A woman keeps her young by injecting bacteria 3.5 million years ago

Release date: 2017-10-11

A 45-year-old actress from Germany injected a strain of bacteria from the permafrost of Siberia 3.5 million years ago to stop the effects of aging.

The woman named Manoush described herself as “the white mouse of the human laboratory” because she was the first person in the world to inject Bacillus F. The cells of this bacteria clearly showed no signs of aging. . She has been doing this for the past three months and claims that it has made her look younger than the actual age.

In 2009, Russian scientists first discovered Bacillus sp. F in the permafrost of northwestern Russia, which was later hailed as a “scientific sensation”. In 2015, a group of researchers claimed that the DNA of the bacterium was declassified. Unlike other cells in nature, the cells of Bacillus F did not show signs of aging and may be the key to eternal youth. Manoush has clearly kept these statements in mind and injected bacteria into her blood.

If you want to know how a little-known actress from Munich, Germany, succeeded in getting Bacillus F, she apparently got enough samples from Dr. Anatoli Brouchkov, head of the Department of Geology at Moscow State University.

Since the process was experimental, no doctor could inject the bacteria without risk, so the actress decided to do it herself, under the supervision of the doctor and her friends, to prevent bad things from happening. Every two weeks, she injects these strange bacteria into her veins and hopes to increase the dose and frequency as soon as possible.

“My skin is as soft as the baby's buttocks,” Manoush told Barcroft TV recently. "You can't see it on the photo, but if you see me, you can see no traces of time or embarrassment. I have never been so good. I have never slept better, deeper, longer."

Dr. Brouchkov has apparently taken his own Bacillus F extract – just for oral administration, but Manoush is the first person to be injected directly into the bloodstream.

The 45-year-old woman said: "We don't know how long-term impact of this is, but no risk is unsuccessful." "This will not make me younger 20 years old. But I think it can help me live to 80 or 90 years old. In terms of artificial health and beauty, age will also become less glamorous. I want to die in a functional body. If this helps me, then everything is worth it."

Manoush's family is totally opposed to her plan to inject herself with an unknown bacterium in order to gain eternal youth, but this has not stopped her. Dr. Anatoli Brouchkov also does not recommend injecting the sample directly into her blood.

"Aging is a disease. It's a genetic defect for me." The actress said that even in my teens, I couldn't accept getting older every day. "I don't care what others think. Nothing can stop me from finding and feeling young, nothing."

It's worth noting that this is just the latest attempt by Manoush to try to stay young. In the past 20 years, she has spent about $50,000 on plastic surgery, including cosmetic surgery, breast augmentation surgery and nose plastic surgery.

Although many people think that Manoush is crazy about injecting bacteria into her blood, previous reports say the bacteria have been injected into living organisms - human blood cells, mice and crops - and the results are encouraging. The lifespan of these organisms is longer than expected.

Source: Omelette

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