Bryan Johnson is a biohacker on a mission to conquer death and has been injecting ketamine into his system to see how it affects the brain.
Bryan Johnson, the American entrepreneur renowned for his anti-ageing endeavours, has disclosed the details of his latest self-experiment. This time, Johnson injected himself with a horse tranquilizer to track his brain activities for the past fifteen days.
Ketamine, a dissociative anesthetic, has carved itself a spot in the world of mental health care over the past two decades.
In his quest to defy ageing, he has undergone unconventional and radical procedures, including receiving blood transfusions from his own son.
Across Lancashire, recorded offences for possession and supply of ketamine rose by nearly 70% from 54 in 2023 to 91 in 2024. "What we have seen, probably within the last 12 months, is the upturn in the use, particularly around children," says Insp Matt Plummer of Lancashire Police. "Sometimes the parents have no idea."
After the rejection of Lykos Therapeutics’ MDMA-based PTSD treatment tempered excitement for psychedelic therapeutics, a recent approval and positive data are generating new momentum, which experts expect to continue throughout 2025 and 2026.
Bryan Johnson, an American entrepreneur known for his anti-ageing experiments, recently revealed details of his latest self-experiment involving ketamine, a horse tranquillizer. After previously undergoing plasma exchanges and stem cell injections,
Bryan Johnson shared details of the study of his brain following the Ketamine injection. (X/@bryan_johnson) The entrepreneur, who created a huge buzz in India recently after he left billionaire ...
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