Having been injected with Swedish stem cells, Bryan is now a pro at assembling IKEA furniture.
@ziggy333993 ай бұрын
Why Swedish? Something markedly different?
@Captainramen831573 ай бұрын
@@ziggy33399He probably lives in sweden
@danielstraka173 ай бұрын
😂
@ecod7r3 ай бұрын
@@ziggy33399 Aryan race DNA, viking DNA, ?
@ziggy333993 ай бұрын
@@ecod7r aryan race isn’t appealing (to me). Simply put…some places are healthier to live , some foods are healthier, we have Crspr technologies, other things coming up. I wish for a best life for everyone. Bryan could NOT be on a more noble cause.
@peacelovekindness3 ай бұрын
I can really see a difference in his father's energy and mood. I'm so happy for him ❤
@Lethallime12343 ай бұрын
What's funny?@@ShamMirza-dg1xv
@rasplata3 ай бұрын
yeah he is good guy
@2namesmusic3 ай бұрын
Seems like an awesome guy full of energy. It must feel nice to help him like this.
@twisterrjl3 ай бұрын
it's called acting.
@cupocity3033 ай бұрын
@@twisterrjlyou're just doomer
@alyjiyu3 ай бұрын
My beloved has RA, a painful autoimmune disease that causes joint cartilage to deteriorate. I've been researching the efficacy of stem cell injections to reverse joint damage, and grateful your video came up in my feed. I realize it's a prohibitively expensive, out-of-pocket procedure for most, yet the hope & encouragement garnered here, for future wide-availability ...is priceless.
@kathleenwilliams36442 ай бұрын
Look up DR peltz she does diets just for women, and after time you will learn to fast with out being hungry, and then she tells you how to fast to get your own stem cells to reproduce to heal your own body, it’s proven science she has several books out.
@spookybells50992 ай бұрын
Praying for you guys. ❤❤❤
@yasemeenelson64952 ай бұрын
You can also stimulate your own body to make stem cells by doing a fast for longer than 72 hours! Google 3-5 day water fast and stem cells and you’ll find info on it! I totally understand - I suffer from autoimmune conditions as well! I hope it helps!
@karinaw9772 ай бұрын
Fasting is also a great way to create your own stem cells. Dr Mindy who wrote the book ‘Fast Like a Girl’ has plenty of KZbin videos on it. Need to alkaline the body and reduce inflammation in order to prevent more damage to joints. Acidic body won’t help with healing.
@mcmcpoi-ra74052 ай бұрын
Fatty red meat, salt, water and nothing else - you'd be surprised at how quickly arthritis can be put into remission. Many people seem to find the pain goes in 2 weeks. Much cheaper than stem cells too.
@Jbrimbelibap3 ай бұрын
I work in Maintenance, in the industry. It's crazy how we have developped systems to prevent failures and malfunctions on industrial equipment, but on the human body we still do 100% fixing once something has failed or is seriously damaged...
@BryanJohnson3 ай бұрын
100%
@adamsteinhardt63933 ай бұрын
Absolutely. It blows my mind that there is a stigma about using interventions to improve the human body and reverse degeneration. In aerospace this is an expectation.
@jungtarcph3 ай бұрын
yeah, and your Tesla has 400 sensors and you have.... a body scale....
@Jbrimbelibap3 ай бұрын
@@jungtarcph I have a Saab 900i, not a tesla. And Bryan has shown plenty of ways to measure damage in the body
@Revivalheb3 ай бұрын
@@YO-BIZZY that and the cost required to maintain the body at the level Bryan does is unfeasible for the common folk, albiet his diet is fairly cheap to replicate.
@collad10003 ай бұрын
My husband had the treatment your dad did about a year ago. He is 68 and hasn’t seen any improvements in his health. The cost was $6000. I hope you and your dad have better results.
@BestLifeMD3 ай бұрын
Thank you for your honesty. I'm an MD and have not seen anyone successfully treated for joint issues by stem cells.
@jean-lucchoiniere55873 ай бұрын
@@BestLifeMD What's the difference between them and those who've had healing such as the MMA fighters someone like Joe Rogan always talks about?
@cvspvr3 ай бұрын
@@BestLifeMDyeah, but these are YOUNG, SWEDISH stem cells
@ericmalitz3 ай бұрын
I’d assume you have to actually use your joints, I.e. train them through full range of motion, to get any potential benefits. (Just like if you didn’t have stem cells)
@manp10393 ай бұрын
thanks for sharing.. I have been very skeptical of these place promoting a stem cell injection service. On the other hand, I have heard and explored using natural methods to enhance cell production and most importantly placement. You may have heard about animals that regenerate limbs. It is my impression that the human body, such as digestive tract and skin have the ability to produce and excrete stem cells and enzymes related to tissue repair. You may have heard about how people have done some kinds of dry heat sauna therapy.. the ideas are to dilate the capillaries and cause sweating on the skin. I am not sure how these companies identify a stem cell..And i am wondering what do they include with the stem cells in the solution they inject.
