zones live to 100.
So concentrate on health span diet , exercise , and doing ( socially , adventure, learning etc )
If you avoid big three Cardiac, Cancer and immune/dementia etc getting to 90 in good strength is probably achievable

You measure life by novel events and experiences and not time anyway why life goes fast for some and school holidays as kids seemed longer
 
The problem with taking 54 different supplements is there's zero data there. You need to isolate individual changes to attempt to generate any kind of hypothesis you can then test.

He's running a couple of orders of magnitude too many tests at once to determine anything.

- Yep. Granted its a techspot article so light on the details, but unless this guy has a whole lab full of people he's testing these things on with corresponding control groups... its just bro-science non-sense.

To quote Cave Johnson from Portal 2: "We're throwing science at the wall here and seeing what sticks!"
 
I think we need a new term for someone who is worth more than a million but less than a billion. This man is worth 300 million roughly, so he is significantly richer than someone who is worth 1 million. Technically my mother is a millionaire based on the value of her assets (2 homes) and I will earn at least $1m over the next 7 years or so from a regular tech job in Portland Oregon.

Millionaire doesn't mean much anymore. And if our politicians keep spending like they have been, inflation will mean that il be earning a million dollars in just a couple of years working a 9-5.


 
How odd. Life span maxes at 120 years, with current tech. Exercise and don't do stupid stuff. What a clown that's just another rich person that confuses his desire, and mistaken beliefs, with reality.
Make no mistake sooner or later the human race (rich people mostly) will find ways to outlive most others through expensive procedures and drugs...just because they can't do it now it doesn't mean they won't be able to do it 100 years from now.
 
Everyone is bashing this guy hard, but in reality, I’m glad he’s doing it, and the government isn’t testing this on us. Who wouldn’t want to live longer? Assuming everyone else around them also lives longer. I don’t see the issue here, let him do it. He doesn’t look his age at all, so something he’s doing is at least keeping his appearance young.
They are and did during covid. Won't be the last time they force untested drugs on the population
 
I was bored until the shock therapy.
A person with his wealth could resort tom, "normal means", to gain the erection of an 18 year old.

1: Locate the hottest porn star you could find, and put her in isolation for the normal gestation period any known venereal disease. Isolate yourself for the same time period. with no self stimulation permitted. By the time that's ended, both she and yourself, will be banging like an old rusty gate. Make a "home movie" to commemorate the event. But remember, if it gets onto the internet, it's there forever.
2: Chemical means a, "Viagra"
3: Chemical means b "the Yellow pill" (forgot its brand name).
4: A personal favorite of others (but certainly not mine) Methamphetamine. (I can't believe I spelled "crank" wrong on the first try)
5: "Peruvian marching powder" will do as a substitute. Plus, it's much easier on the teeth.

6" As a "last resort" some people even resort to being injected with "testosterone" I always say, use what "god" gave you, although sometimes a "second helping" can be beneficial as well

Avoid alcohol . Alcohol is reported to "increase the desire, but stifle the ability to consummate the act itself..

Genius, wealth, eccentricity, and madness, are all inextricably interlocked. Deal with it.

Moving on, every "mycin" I've ever encountered is an antibiotic. In this case the drug is also an immuno-supressant (?). You would think the little buggy-wugs in your body would develop an immunity after a while, and certainly after five years.

And so fellow boy scouts, here endeth the lesson on, "pitching the best tent ever".
 
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