How to reverse the aging process with young human blood. (GDF11 ? and CREB ?)
Justinbailey.info
September 27, 2015
by Worthingham
Excerpt:
Saul Villeda, PhD, of the University of California in San Francisco indicates that a protein called Creb (or CREB) was linked to an anti-aging effect that behaves as a chief regulator in the brain.
...
Amy Wagers, PhD, of Harvard University, indicated that the protein GDF11 is identical in both humans and mice. Moreover, GDF11 is also existent in the bloodstream in humans.
Apparently GDF11 levels in humans shrink with age, as well. According to Wagers and her analyses infusions of GDF11 into older humans should likely produce the same reverse-aging effects.
...
In closing it should also be noted that in the year 1615 Andreas Libavius, a German doctor and chemist (and alchemist), put forward the idea of connecting the arteries of an old man to those of a young man. According to an account in the Textbook of Blood Banking and Transfusion Medicine (by Sally V. Rudmann) the German doctor/chemist stated, “The hot and spirituous blood of the young man will pour into the old one as if it were from a fountain of youth, and all of his weakness will be dispelled.” However, there are evidently (?) no known surviving records of this blood transfusion having ever occurred.
...
Read more:
http://justinbailey.info/2015/09/27/...df11-and-creb/
Justinbailey.info
September 27, 2015
by Worthingham
Excerpt:
Saul Villeda, PhD, of the University of California in San Francisco indicates that a protein called Creb (or CREB) was linked to an anti-aging effect that behaves as a chief regulator in the brain.
...
Amy Wagers, PhD, of Harvard University, indicated that the protein GDF11 is identical in both humans and mice. Moreover, GDF11 is also existent in the bloodstream in humans.
Apparently GDF11 levels in humans shrink with age, as well. According to Wagers and her analyses infusions of GDF11 into older humans should likely produce the same reverse-aging effects.
...
In closing it should also be noted that in the year 1615 Andreas Libavius, a German doctor and chemist (and alchemist), put forward the idea of connecting the arteries of an old man to those of a young man. According to an account in the Textbook of Blood Banking and Transfusion Medicine (by Sally V. Rudmann) the German doctor/chemist stated, “The hot and spirituous blood of the young man will pour into the old one as if it were from a fountain of youth, and all of his weakness will be dispelled.” However, there are evidently (?) no known surviving records of this blood transfusion having ever occurred.
...
Read more:
http://justinbailey.info/2015/09/27/...df11-and-creb/