@SergeyTheBold3 ай бұрын
Bryan, when the time is right please give us an update on what changed on your MRI images and whether there's any reneration/repair visible. Thanks for your work!
@cozyfalcon3 ай бұрын
That father's look, at 30:40, while his son was getting that shoulder injection is the most heartwarming part of the whole video.
@LeoLau-ip9bv2 ай бұрын
ya
@lizamedovaya29 күн бұрын
I'm nearly crying...
@kasperlarsensen17073 ай бұрын
Screw the haters Bryan I'm thankful to be alive in an era where I can watch you do things like this for the betterment of our lives. Absolutely incredible keep it up.
@stevehorace20503 ай бұрын
I agree and like seeing him try many new things, but I wished he had tried some different dietary approaches like carnivore 1st before the stem therapy. They do say many plant foods have toxins and many old people have reversed joint problems with carnivore. Good luck to him regardless.
@Ryan-nj5ue3 ай бұрын
not your life the superwealthy
@LuxStrangelove3 ай бұрын
Ikr, I want to see what works and copy him!
@djimiwreybigsby52633 ай бұрын
@@Ryan-nj5ue once upon a time, indoor plumbing was for the super wealthy only the future is here but slowly
@ChaosBW3 ай бұрын
Betterment of our lives? You mean the betterment of his life, and other billionaire who can afford human blood, bone marrow, and stem cell transplants.
@illuminatusdeus30513 ай бұрын
Great message - care for your parents, who have cared for you. I am all for it and am following your progress closely. Keep up the good work!
@crangel21833 ай бұрын
Bryan perhaps your most underated quality is kindness. Thanks for all you do
@inyourfacetimmy3 ай бұрын
Watched this with my Mom. She is 74 years old now. I am 40, feeling 29, trying to live to 150 years for now. I love my Mom. Hope to have he around for many more years. Trying all I can.
@danielbermingrud36553 ай бұрын
Also Living aint Working for ur health over half ur day. i mean if you have fun 10Hours without all this. but do this and have fun 5hours and work with ur health 5Hours. you dont gain anything other then more time u CANT use as you use it on Training and etc.. like Time is Time. Waste more time on other things dont mean you GAIN life.. unlike you Overlive the time you spend to try gain more time.. wich i dont see anyone will ever be able to do even within 50 years from now with all the speed our tech is moving.
@jambogamer-je2nf3 ай бұрын
believing this trash video is first sign of dementia.
@RIMHQ-YT3 ай бұрын
I recently lost my mom.,she was 74 also. She died suddenly and I never got a chance to say goodbye. In the casket I put fishing gear, an Underberg bottle, flowers and seeds and 1 of my 2 first shoes I got when I was a baby 49 yrs ago. My dad will have the other if he goes before me. Tell your mom you love her, and next time give her a hug and notice her cheeks are the softest cheeks you ever have felt. The hug is something you will miss the most. ❤❤❤
@Yajoy-kh3kc3 ай бұрын
delulu
@dublindave57953 ай бұрын
My mom made it to 91. Unfortunately her mind was crap for her last 4 years. Body was kind of ok functionality wise
@batcavemd2 ай бұрын
I adore your Thankfulness & Respect toward the Ones who have raised you Bryan 😊❤. Maintain that ;)
@MoreMushroomThanMan3 ай бұрын
If this works, please figure out a way to make this treatment affordable & available to the masses. As a retired disabled veteran with chronic joint & spine issues that go untreated by the VA, I would GREATLY appreciate a treatment like this, just so my kids & wife can have a healthier, more present & physically active patriarch in their lives. I’m sure they would agree, I’ve earned it, despite being discarded & forgotten by the country I served. ♥️🕊️🙏
@JitinMisra3 ай бұрын
@@MoreMushroomThanMan is lot of your joint issues from training in the army?
@carpediem6733 ай бұрын
I had terrible joint pain--hip and shoulder. Taurine helped me.
@nadagabri57833 ай бұрын
The bone marrow stem cells come from young Swedish donors. Do you even question how they extract it? No, you don’. Maybe your grandkids can donate some of their young American bone marrow stem cells to you. Are they killed for it? Do they get paid for under going this extremely painful extractioni? Worse Are they harvested?
