Science Immortality-Obsessed Tech Guy Trying New Technique That Involves Removing "All Blood From Body" - "I am no longer injecting my son's blood," Johnson boasted. "I've upgraded to something else: total plasma exchange."

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Immortality-Obsessed Tech Guy Trying New Technique That Involves Removing "All Blood From Body" (archive)
"I am no longer injecting my son's blood."

By: Frank Landymore; Futurism
Published: January 29th, 2025 at 5:05 PM EST

eat that tasty goo.png

Entrepreneur Bryan Johnson is no longer sustaining his monomaniacal quest for immortality by exsanguinating his own progeny to stave off certain doom.

The vampiric figure — who, had he existed in another time period, would've had to lock himself in a castle to avoid the locals trying to drive a stake through his heart — announced his latest medical stunt on X-formerly-Twitter this week.

"I am no longer injecting my son's blood," Johnson boasted. "I've upgraded to something else: total plasma exchange."

Johnson shared a photo of himself brandishing a plastic sac bulging with yellow viscous goo, which he claims to be that indispensable component of blood, looking as uncannily youthful as ever.

"Here's my bag of plasma," Johnson wrote. "Who wants it?"


As our protagonist explains, his treatment involves removing "all blood from body," separating the plasma from the blood, and replacing his old plasma with an infused substitute.

Off-putting displays like these are par for the course for Johnson. To him, seemingly, there's no such thing as "TMI." Recently — and we'd hate for you readers to be out of the loop on this — the Braintree founder shared that he was scientifically tallying the nighttime boner count of his 19-year-old son Talmadge, observing that the younger Johnson's, well, Johnson, exhibited an erectile "duration" that was two minutes longer than his own.

Ever the subject of bizarre experiments like these, Talmadge may be relieved to hear that his dad's latest blood ritual leaves him out of it. The elder Johnson quit the last one after finding it provided "no benefit." And that's not surprising, since the science behind those so-called "youth blood transfusions" is, while showing some early promising signs, a little controversial.

Johnson's new thing, therapeutic plasma exchange (TPE), isn't a new practice — but being used by a vain elite hellbent on seeing out the very end of the Anthropocene is almost certainly novel.

Johnson cites several studies purportedly showing TPE's manifold health benefits, including, of course, reversing aging based on parameters like "blood proteomics and biological aging clocks," he wrote. Using this evidence-based approach, Johnson claims he replaced his old plasma with a mixture of five percent albumin, a blood protein, and intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG), a fluid derived from donor blood which provides antibodies to shore up your immune system.

Johnson claims he's already done some experimenting with TPE, discovering the minor side effect of "increased infection risk" following the treatment. Let's hope that doesn't come back to haunt him.

He now plans to implement a bi-weekly protocol.



🐴: If you'd like to learn more about the world's richest Morbius kinnie and his feverish pursuit of lichdom, the Kiwi Farms now has a horrorcow thread on Bryan Johnson and the "Don't Die" movement here.
 
He doesn't look very healthy to me


How the fuck do you measure nighttime erections? Why would you do that? Why would you compare with a family member? WHY WOULD YOU POST IT ON THE INTERNET?
Your father never came in to check you weren't having any devil dreams?
 
  • Deviant
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Someone should tell him to gobble up quicksilver pills. I heard they work wonders
 
...bloodletting? This guy's a sucker, just wait for the singularity like Moviebob told us to.
 
Ironically he’s probably doing more harm than good here. IVIg is a dense soup of a zillion different antibodies. We know that if a male receives antibodies/blood products from a woman who has ever been pregnant then there can be issues up to and including a higher risk of death.
He’s throwing the dice here. What he expects is a clean plasma loaded with juicy antibodies and with the junk his body was cleaning out removed. What he may get is a random autoimmune disease popping up five years down the line, his red blood cells throwing a shit fit, or his kidneys getting fried. Repeated IVIG is NOT good for your kidneys. This is a dumb move.
 
This is your reminder to read Bug Jack Barron by Norman Spinrad (but not on public transportation or anywhere someone might be reading over your shoulder). It's about a world where (massive spoiler alert)
Little kids are being bought from impoverished parents, then kept unconscious as blood boys for the extremely wealthy so the oligarchs can have vastly extended lifespans.

It's from the 70s and there are a lot of hard r's.
 
I don't understand people obsessed with immortality. It's one thing to be scared of death but even if you "cure" old age sooner or later some horrific accident is going to take you out.

Someone like this would be horrified by random chance shown the "watch people die" thread.
 
This guy will invest in cloning technology and generate a new body when he gets to his 80s.
 
  • Optimistic
Reactions: Bucephalus
I don't understand people obsessed with immortality. It's one thing to be scared of death but even if you "cure" old age sooner or later some horrific accident is going to take you out.

Someone like this would be horrified by random chance shown the "watch people die" thread.
It’s peculiar isn’t it? They don’t seem to understand that ‘not dying’ and ‘living’ are two different things.
@Agamemnon Busmalis thats the thing isn’t it? You could do all this and get hit by a bus tomorrow. Or you could be one of those old grannies who hits 110 with all her marbles intact in a diet of coffee and cigars. Really just look after yourself and the rest is out of your hands.
 
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