Saturday, June 17, 2023

Man’s Biological Clock Set Back 10 Years




We do not have a bettyer way and this is unexpected and the so called negatives are easily countered.

There are plenty od additional questions, but right now from the getgo ,three months down gives you a ten year reversal in telomeres and a hunfred fold increase in stem cells.

The instant take home is that anyone over fifty needs to do this every ten years inorder to optimise ones working health.That is good enoughh and any bigger picture can wait.

the pressure is real but obviously not deep deep diving at all.  It does means living in a monitored suite  for three months and possible occasional oxygen enrichment as well in case that helps.


building a pressure suite is not too difficult provided we do not go crazy.  It can be designed around around eight foot by eight foot panels consisting of a steel frame and a blown plastic bubble rated to a certain pressure..  Then bolting and cabling these together to form a living box should also be practical.  then seal the joints and pressure test.

you then set up an interior using wood and drywall even and away you go.  This would actually become a hotel type if we get serious here. particularly if simply sleeping is good enough to do the job over longer time spans.


Man’s Biological Clock Set Back 10 Years After 93 Days Living Under the Ocean in a Research Station


-Jun 8, 2023

https://www.goodnewsnetwork.org/mans-biological-clock-set-back-10-years-after-93-days-living-under-the-ocean-in-a-research-station/

A man of science locked himself in a 592 square-foot underwater research station for 100 days to document the effects of pressurization on the human body.

Now, having emerged from his submerged experiment, scientists studying those effects have discovered a shocking change in the man’s body—he’s 10 years younger.

The man, Joe Dituri, a former US navy diver and expert in biomedical engineering, had experienced a 20% growth in the lengths of his telomeres.


Without explaining the complex biology of the aging process, one of its hallmarks is the shortening of telomeres, which are found on the ends of strands of DNA and act a little like the fused plastic ring around the end of a shoelace—it keeps the fabric from splitting apart.

Telomeres shorten as we age, exposing the DNA to damage, and many longeivity programs today focus on halting that loss.

Another major factor was likely his body’s natural stem cell count—which grew 1,000% higher from before he went under. He experienced a 60% increase in the duration of deep sleep, the truly restorative state of sleep we all need to maintain our health that typically makes up around 90 minutes of our sleep cycle.

Altogther it served to reduce his biological age clock by about 10 years.

As Science Alert reported, before going under Dituri was focused more on what negative effects would befall him under the sea, such as a reduced exposure to vitamin D, losses of bone and muscle mass, and a reimergence of already-beaten viruses due to a weakened immune system.



@drdeepsea Instagram video

However, pressure, such as is found within a therapeutic hyperbaric oxygen chamber, has been shown to have several benefits which living under the pressure of the waves seems to have replicated.

“You need one of these places that is cut off from outside activity,” Dituri told British media about his experience. “Send people down here for a two-week vacation, where they get their feet scrubbed, relax and can experience the benefit of hyperbaric medicine.”



In the pod, he used exercise bands to complete around an hour of fitness work five days a week. This was probably substituted or supplemented by swimming, as he could go for a dive whenever he felt like it.

More research is needed to fully understand the biological effects of living under the sea. The idea of undersea spas and wellness retreats is quite a strange one, but at the moment the results are hard to argue with.



<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/1sZh2F0nm0E" title="Man Breaks Record for Longest Time Living Underwater" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; clipboard-write; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture; web-share" allowfullscreen></iframe>

No comments:

Post a Comment