Longevity - Life Extension - Anti-Aging

Wednesday, December 27, 2006

Year End Report: Resveratrol #1 Newsmaker


In late 2006, researchers reported that resveratrol--a molecule found in the skin of red grapes--can prolong the life span of obese mice. Thousands of articles have shown up in newspapers and on the Internet about this report and it does now appear that resveratrol may be the long awaited answer to longevity and anti-aging.
Read the complete article on the website http://longevityexperts.com (Longevity Experts)
"After six months, resveratrol essentially prevented most of the negative effects of the high-calorie diet in mice," says study co-author Rafael de Cabo of the National Institute of Aging (NIA) along with Robert Sinclair, a Harvard Medical School pathologist of the current study.
Sinclair notes, "but there is no question that we are seeing increased longevity." The researchers also note that the resveratrol-treated mice not only live longer than their untreated counterparts, but have more active lives, too--their motor skills have actually improved as they have aged. More

You can order Resveratrol online one dose is equal to 8-12 glasses of red wine: Click Here

Tuesday, July 11, 2006

Longevity News and Products at http://longevityexperts.com

Calorie restriction shown to boost longevity and slow loss of muscle mass in animal experiment
http://www.newstarget.com/019602.html

Monday, July 10, 2006

A study recently published in the Journal of Gerontology: Biological Sciences suggests that eating less may help people stay strong even in old age.

Scientists from the University of Calgary found that rats fed a nutritious, calorie-restricted diet maintained their muscle mass much better than rats that ate a normal amount of food. "It's the equivalent of an 80-year-old rat with the muscles of a 20-year-old rat," said Russ Hepple, a physiologist at the University of Calgary.

Although it is well-documented that a low calorie diet increases life expectancy, this is the first study showing a connection between diet and strength. In Hepple's experiment, rats that consumed a low calorie diet lost only 20 percent of their muscle mass as they aged, with no loss of muscle function. Rats fed a normal diet lost 50 percent of their strength and 50 percent of their muscle function as they aged.

Researchers are still trying to understand how a low calorie diet preserves muscles. Experiments performed so far seem to show that cutting calories helps the mitochondria function better, which improves the rats ability to rebuild and replace cells as they age. Hepple's next study will focus on antioxidants, exercise and gene therapy to see how these areas affect muscle maintenance.

While cutting calories by 40 percent showed significant improvement in the study rats, Hepple does not recommend such severe calorie restriction for the average person. He encourages people to eat a healthy diet and stay active throughout their lives.

Saturday, June 17, 2006

Your Momma Told You To Eat Those Veggies!

And she was right!!

Longevity Information, News and Products at http://longevityexperts.com

Animal studies suggest vegetables may reduce hardening of arteries
WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. – New research suggests one reason vegetables may be so good for us – a study in mice found that a mixture of five common vegetables reduced hardening of the arteries by 38 percent compared to animals eating a non-vegetable diet. Conducted by Wake Forest University School of Medicine, the research is reported in the current issue of the Journal of Nutrition.

"While everyone knows that eating more vegetables is supposed to be good for you, no one had shown before that it can actually inhibit the development of atherosclerosis," said Michael Adams, D.V.M., lead researcher. "This suggests how a diet high in vegetables may help prevent heart attacks and strokes."

The study used specially bred mice that rapidly develop atherosclerosis, the formation on blood vessel walls of fatty plaques that eventually protrude into the vessel's opening and can reduce blood flow. The mice have elevated low-density lipoprotein ( LDL), or "bad" cholesterol, which is also a risk factor for atherosclerosis in humans.

Half of the mice in the study were fed a vegetable-free diet and half got 30 percent of their calories from a mixture of freeze-dried broccoli, green beans, corn, peas and carrots. These five vegetables are among the top-10 vegetables in the United States based on frequency of consumption.

After 16 weeks, the researchers measured two forms of cholesterol to estimate the extent of atherosclerosis. In mice that were fed the vegetable diet, researchers found that plaques in the vessel were 38 percent smaller than those in the mice fed vegetable-free diets. There were also modest improvements in body weight and cholesterol levels in the blood.

The estimates of atherosclerosis extent involved measuring free and ester cholesterol, two forms that accumulate in plaques as they develop. The rate of this accumulation has been found to be highly predictive of the actual amount of plaque present in the vessels.

Adams said it is not clear exactly how the high-vegetable diet influenced the development of plaques in the artery walls.

"Although the pathways involved remain uncertain, the results indicate that a diet rich in green and yellow vegetables inhibits the development of hardening of the arteries and may reduce the risk of heart disease," said Adams.

He said that a 37 percent reduction in a certain marker of inflammation in mice suggests that vegetable consumption may inhibit inflammatory activity.

"It is well known that atherosclerosis progression is intimately linked with inflammation in the arteries," Adams said. "Our results, combined with other studies, support the idea that increased vegetable consumption inhibits atherosclerosis progression through antioxidant and anti-inflammatory pathways."

