Bryan Johnson explained that the therapy has several health benefits, including cellular repair, rejuvenation, vascularisation, and others (Image source: @bryan_johnson/X)Entrepreneur and “age-reversal” millionaire Bryan Johnson has been making headlines. From criticising India’s air quality index (AQI) to sharing his personal diet plan, Johnson has been attracting significant attention on social media. On Saturday, the CEO moved his office into his hyperbaric oxygen chamber, leaving his followers perplexed.
Sharing a video on X, Johnson wrote, “Moved my office into my hyperbaric oxygen chamber.” The viral clip, which has garnered over three million views, shows Johnson working on his computer inside the chamber while wearing an oxygen mask over his mouth and nose.
Watch here:
Moved my office into my hyperbaric oxygen chamber. pic.twitter.com/8TXfpPpICh
— Bryan Johnson /dd (@bryan_johnson) February 21, 2025
In another thread, Johnson shared details about hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBOT). He explained that the therapy has several health benefits, including cellular repair, rejuvenation, vascularisation, and others. “The increased pressure enhances the lungs’ ability to absorb oxygen, boosting oxygen levels throughout the body. The therapy aims to promote rejuvenation by increasing oxygen concentration in tissues, supporting healing, cellular repair, and vascularization,” he said.
Johnson also shares multiple sources to back his claims on the health benefits of HBOT.
See here:
Explainer on HBOThttps://t.co/PW1XIdlIEU
— Bryan Johnson /dd (@bryan_johnson) February 21, 2025
Johnson’s post quickly gained traction, with social media users sharing their queries about the therapy. “Is that safe? Isn’t there a potential risk of electrical sparks?” a user wrote. “A hot laptop plus oxygen-rich high-pressure air is explosive. Maybe even illegal,” another user commented.
“Bryan are you concerned about the blue light from the laptop?” a third user said.
Meanwhile, Johnson is turning heads after he claimed that men who do not experience nighttime erections are more likely to die prematurely. “Men who do not have nighttime erections are 70 per cent more likely to die prematurely. It predicts death. On average, a 20-year-old male should have between three-five erection episodes per night, yeah like 145 minutes of erections, and that’s healthy. By the time you’re 75, that reduces to about 50 minutes, so dramatically declines with age. Nighttime erections are a really important health marker,” Johnson said in a podcast with Ranveer Allahabadia.