2023-06-05 05:15:43
Brian Johnson (Instagram)
Dubai – Al Arabiya.net
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Without plastic surgery or widely circulated Botox or Filler injections, the businessman and technology mogul, Brian, in his forties, looked like an 18-year-old.
Brian, 45, spends $2m (£1.6m) a year on his search for eternal youth, which he calls a “planned project”, according to a report by the British Daily Mail.
He has a team of more than 30 doctors who routinely measure blood pressure, heart, liver, kidneys, brain and blood vessels.
He takes 80 vitamins and minerals daily, eats 70 pounds of mashed vegetables a month, goes to bed at 8:30 pm every night, and has taken more than 33,000 x-rays of the inside of his intestines.
healthy diet
Brian’s goal is to become an 18-year-old biological once more, eating 1,977 calories a day including almond milk, walnuts, flaxseeds and berries.
He also exercises at least an hour a day and, following two years of anti-aging experience, claims to now have the heart of a 37-year-old, the skin of a 28-year-old and the fitness of an 18-year-old.
blue print
Brian takes small doses of the male hormone testosterone, because his restrictive diet has lowered its normal level, human growth hormones that reactivate the thymus gland, the gland responsible for keeping the immune system healthy, and a daily dose of mood-enhancing lithium.
plasma exchange
Brian made global headlines last month at the world’s first “multigenerational blood plasma exchange” when his 17-year-old son Talmage donated his young blood to Brian, who in turn donated the plasma to his 70-year-old father, Richard.
His idea was prompted by rodent tests that showed older mice rejuvenated when infused with blood from younger mice, but it has not been scientifically tested in humans.
Brian began his anti-aging research when, following selling his company Braintree Venmo to PayPal for $800 million and divorcing the mother of his three children, he found himself at 60 pounds (27 kg), depressed to the point of suicidal thoughts and violent mood swings.
contradictory opinions
On the other hand, many doctors, including the pioneering British scientist Lord Robert Winston, reject what Brian is doing, and say that taking dozens of vitamins is pointless if a person follows a balanced diet.
Meanwhile, others, including oncologist Christine Dittmar, praise Brian for investing millions in “breaking new ground”.
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