@avitalsheva3 ай бұрын
It will be never ever for masses. Never. It will be only for superrich. I think everybody know this. Bryan will celebrate a new year in 2111
@real_smilegamez3 ай бұрын
@@nadagabri5783 Aint no way you think Swedes get their body parts illegally harvested 💀Either the dude died young and had signed for his body to be used for medical reasons/research, or it doesn't kill him(very unlikely it does kill him) and he got paid well.. if it was illegally harvested, the country would not be made that clear
@o7uk3 ай бұрын
That Cribs section was gold - keep it up
@cadene90953 ай бұрын
I’ve seen a lot of hate towards you online saying “you’re trying to play god” but in all honesty I’m INCREDIBLY interested in this research. For thousands of years humans have had a cap on how long we can live, and nobody is really exploring WHY that is and how that is. This is honest to god so incredibly exciting.
@VibeRipple2 ай бұрын
Yeah I mean nothing is stopping them from just choosing to die. People are so weird
@robertunderwood10112 ай бұрын
Of course we play God. It’s called medical care. We’ve gotten better at it over the years Our average lifetime has been extended a few years longer Time for a little self congratulation !
@lapub.2 ай бұрын
Nothing new since the snake oil liniment
@dirkdiggler93792 ай бұрын
@@robertunderwood1011a few years try decades
@slaaayx3 ай бұрын
Seeing your father being this happy has triggered a lot of joy in me. I really hope that someday I can achieve the same pride and happiness a father can feel for mine. I really appreciate that you show how much you care about your family. There is nothing better to live for people you love instead of living completely for youself, and extending this time is something anyone would do if they have the necessary resources, to enjoy this beautiful and priceless, yet limited amount of time. I have so much faith in you that your self experiment becomes a mindblowing revolution one day, and you are the oldest man to have ever lived. The sheer amount of discipline required to follow your unhumanly strict plan is truly remarkable.
@falsefortune77263 ай бұрын
Imagin spending all this time and energy to extend your life span just to be taken out by a 737 Max
@ryanray62153 ай бұрын
Other airplanes , helicopters , trains , boats , cars do not crash ? Imagine ! hahaha LOL 🤣😂🤑😅
@excaliber28453 ай бұрын
that isn't the point mate@@ryanray6215
@NavoTheTrueGod3 ай бұрын
At least he spent his time doing something actually valuable and a sense of PURPOSE That's what life is.
@Enderplays123 ай бұрын
@@NavoTheTrueGod The person was just joking lol. The 737 Max is a passenger airplane. Not really a concern while you're walking to the supermarket.
@falsefortune77263 ай бұрын
@@ryanray6215 Found the Boeing Exec.
@benholden33 ай бұрын
Bryan I admire not just the committment you have to your healthspan, but also the way you carry yourself and treat others. You're a good man, I aspire to be more like you
@maggiemiller52773 ай бұрын
I have to say I enjoyed watching your personality in this episode, you made it fun & you’re so down to Earth, it’s great
@volthertz99503 ай бұрын
HEY BRYAN! Please do a 30 days after Video, telling everything you feel and if it changed anything, and later a 90 days after! PLEASE! I have 37 and i will soon do something like that miself. I have been following you from here on Brazil, since 1 year already, and I already changed almost everything on my life, im tunrning all my energy to "Dont die". Just because I LOVE science and I want to live as much as possible to keep discoverying the world with science. Im not exacly rich to put a lot of money on to that, but im doing as much as possible! And im a lot curious about that steam cells and any other intervention like that! I want to buy all your products, but atm its too expensive for me (almost 2000 reais) and you dont ship to Brazil, but soon i will follow all the protocol blueprint, atm im just working with the things i have here. I love your Idea of beeing genuinely true about your dream, and sharing it, this dreams came from our generations, Milenials are dreamers. Elon Musk and You and I hope there is more out there coming, You are my source of inspiration, Life can be way better and diferent from what we beleave it is!
@TrueFallacy3 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for taking us inside this journey!
@duved3 ай бұрын
I'm suffering from tendonitis at the moment. I can't play the guitar for a while. Music is my passion, job, and art. Imagine if we could all just take a shot and solve our tendon problems. Bryan, thank you for pushing the envelope.
@stephanechouinard58673 ай бұрын
If you fast for three plus days your body will create its own stem cells. It’s free you just need to drink water for a few days. It works too
@guglielmo71913 ай бұрын
@@stephanechouinard5867Stop putting out this bullshit
@mprado41773 ай бұрын
@@stephanechouinard5867 Yes, I've had tendonitis a couple of times. It may take some time to cure, depending on the intensity of the injury and on how people will take care of it (rest, appropriate support, having things like bone broth or collagen peptides, etc), but it does go away, at least for me. No lasting consequences.
@renalta89683 ай бұрын
Out of all injuries you could have, most tendon injuries can be recovered from. Before going for expensive options, look up on youtube how tendons and tendon pain actually works. Tendons get injured because they are weak. Resting and not moving where it feels painful doesn't heal tendons, it makes them atrophy and even more prone to later injury. Rest is only needed for a few days maximum after getting injured. You need active recovery, gradual strengthening of the tendon with isometric holds and eccentric low weight exercises. Let me know if you want video suggestions but there are quite a lot of informative one's out there. Good luck.
