Paul Saladino· MD
I asked the butcher to bring me some thymus this week I'm crossing my fingers that I'll get some like that's interesting I'm going to start eating thymus more often
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.
I asked the butcher to bring me some thymus this week I'm crossing my fingers that I'll get some like that's interesting I'm going to start eating thymus more often
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there's evidence that consuming desiccated thymus freeze-dried thymus or fresh thymus actually improves the health the size of the thymic gland in animal models the thymus is an immune organ that very few of us even know about it it's just behind the sternum and it's we're told that it involutes that it shrinks as we age but I found it very interesting that in animal studies if you give these animals desiccated thymus it can improve the size and the function the immunologic function of the thymus
we've seen this in other animal models you give animals thymus and their thymus grows in like mice and rats