Breaking

Serge Voronoff: The Doctor Who Transplanted Monkey Testicles Into Men to Rejuvenate Them

 In 1923 the dictatorial General Serge Voronoff in Russia, one of the largest delegates to the International Congress in London, had died. Three years earlier, Voronoff had finished his religious experiments, which he claimed could shorten a person's lifespan by several years. Wolof introduced his Heroes of Suffering series of films to a traditional audience of over 700 prominent colleagues around the world, where they saw the "before and after" effects of his treatment on many of his subjects, all in the sixties. Were from middle to end. -the seventies. Four to twenty months after treatment, the films showed remarkable improvements in his health and face, including some horse riding, boating and other athletic feats. Voronoff claimed to have treated more than forty men over the age of sixty, many of whom were wealthy and educated.


Serge Voronoff was born in 1866 into a Jewish family in the village of Shekhman, Russia. At the age of 18, after his graduation, Voronoff left Russia to study medicine in Paris. There he met the renowned French surgeon Alexis Carrel, who had received the Nobel Prize in Medicine for his pioneering vascular suturing technique. Under Carell, Voronoff learned the technique of transplantation and became fascinated by the possibilities of animal-to-human transplantation, believing that youthful vigor could be restored and even diseases cured through the transfer of hormones. Treatment can also be done.


In 1889, Voronoff began working with experimental physiologist Charles-Edouard Brown-Séquard, who was also interested in the rejuvenating effects of animal hormones. Brown-Séquard conducted experiments on himself by injecting extracts of ground-up dog and guinea pig testicles under his skin. However, these experiments failed to produce the desired results and Voronoff became convinced that tissue grafts would produce a more sustained effect than injections alone.


Serge Voronoff was born in 1866 into a Jewish family in the village of Shekhman, Russia. At the age of 18, after his graduation, Voronoff left Russia to study medicine in Paris. There he met the renowned French surgeon Alexis Carrel, who had received the Nobel Prize in Medicine for his pioneering vascular suturing technique. Under Carell, Voronoff learned the technique of transplantation and became fascinated by the possibilities of animal-to-human transplantation, believing that youthful vigor could be restored and even diseases cured through the transfer of hormones. Treatment can also be done.


In 1889, Voronoff began working with experimental physiologist Charles-Edouard Brown-Séquard, who was also interested in the rejuvenating effects of animal hormones. Brown-Séquard conducted experiments on himself by injecting extracts of ground-up dog and guinea pig testicles under his skin. However, these experiments failed to produce the desired results and Voronoff became convinced that tissue grafts would produce a more sustained effect than injections alone.

2 comments:

Powered by Blogger.