Numerous studies in humans have shown that a high-vegetable diet is associated with a reduced risk of cardiovascular disease, as well as with reductions in blood pressure and increases in "good" cholesterol. This is believed to be the first study to address the effect of increased vegetable consumption on the development or progression of atherosclerosis.

Despite compelling evidence supporting the health benefits of increased vegetable consumption, intake remains low, Adams said. The mean consumption is 3.2 servings per days, with about 40 percent coming from starchy vegetables such as potatoes.

Public release date: 17-Jun-2006

Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center

Longevity Information, News and Products at http://longevityexperts.com

Friday, June 09, 2006

Hundreds of Ways to Live to Be 100 - Secrets of Longevity

Secrets of Longevity: Hundreds of Ways to Live to Be 100
Press Release
Friday June 9, 7:00 am ET
New Book by Physician to the Stars, Dr. Maoshing Ni

SAN FRANCISCO, June 9 /PRNewswire/ -- New research suggests that a long life is no accident. So what are the secrets of the world's centenarians? Although centenarians are still rare, they now constitute the fastest-growing segment of the U.S. population. Their ranks have increased 16-fold over the past six decades -- from 3,700 in 1940 to roughly 61,000 today. The Census Bureau projects that one in nine baby boomers (9 million of the 80 million people born between 1946 and 1964) will survive into their late 90s, and that one in 26 (or 3 million) will reach the ripe age of 100.

Dr. Maoshing Ni, a 38th generation doctor of Chinese medicine, authority in the field of Taoist anti-aging medicine and author of Secrets of Longevity: Hundreds of Ways to Live to be 100 has helped celebrities like Helen Hunt, Jim Carrey, Angelica Houston, and Denzel Washington realize that the tools to live a longer, happier and healthier life already exist, and they're within virtually everyone's reach.

Instead of providing hard-to-follow regimens and rules, Dr. Ni shares entertaining and easy-to-implement 'secrets' to help readers feel young and vital well into their tenth decade. Some of the 'secrets' shared in Secrets of Longevity: Hundreds of Ways to Live to be 100 include:

-- Sweet Potatoes and Yams: Not Just for the Holidays
-- Ginger Gives You Snap
-- Prune's Other Benefits
-- Grow Fresh Air Indoors
-- Your Tongue Never Lies
-- Longevity Loud and Clear

A growing body of research suggests that chronic illness is not an inevitable consequence of aging, as we've long believed, but more often the result of lifestyle choices that we're perfectly free to reject. Secrets of Longevity: Hundreds of Ways to Live to be 100 shows that living to 100 is simpler than most people imagine -- this invaluable book is a 'must have' tool in the arsenal against aging. Secrets of Longevity: Hundreds of Ways to Live to be 100 will help people live longer, healthier lives so they can glide through their later years with clear minds and strong bodies.

Dr. Mao (as he is known by his patients and students) is a 38th generation doctor of Chinese medicine and an authority in the field of Taoist anti-aging medicine. After receiving two doctorate degrees and completing his Ph.D. dissertation on Nutrition, Dr. Mao did his postgraduate work at Shanghai Medical University's affiliated hospitals and began his 20-year study of centarians of China. Dr. Mao returned to Los Angeles in 1985 and has since focused on Taoist anti-aging therapeutics at his Tao of Wellness Center.

Longevity web site: http://longevityexperts.com

Wednesday, February 22, 2006

Life extension comes to your neighborhood!

The World must get ready for longevity




The next few decades will see a significant rise in life expectancy. Radical policy changes like increase in the age of retirement would be needed to cope with the challenges posed due to increased lifespan. The next few decades will see a significant rise in life expectancy. Radical policy changes like increase in the age of retirement would be needed to cope with the challenges posed due to increased lifespan.



According to a study by Dr. Shripad Tuljapurkar of Stanford University, due to the developments in the field of anti-ageing technologies, the average life expectancy in the industrialized counties would increase one year every year for the next twenty years. “People are going to do things they didn't get round to in their working lives. Current institutions are really not equipped at the moment to deal with such long lives,” said Dr. Tuljapurkar addressing the annual gathering of American Association for the Advancement of Science in St Louis, Missouri.



In his study, Dr. Tuljapurkar analyzed the past data and trends on ageing and population growth of four countries – USA, Sweden, India and China. Dr. Tuljapurkar said that the increased cost of living would put a huge burden on the economies of these countries. He emphasized the need for governments to plan ahead. “There are conflicts here between government analysts, who have recognized the problem, and the short-term nature of political decision-making,” said the Professor. “Politicians tend to want to roll this problem over until after their terms of office, and the more this gets rolled over the worse it is going to get.”



Dr. Tuljapurkar said that countries like the US will have to spend huge sums on social security if the current retirement age is continued. In order to strike a balance, countries will have to increase the retirement age to 85 years. People should be ready for many other changes in their lifestyle and the society. “It might be possible to go through two mortgages, for example, or even have 50-year or 75-year mortgages,” elucidated the researcher.


2/21/2006    From: http://www.whatistheword.com/story/Lifestyle_683.html


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Stay robust because you are going to live
longer than you ever thought!


http://longevityexperts.com


 

Tuesday, February 14, 2006

Life Extension - Anti-aging News

Life Extension - Longevity -
Anti-aging - News


The Longevity Experts:  
http://longevityexperts.com

Find out how to live until you are 110 or longer.


