Forget Botox! Scientists say tripping on mushrooms might keep you young

Tech announces hearing supplements and revitalizes themselves with the “young plasma” to protect the time. At the same time, it shows that a substance in which people are accepted in a thousand years.

A new study published in Nature Partner magazines Aging The modest psychic mushroom managed to grow older and even a mouse life of compounds that occur in mushrooms. The EMORY University studied two-bodied research, in magical fungi, psychoactive component, human lung and skin cells and the effect of micro levels with laboratory mice.

Psilocin, Psilocybin’s active metabolite, fetal pulmonary cells increased by 29% along the mobile life – a number of rockets to 57% when they are exposed to a larger dose. When scientists repeated the study with human skin cells, the dose of large psilosin increased the life of cells by 51%. Throughout cell experiments, oxidative stress, which can cause the length of the chromosome, which can cause psychosis and other diseases in other children’s diseases, reduced.

It was even more impressive to find scientists in live mice. When the psilocybin doses older mice and compared them with a control group, the research team found that the old mice were 30% longer than the same mice. On top of that, the mice were given to Psilocybin view The more healthier, better fur quality, more hair growth and less than the coats.

Psilocybin is a border in mental health studies, but also maintains a strong potential in the field of longevity. Psychic substances have promised everything from helping smokers and alcoholics and left the habit of giving relief from the great depression after gifts.

“Our research opens new questions about what long-term treatment can do,” said Louise Hecker, PhD, Senior Scientific Author and former Emory University Associate Professor. “In addition, if the intervention is not late in life in the mice, it still leads to improving clinically relevant in healthy aging.”

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