First in Human
Send a healthy 35-year-old into orbit and their bones start dissolving ten times faster than someone on Earth with osteoporosis. Their muscles waste. Their vision degrades. It turns out, space is a biological time machine - compressing decades of aging into months. And that means one thing: if you solve aging in orbit, you might have solved it on Earth. Matthew Kuhn is a 31-year-old biomedical engineer in Houston. And on October 13, 2024, he stood in a closet holding his newborn daughter, watching a SpaceX rocket land on his phone, when he had a sudden realization: the same problems we'll need to solve to keep astronauts alive longer in orbit are the problems holding back longevity on Earth. He didn't sleep that night. By sunrise, the bet that became Skybound Medtech had taken shape. In this episode, we explore what happens to a body in orbit, the strange logic of dual-use medicine, and what it means to build a company at the intersection of NASA, the world's biggest medical center, and a future no one's quite built for yet. This episode is a different kind of conversation for the show. We usually meet builders well into the work: companies with traction, devices with data, stories already taking shape. Instead, this is a rare look from the passenger seat, at the very beginning of a founder's journey. It's an episode about diving deep into understanding an unmet need - and the vision for what might be possible. Subscribe to First in Human: - Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/first-in-human/id1842644737 - Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/3C1xG5SxPei8m2lI63WSkd Connect with Matt on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/matthew-t-kuhn/
29 episodios
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