Life extension is an effort to increase life expectancy and lifespan, especially for humans. In life extension, aging is regarded as a combination of degenerative processes and genetic limitations, known respectively as random damage and aging clocks. These are the underlying factors of all aging, and in addition to causing the general decline in health which is commonly considered to be aging, they also play a major role in all degenerative diseases, such as cancer, heart disease, and arthritis, to name but a few. Random damage is combatted with anti-aging therapies and preventive health measures, while genetic aging clocks still determine the maximum lifespan of the human species, which hasn't changed in
millenia, and is between 110 to 120 years.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Life_extension


_____________________________


The Longevity Experts:
find out how to live until you are 110 or longer.  http://longevityexperts.com


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"I think it’s reasonable to suppose that one could oscillate between being biologically 20 and biologically 25 indefinitely."

-- Aubrey de Grey



Time may indeed be on your side. If you can just last another quarter century.



By then, people will start lives that could last 1,000 years or more. Our human genomes will be modified to include the genetic material of microorganisms that live in the soil, enabling us to break down the junk proteins that our cells amass over time and which they can’t digest on their own. People will have the option of looking and feeling the way they did at 20 for the rest of their lives, or opt for an older look if they get bored. Of course, everyone will be required to go in for age rejuvenation therapy once every decade or so, but that will be a small price to pay for near-immortality.



This may sound like science fiction, but Aubrey de Grey thinks this could be our reality in as little as 25 years. Other scientists caution that it is far from clear whether and for how long science can stall the inevitable.



De Grey, a Cambridge University researcher, heads the Strategies for Engineered Negligible Senescence
(SENS) project, in which he has defined seven causes of aging, all of which he thinks can be dealt with. (Senescence is scientific jargon for aging.)



De Grey also runs the Methuselah Mouse prize for breakthroughs in extended aging in mice. The purse of the M Prize, as it is called, recently grew beyond $1 million.


http://www.livescience.com/humanbiology/050411_aubrey_interview.html


 


The Longevity Experts:
find out how to live until you are 110 or longer.  http://longevityexperts.com


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Contribute to the Methuselah Mouse prize for breakthroughs in extended aging in
mice:


http://www.mprize.org/index.php?pagename=donate


 

Wednesday, February 08, 2006

Life expectancy is increasing - How to stay healty and vigorous for the next 20 years.

At their web site: http://www.longevityexperts.com That's Longevity
Experts
It is possible with today's available approaches and therapies to have
a complete life with no need for the "inevitable" morbidity of old age.

At least for the next 25 years.
At that time, new therapies will emerge to help us live another 20 or
so years and then as time goes on, more therapies will allow us to
continue this trend....living almost forever!
Advances in Genomics, and technology are moving forward at exponential
growth rates and we will soon see (we are already seeing fantastic
discoveries) advances that look like science fiction.
Staying healthy and vigorous during the next 20 years is a must.
A frail body has little chance of benefiting from the new treatments
and therapies, so what can you do now and for the next two decades?
Ray Kurzweil and Terry Grossman (authors of the 2005 best seller:
Fantastic Voyage or How to Live Long Enough to Live Forever) have put
together formulations of supplements that along with a proper diet and
exercise program will do just that....help extend vigorous, vital life.

Look what else is being discussed:
The official "Life Expectancy Chart" indicates - in 1900 Life
Expectancy was 48 years today it is 77 years
Life expectancy is increasing about 1/2 year every year based on the
2005 rate.
Life extension supplements can be found at this url:
http://longevityexperts.com/supplements.htm
Offering:

Total Care Daily Formula - a daily vitamin and mineral formulation

EPA/DHA Formula - with essential fatty acids (EFA's). These 2 EFAs
are alpha linolenic acid (ALA), an omega-3 fat, and linoleic acid, an
omega-6 fat

Immune Formula - With:
1. Green tea also helps kill many pathological bacteria and viruses.
2. Curcumin is an active ingredient of the Indian spice commonly known
as turmeric.
3. It can serve as a powerful stimulant of immune system function.
4. Curcumin has anti-inflammatory properties, has antioxidant
properties and has been shown to help prevent multiple types of cancer.
5. Cat's Claw can help modulate the immune system to treat allergies,
infections, and different types of cancer.
6. It increases energy and can be helpful in treating chronic fatigue.
7. Pine bark and grape seed contain a group of very beneficial
substances known as proanthocyanidins.
8. These compounds reduce allergies, inflammation and stimulate immune
system cells such as T lymphocytes and natural killer (NK) cells.
9. Proanthocyanidins are very potent antioxidants.

They also offer all of the below formulations, specially created.
Phosphatidylcholine
Cholesterol Therapy
Total Joint Care
Total Eye Care
Vitamin C
Vitamin E
Grape Seed Extract
Green Tea Extract
Evening Primrose Oil
Memory Support
Chocolate Meal Replacement
Value Packs
Water Ionizer & Saunas