@duved3 ай бұрын
@@renalta8968 Thanks for your comment. I am seeing a physical therapist twice a week, so I think I'm on the right path.
@TorcheredSole3 ай бұрын
Bryan is actually a vampire and this youtube channel is an attempt to build an alibi for why he never ends up dying!
@study70083 ай бұрын
What's wrong in it
@ryanchappell59623 ай бұрын
Bryan is going to love this comment.
@epiksaus51123 ай бұрын
:)
@MrAnarchocapitalist3 ай бұрын
That explains where all the young Swedish stem cells came from. How many were sacrificed to get 300 million?
@weirdwardrobetrashtotreasure3 ай бұрын
@@MrAnarchocapitalistthey probably donated it for money but yes, you never know and also the retraction of the bone marrow is without sedation ( i heard that years ago, from people who donated to fight cancer )
@karigisla3 ай бұрын
ive seen people do interviews with this guy and i saw this now and noticed that he has his own channel and i gave it eh ill click it but i genuinely did not think that id find him that interesting, his format is good he is funny and kind, the view into the process is way more than you'd get anywhere else, just the shot of them delivering the cells (fake shots or not it's about the storytelling) and all about that was very surprising and i'm all for it, instant subscribe and props to you, the quick interviews dont sell you as good as they should, (they get your name out there but id heavily advertise your channel when the spot light goes on) keep it up
@ThugByChoice3 ай бұрын
His relationship with his Dad and his Son is what made me want to watch his channel more than anything else.
@TheLoveSignGuy3 ай бұрын
Great to see you helping your fun loving dad. I recently moved to The Villages, Fla to help my mom with getting her life back from near death due to multible cronic illnesses. After 3 months on a super nutrient dense, plant based diet with daily exercising and vitamin/herbal supplementation (Plus some basic LOVE) she is doing great. A 180 degree wellness reversal. The Villages is home to over 100,000 retired seniors. I would love to share your program here and help these wonderful people get these awesome health benefits. I'm 60 and have been plant based for over 40 years. I look 40 and feel like I'm 30. I would love to be on your team. Many Blessings, Will Love Strong
@RapmasterY3 ай бұрын
This is so amazing to hear !!! Well done for your efforts, wow !
@jmmyt33 ай бұрын
"Take care of your parents, they took care of you." Love that!
@m_turbolover82 ай бұрын
well, they didn't, what's then
@print4apet2 ай бұрын
@@m_turbolover8 yeah his dad needs to drop lbs yest an stat, then get active then stemsss !
@m_turbolover82 ай бұрын
@@print4apet I spoke in general, for that comment, 'cause not everyone has parents........
@MiaTuzlic3 ай бұрын
I am a huge Bryan Johnson fan. I just love his overall entire vibe. He seems so at ease with himself& the ppl. Around him& inspires me to become a better version of myself. I wish I could do for my mother what he does for his father. I do it in my own way sort of with skin regiment products, etc. when I find something I love I get it for my mom.. It really seems to be fun and an excellent way to bond. Good luck to the whole team in your next endeavor.. Sending love from Pittsburgh PA!
@MYSTCAROL3 ай бұрын
I did Stem Cells in 2023 for my knees. I have felt such a difference and would do it again. Although for me it was painful when injected (Bryan is super healthy)
@JitinMisra3 ай бұрын
how old are you?
@anamosity_soso3 ай бұрын
What exactly does this treatment do?
@ruminantdastellar77403 ай бұрын
I want that in my hip
@deepforestenergy603 ай бұрын
If you practice according to my method, then you don’t need to inject anything. Who else can do this simple exercise at the age of 60? kzbin.infopPIbL4bGc50
@private_citizen3 ай бұрын
I tore my meniscus. Saw a sports doctor in FL who injected my knee with stem cells. The injection itself wasn't painful, but hours later, OMFG it was so painful it made me feel like i was going to throw up, all i could do was lay on the couch and try not to move. But yes, months later i believe my injuries improved. My knee isn't back to 100% but i feel like its 90% recovered. Cost $1,500 for one injection.
@vibrationoftheone2 ай бұрын
The care for your dad is heartwarming and inspiring. Good on ya Bryan. Fascinating journey 👍
@scottdw3 ай бұрын
Richard + Bryan = my heroes for life
@punitadatta2 ай бұрын
Awww
@williamhenry33373 ай бұрын
I am 75 years old and I have never had any aches or pains. Never had a prescription. Same bodyweight and waist size as when I graduated High School (140 lb/29"). My 45 year old daughter has massive pains all over her body and may need hip replacements. I wish I had the money to fly her down there for treatment.
