Is it true that unfulfilled libido can affect your lifespan, affect your lifespan, and shorten your life?
That's too scary. How sexual health experts come to the conclusion that sex is related to lifespan through scientific research. Losing weight can make many living things live longer. This health preserving effect is consistent among worms, fruit flies, mice, Zebrafish, monkeys, and even yeast. However, the scientific paper published in 2007 by the research team led by Scott D. Pletcher, a geneticist at the University of Michigan, USA, during his tenure as a professor at the Baylor College of Medicine in Texas, pointed out that the effect of weight loss on life extension would significantly reduce the discount after fruit flies smelled the taste of food! That is to say, fruit flies on a diet, tempted by the smell of food, have shorter lifespans than they should have!
After the mutation of the Olfactory receptor gene Or83b, it was found that the flies were under pressure, and their life span was prolonged. Smell affected the physiology and aging of flies. But didn't our ancestors say that food and sex were also important? If you smell it and cannot eat it, you cannot maintain health. Will it be induced by color? When Guo Chonghan from Taiwan was studying in the doctoral class of Baylor College of Medicine, considering this interesting problem, he and the guiding professor of the doctoral class together designed an experiment to discuss this challenging problem.
In the scientific paper in which Guo Chonghan is the co first author, they found that dissatisfied fruit flies will also become shorter! Guo Chonghan studied the relationship between drosophila Pheromone and early speciation during his master's class at Tsinghua University in Taiwan, and was also interested in the research on the influence of Pheromone on aging. He said that they had tried to use color to induce male flies before to discuss whether female Pheromone would affect the life span of male fruit flies, but no significant results were obtained. Previous experiments used fine nets to separate male and female fruit flies to avoid mating. However, this method may not make male Drosophila exposed to enough Pheromone. Secondly, male Drosophila melanogaster must use body contact Pheromone to take effect, and the partition net prevents this contact. The limitations of experimental methods lead to poor results.