Peter Attia· MD
if these mice are grown at 11% instead of 21% they now survive to about a median of one year
The headline is broadly defensible, but the qualifications matter. Effect sizes vary by population, the strongest claims rest on shorter trials, and credible voices push back on how it's typically framed.
if these mice are grown at 11% instead of 21% they now survive to about a median of one year
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lee syndrome so this mouse is defective in in complex one of the electron transport chain of the mitochondria and it it is very short-lived it lives about 55-60 days and it develops many of the same uh molecular phenotypes and neurological phenotypes as kids who have lee syndrome this childhood mitochondrial disease and and these children typically live how long you know it's variable onset but it's anywhere from infants to you know eight nine years old typically kids with lee syndrome don't make it to be teenagers it's just a it's a horrible horrible disorder