@asbjrnscholerjensen50693 ай бұрын
Jordan Peterson's daughter has had what sounds like the same issues, and they went away when she started on carnivore diet.
@lauramakin8343 ай бұрын
I wonder what the difference between you two is, why you've never had aches or pains but she has? Do you have very different lifestyles?
@JitinMisra3 ай бұрын
is your life style different or do you take special care in diet or exercise compared to your daughter , all your life ?
@skyw82483 ай бұрын
@@ryanray6215it’s just not an optimal diet for longevity whatsoever unless you have rare autoimmune diseases.
@jnova33283 ай бұрын
I wish you and your daughter all the best for her to have a complete recovery. Conventional doctors don't read blood tests or read your body the same way/the better way that a functional medical doctor does. I believe in using conventional doctors when necessary but primarily use holistic functional doctors. I hope she does not have any operations until she exhausts all other options such as doing heavy research to find answers and she finds doctors who can find the root cause of her symptoms, such as a functional medical doctor. Possibly a Chiropractor is a start to help her and/or physical therapy and see a functional medical doctor. I prefer to only go to a Chiropractor who incorporates Applied Kinesiology in their practice. Research Jordan Peterson's daughter and Jordan Peterson's health, binge-watch Dr. Berg's videos that pertain to her specific symptoms, check Gary Brecka's website and his interview with Steve Harvey for ideas on things that she can start to do herself, and find other websites or KZbin Channels that pertain to her symptoms. There are so many things that could be causing her medical symptoms but an operation may not be the answer, it might make her health worse, or it could make it better but it is always best to get extra opinions from non-conventional doctors. Her symptoms could be due to an allergy to gluten or something else, she might have a misalignment in her spine and if it's fixed it might alleviate or eliminate most of her symptoms if she were adjusted by a chiropractor, she might have been bitten by a tick and not know it and have Lyme or have fibromyalgia or arthritis. The possibilities I mentioned all cause various symptoms and often a non-functional doctor doesn't diagnose it correctly.
@dylan_13133 ай бұрын
I love the relationship between him and his dad is so strong and he is so happy and positive
@kirstenbakker8393 ай бұрын
Watching Bryan's love for life and for his family never fails to instantly lift my mood ❤ I'm grateful for the opportunity for us to join him on this fascinating Blueprint adventure through KZbin. Interesting stuff!
@haleyross22553 ай бұрын
I love your Dad! You can tell he's so proud of you and loves you so much! I'm looking forward to seeing what your results are. Joints are such a big deal.
@lollyying45653 ай бұрын
I'm sure you get told this a lot already, but I think that what you're doing for scientific development is really admirable. Keep up the effort!!!
@dr.palsonp.h.d8153 ай бұрын
Appreciate the increase in production, specifically the shift to target entertainment + informative. I could see the the purposefull inclusion of internet vlogging elements in this video. Good job, the channel will get traction, usually takes multiple years to get a good base.
@joelm.m3 ай бұрын
25:00 "Kids take care of your parents" is the best lesson in all this adventure...
@BryanJohnson3 ай бұрын
❤
@lu.pi.55993 ай бұрын
At 40, with my children on my left and my parents on my right, I echo the sentiment of this video. It's a humbling realization of the man I've become, balancing the roles of father and son. This is where true manhood takes root."
@Botanifiles3 ай бұрын
How do I take care of them though, if they won't listen to any of my advice
@joelm.m3 ай бұрын
@@Botanifiles with patience and love and acceptence. Your job is to love them and inform them and accept what you can't change for now. In due time some come around.
@rebeccawills86973 ай бұрын
@@BryanJohnsonwhy sweedish?
@kathyn87802 ай бұрын
thanks for being the guinea pig, so brave ! love to see the results
@scottdw3 ай бұрын
The golf cart rides were my favorite part. So comfy!!!
@SilverFan21k3 ай бұрын
Your videos are super good now of amazing quality + hd camera + edits
@Soulful_Oatmilk18 күн бұрын
Bryan, you taking your dad with you on this journey was lovely to see. Thanks for sharing.
@epa-c70073 ай бұрын
Had stem cells injected into my hip to stave off replacement. Arguably the worst pain I've experienced because there was barely any space to the joint. Hopefully you get more distance out of it than I. Only saved me around a year before needing the artificial joint. I'm sure this is state of the art technology. Best of luck. Will be following.
@BrainiousPodcast3 ай бұрын
Bryan, you are such an inspiration. Can't wait for the Don't die dinner, we would love to join from Hungary! Greetings from a small channel that also tries to educate other. :)
@cillyhoney18922 ай бұрын
This is my first video of yours that I have watched. Your narcissism is off the charts but you seem to at least have intellectual empathy and you're funny so there's that. I hope your endeavors pay off and I wonder how your son really feels about being your blood bag. Your father clearly loves you dearly. You are a very lucky person. I hope you know that. Thank you for trying to make the world a better place in your own way.
