Medicine

Young blood could be the secret to long-lasting health: study

Drinking young people’s blood could help you live longer and prevent age-related diseases, a study has found.

Blood factors taken from younger animals have been found to improve ꦜthe later-life he🦩alth of older creatures.

The study, , was conducted by researchers from University College London (UCL), who said it could reduce the chances of developing 🥃age-related disorders.

𒁃Geneticist Dame Linda Pa💝rtridge said these included cancer and heart disease.

“I would say aging is the emperor of all diseases.”

“A lot of people regard aging as ‘natural’ and that therefore you shouldn’t interfere with nature. But we’ve always considered it an ethical imperative to cure illness where we find it.”

The research is part of a wave of studi🌌es and trials backed by PayPal co-🅰founder Peter Thiel at a San Francisco start-up called Ambrosia.

Sepa🀅rate trials by Ambrosia involv൲ed 70 participants, all 35 or older.

After being given plasm😼a — the main component of blood — from volunteers ages 16 to 25, researchers noted improvements in biomarkers for various diseases.

Ambrosia currently offers teenag🏅e blood plasma to customers at a cost of $8,000 for 2½ liters.

The UCL trials sho🐟wed older mice did not develop age-related diseases afte🅠r being given young blood.

The mice also maintained sharꦬp cognitive function.

The🎀 opposite was true for younger mice injected with old blood.

The study did not: “Research in animals is needed to establish the long-term consequences and possible side effects.”