Snake Yoga Slititers in California Studio
A California Yoga studio combined his love for yoga and pythons to create a “unique experience” called “Snake Yoga”: the ball pythons will fall to the participants during their “flow”.
Scientists have developed what they think is the most effective antivenom in history, and the secret ingredient came from a man’s blood.
In the course of his research, the team found a man, Tim Friede, who had been bitten hundreds of times by 16 species of fatal snakes, the venom of lethal enough to kill a horse, according to scientists, for a period of 18 years.
Friede had intentionally received the bites as part of a self-immunization process through increasing doses. As a result, it had become “hyper-immune” for the effects of snake neurotoxins, researchers declared.
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“After being introduced to Tim Friede and his incredible journey and his immune history, we decided that there was a unique opportunity in life to study his blood and isolate the base of a universal anti -henom,” Fox News Digital, author of the main study, told Fox News.
The research team found a man, Tim Friede (in the photo), who had been bitten hundreds of times by 16 species of fatal snakes for a period of 18 years. (Centivax)
Friede agreed to participate in a study in which he donated two samples of blood.
The researchers isolated from Friede’s blood antibodies, which reacted with neurotoxins found within the 19th of the most fatal snakes in the world.
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They combined two of the antibodies with another molecule to create a new antivenom. In mice trials, it was found that the antidote was a protector against the black mamba poison, King Cobra, Coral snakes and tiger snakes, among others.
The results were published on May 2 in Cell Press magazine.
Friede said that, participating in the study, he is “helping humanity”.

The researchers isolated from Friede’s blood antibodies, which reacted with neurotoxins found within the 19th of the most fatal snakes in the world. (Centivax)
“I know I’m helping someone possibly 8,000 miles away, and that makes me feel very good,” he said in a statement to Fox News Digital.
“I realize what I have been doing over the years has not been in vain with this research.”
“I know I’m helping someone possibly 8,000 miles away, and that makes me feel really good.”
“The reason I have been bitten so many times is to get more comfortable with this,” he added. “It became a lifestyle for me, almost like an addiction.”
The hope is that the “unique and unique immune history of Friede could give rise to a” broad spectrum “or universal antivenom, according to Granville.
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“If you are formulated for an intramuscular delivery in a form of” Venom Epipen “, which is our preference, it could be deployed more widely without any IV requirements, including very rural parameters or hiking backpacks,” he told Fox News Digital.
Researchers are planning to expand their trials to treat dogs that have been taken to veterinary clinics after receiving snake bites, according to the statement.

Scientists combined two of the antibodies with another molecule to create a new antivenom that was found protector against the black mamba venom, the Cobra king, the coral snakes and the tiger snakes, among others. (Centivax)
They will also work to create another antivenom to protect against Viper’s bites.
Prior to this research, the process of antivenom has been more or less the same during the last century, according to researchers.
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“Usually, it involves immunizing horses or sheep with poison from simple snake species and collecting the antibodies produced,” they wrote. “Although effective, this process could lead to adverse reactions to non -human antibodies, and treatments are usually species and specific in the region.”

According to the World Health Organization, approximately 5.4 million people are bitten by snakes worldwide. Among the 2.7 million are poisoned by the poison, which can cause death or permanent disability. (Istock)
According to the World Health Organization, approximately 5.4 million people are bitten by snakes worldwide. Among the 2.7 million are poisoned by the poison, which can cause death or permanent disability.
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The research was supported by the National Institute of Allergies and Infectious Diseases of the National Health Institutes, the National Program for Innovation Research for Small Health Companies and the Energy Department of the United States.
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