@Rstudio445213 ай бұрын
bruh the cribs bit killed me
@ADentistDoesHomeImprovement3 ай бұрын
Came here to stay this. He should look into comedy if he ever gets bored.
@wikkedJ123 ай бұрын
ahahahh it's so good
@Kiwipre3 ай бұрын
real 😂😂
@irisdude3 ай бұрын
😂 it was great humor...especially the yachts
@roboform1003 ай бұрын
"Safety is a #1 priority" reference was excellent
@Sadlander23 ай бұрын
Creating this KZbin channel was a great idea, not only to show the progress but (especially) to show that you're not some sociopath millionaire who wants to live forever but that you're a father, a son and that you care about and love spending time with your family!
@rhondasmith74133 ай бұрын
😂😂😂
@WolfHeathen3 ай бұрын
Then maybe he should stay away from the stem cells. You can't just will unprogrammed cells into benefitting you. They can just as well develop into cancer cells anywhere in your body.
@ChronicallyMandyMay3 ай бұрын
Interesting thought...thank you@@WolfHeathen
@mookfaru8353 ай бұрын
Right, I had that same idea on the surface. But if I get to know you, I see that your cause is a noble one.
@gsssprocket3 ай бұрын
THANKU FOR ALL YOUR KINDNESSES AND GOOD WILL TO HEALTH FOR ALL
@jane012343 ай бұрын
His outfits are just on point Everytime!!
@roxannana173 ай бұрын
“This wave stopped because it found me intimidating” 😂 nice
@wethepeople_usa2 ай бұрын
I mean i 100% get what he's doing and i do applaud his resolve. I am just concerned with that much stress on his body but i also have watched most of the videos hes put out. I think he got it worked out. He looks great and i am hoping that he has even more success. If you do nothing nothing will get done. Hes pioneering something. This is one of my favorite type of human.
@print4apet2 ай бұрын
He doin it to make the $$$ Don’t kid yourself.
@mesere73 ай бұрын
You have great energy with your dad, it's amazing to watch. Please do a deep dive on his health too how the procedures affect his health at his age and what benefits he is getting and his general health journey...
@Andre-Nader3 ай бұрын
I looked at the website for the price: The treatments are funded by the participants. The rates differ between the trials depending on cell dose and way of administration: Local injection of a joint, USD 16 500 Systemic treatment or two joints, USD 25 000
@johnames64303 ай бұрын
it's actually not that expensive, if you cut out vacations and drive your car for 15 yrs almost anyone can afford it
@JesusIsGoodTruth3 ай бұрын
@@johnames6430LOL
@SourceHades3 ай бұрын
@@johnames6430 Hmm, should I gamble €10k this weekend or save it and get some stem cell injections next month? Hard choice
@Joe_Blo2 ай бұрын
Yeah, well, our body produces it's own stem cells 24/7. If it could repair damaged /destroyed cartilage like a lizard replaces it's tail, it would.
@sueellenmcgoey6095Ай бұрын
I guess only the wealthy will live forever in no pain😢
@richieuhh852 ай бұрын
My mom had a knee partially replaced and it’s not any better than it was before the surgery. It still causes her pain. She moved to Korea and the doctor there used placenta stem cells on her other knee and has felt much better and avoided surgery.
@ffarjani3 ай бұрын
Believe me Bryan, this is by far the purest form of entertainment for me, watching you living the dream and experiencing life as if you are going to live forever is a bliss, Thank you for 2 things (for doing what you do and for sharing it with us for free)
@Clayaga3 ай бұрын
You know, the actual don't die mission aside, its fun to see you actually just starting to have fun with making the content. Its informative sure, but you and your team making entertaining cuts and etc, and not in a mr beastification way but one that matches your energy is really refreshing and you can tell that you have a lot of purpose in your life. Keep it up man, lots of people are already listening and pursuing the knowledge you are learning.
@ChelseaCamaro3 ай бұрын
I have had many years of suffering a failed artificial joint replacement in my cervical spine on two levels. The few neurosurgeons that I could afford to see say they can’t revise or take them out. I was in perfect health exercise, running, and weights all my life until now. I cannot work and cannot get disability as of yet. So now my hope of recovery is slipping away. Tests like MRI’s, CT scans, and routine things like a dr visit that I once afforded and assumed I would always afford, are now but a dream that I cannot attain.
@lukaellegaardjensen61783 ай бұрын
Such a cool production video team. You guys are delivering!!!
@raybod17753 ай бұрын
I’ve been taking a couple of tablets Glucosamine, Chondroitine and MSM a day for about 30 years (and many other supplements), now 66. I was over 300 pounds for several years and never had joint pain. Brian isn’t the first person to try to live as long as possible.
@nomars48273 ай бұрын
O really? Was MSM popular 30 years ago?
@l.sienna82263 ай бұрын
I saw MSM in Costco about 20 years ago. So maybe.
@acechadwick3 ай бұрын
@@nomars4827MSM is sulphur and is currently a very popular supplement
@deepforestenergy603 ай бұрын
I am one of the most successful centenarians. At 60 years old, my physical body is the same as at 30 years old. I have developed special exercises. So far, not a single person in the world aged 60+ has been able to repeat all my exercises. But I hope there are still such people.
@sorenjunkers38343 ай бұрын
i am 70s year old smoking and drinking and this year i will run a marathon
@TheNinjaFam3 ай бұрын
We’re anxious to hear the results! Do you have a follow up video coming out soon?
@yuanxingyang67203 ай бұрын
My stress score went to 2.7 (I am a Whoop user, too) after I saw 13:14 of the videos for the knee. Thank you, Bryan. I am an Army reserve soldier in the USA, yet I feel stressed just watching them do these labs and stuff like that.
@yuanxingyang67203 ай бұрын
Needle injection vs needle ejecting fluid from the knee is a completed two different level of story
@xav993 ай бұрын
Massive respect for going through this brother
@punitadatta2 ай бұрын
Bryan Johnson is a *GODSEND* for the science 🧪 of life extension.
@TheCookiecupcakes3 ай бұрын
I laughed a lot during the CRIBS section. So much play, I love it.
@well54233 ай бұрын
Your Bahamas videos are so riveting. Thank you for doing all these trials Brian.
@onionface5835Ай бұрын
When is the update? How is the shoulder? My guess is that most people would not get all joints done in one go, rather deal with each joint as problems appear.
@DevonWayne3 ай бұрын
1:40 That BOEING joke was funny, I literally look at the pamphlets now for "BOING 737-MAX" and if it's a MAX, I'm hesitant to fly
@OlaOla-so3il3 ай бұрын
Arthritis is such a horrible thing! This could make huge difference people lives!🙏
@GrappLr3 ай бұрын
I had 388 million injected last week. And it's definitely not placebo, I'm seeing results already. Mostly for old sports injuries I've had (over the last 16 years).
@randumrastogi3 ай бұрын
Brilliant vlog! Felt like watching a mini series
@LithaMoonSong3 ай бұрын
I would give my eyeteeth to have this done. That wouldn't be too bad since the regrowth drug for teeth is going into testing in Japan. I commented too soon, you and your dad are so sweet.
@sonnysohal1492 ай бұрын
I would love a follow up video on how effective the stem cell treatment was, and if it fixed the symptoms that you were having.
@tonic23353 ай бұрын
I did Stem Cells 3 years ago in Panama and could definitely tell a difference. Now I’m doing hyberbaric chamber- good results
@vilhelmkron74553 ай бұрын
How much did it cost?
@tonic23353 ай бұрын
@@vilhelmkron7455$25,000 US
@tonic23353 ай бұрын
@@vilhelmkron7455 $25k
@RapmasterY3 ай бұрын
Yesss hyperbaric chamber is the way, overall, generally, yet in London it's quite expensive, to do it regularly, best way is to be able to afford one for one's own home. One day
@kuma391863 ай бұрын
He. Actually. Looks. YOUNG!
@aprilslife-momentsshared521122 күн бұрын
Amazing information and amazing scientific work! I’m following for the first time and have had similar thoughts throughout my life. Super excited to see your journey and see what I can learn to implement.
@carlosdominguez31083 ай бұрын
A lot of people don't understand stem cells. They can differentiate into anything. Hopefully they differentiate properly, but there's always a possibility they can differentiate improperly or become neoplastic.
@perfredelius3 ай бұрын
But why wouldn't they get rejected by the immune system?
@carlosdominguez31083 ай бұрын
@@perfredelius They could, potentially. But MSC stem cells typically have low to very little of the molecule that presents cells as self (MHC-2).
@lukamiljic81933 ай бұрын
@@carlosdominguez3108 Even still, wouldn't a low MHC-2 levels promote an NK-cell mediated response, as some tumors do try to evade the immune system by downregulating MHC-2 expression? And even then, those stem cells will eventually differentiate into a specialized tissue, which will inevitably increase its MHC-2 expression, causing a host vs graft reaction. I really can't see a long-term benefit from allogenic stem cell transplantation in these types of cases, as the patients would need to remain on imunosupressive therapy, which just isn't worth it. Now if it were an autologous transplantation, it would be a completely different story, and I can see future treatments going in this direction as soon as the technology matches the demand.
@borodel6193 ай бұрын
Good comment! It depends in what of sort state you are. If the body has to solve former issues, I think they could become neoplatic. It is good to think holistic!
@borodel6193 ай бұрын
@@lukamiljic8193 99,9 % of the medical doctors do not understand cancer, because their appoch is only physical, and not physical and non-physical together. There was a german medical doctor who understood this proces. Of course the medical world did not want to learn of his discoveries. It was financial not attractive for the medical system. But it was finacial attratice for the patient. But who cares?
@eztanezta3 ай бұрын
Very refreshing to see Bryan in a vlog like manner. Makes the videos more personal and relatable and more human. :)
@Max-jv6sx3 ай бұрын
@@eztanezta 😂😂😂😂 uhhhhh....
@TheWheels19652 ай бұрын
This all sounds great, but we still haven't cracked the repair of spinal cord injuries. I wonder why!
@GoHerping3 ай бұрын
bryan's nervous laugh at 30:22 lmao. im obsessed with watching your progress
@therandommusicguy47733 ай бұрын
Your videos as of recent have been taking a very surgical type of route and it's so interesting lol. This is actually ground breaking stuff. Edit: I just had a conversation with my mum about how I'd never get in a boeing so that comment felt right on point lol
@jamesjonnes3 ай бұрын
I wish he would do therapeutic cloning with his own cells instead of someone else's cells.
@josh.salles3 ай бұрын
I absolutely love *Bryan Johnson's* humor, it really hits those related awkward vibes 🫠
@xycan87343 ай бұрын
Great production and editing. Love the content thanks.
@gigihaug96293 ай бұрын
The subject may be stem cells, but the star is your dad! What a lovely man.
@Krptokrayon3 ай бұрын
Doing a good job of talking through that sedation.
@My_Honest_Reaction_13 ай бұрын
Another crazy project and I’m here for it
@cule2193 ай бұрын
I’ve head both of my ACLs replaced, one knee had a meniscectomy and other had meniscus repair. At only 34 I’ve been having bad pains past few years when doing anything that requires me to use my knees. Really would love to be able to do this one day and start living a bit more active life again
@m.bird.3 ай бұрын
Try PRP, it has very good results in knees and is accessible financially and geographically.
@MasterInHD3 ай бұрын
At 34 is crazy, that's a man's prime. Try looking up KneesOverToesGuy
@bondjane0073 ай бұрын
All I can say is you’re so brave! The needle in the hip is killer! But you have a experience doctor doing it. I’ve known him for over 20 years and he is a great conscientious doctor. So happy you found him and he found you. Thank you thank you so much for sharing this journey with us. I’m cringing with him putting that big long needle in you. That is so scary and I know it hurts. You were very brave.
@TheCookiecupcakes3 ай бұрын
8:37 Skipping is a legit great workout.
@Bjax1113 ай бұрын
Im very interested in a one, two year follow up.
@filipivan51253 ай бұрын
I am fascinated by the entire Bryan's story and excited about the future. I want this guy to make a change in this world and be here to see it happen. Unfortunately I am a strongly sceptical person with a drop of pessimism and worried about Bryan's legacy dying if there was anything to happen to him...
@Kavaitsu3 ай бұрын
8:35 this was hilarious 😂😂 your humour is something else, Bryan 😊
@Blaize__3 ай бұрын
Next video: will Ketamine slow my speed of aging?
@kouros03 ай бұрын
Bruh no way you just said that, IT'S FUNNY AF 🤣🤣🤣
@yonierbusnelli3 ай бұрын
Probably yes
@Ted_kaczynsk3 ай бұрын
my answer: no
@hughmyron78733 ай бұрын
The Devon Larratt protocol
@geladaizlabon36053 ай бұрын
I think brain's speed of aging
@LuckTR3 күн бұрын
Two hip replacements later, I've already lost... But I hope people in the future can be fixed without changing use implant hardware. Truly rooting for you to succeed Bryan and team!
@BBJGC43 ай бұрын
Brian . Can you please specify what supplements you suggested for your dad for his cognition .
@artompolski66983 ай бұрын
How did they extract stem cells from the swedish Young people?
@TheOnlySaneAmericanАй бұрын
probably aborted babies. the swedes are known for killing their unborn without giving a fuck
@Toucan-p5h2 ай бұрын
You have my absolute respect dedicating your life to such a long task . Your work will be a great progression in understanding of the human body
@lucasbeaglemixwithdcm57983 ай бұрын
I can’t wait to see the results ❤ you are the best 🙌 thank you for doing this for us!
@Triflixfilms3 ай бұрын
Bryan, I've had a severe cold for the last 2 days. I'm curious to know how often do you get 'sick' from viruses and bacteria on the blueprint protocol?
@CoreTradingMastery3 ай бұрын
I'm not on any blueprint protocol and I haven't had a cold in about a year now. Just eat, raw garlic and ginger.
@soothingeclipse3 ай бұрын
Dude this is such a great question I wanted to ask this to him too pls @bryan do reply