activism and education to defeat aging
"We are on the verge of a revolution in medicine: understanding, treating, and ultimately preventing the causes of degenerative aging. But medical revolutions only happen if we all stand up in support of funding and research. We did it for cancer. We're doing it for Alzheimer's. We can do it for aging - and create an era of longer, healthier lives!"
Home Search Take Action! Articles Daily News Newsletter Fight Aging! Blog Press Room Resources About Contact
Hot Topics: Activism - Anti-Aging - Calorie Restriction - Cryonics - Negligible Senescence - Our Community - Research Prizes - Stem Cells - Transhumanism
Start Here!
Are you new to healthy life extension? Click here to find out more about living a longer, healthier life. More >>
Take Action!
You can help to make therapies for aging and life extension medicine a reality. Click here to participate in improving your future health and longevity!
LM Newsletter
Sign up for our weekly newsletter! It contains news, opinions, and commentary for people interested in healthy life extension: making use of diet, lifestyle choices, technology, and proven medical advances to live longer, healthier lives.

Requested Daily News Article

New York Times on CALERIE (Thursday October 08 2009)
A look at present human studies of the health benefits of calorie restriction at the New York Times: "As Americans become fatter and fatter - a study published in July revealed that obesity rates increased in 23 states last year and declined in none - a select group of men and women under the watchful care of medical professionals have spent the past few years becoming thinner and thinner. There are 132 of them, located in and around Boston, St. Louis and Baton Rouge, La. All are enrolled in a large clinical trial that is financed by the National Institutes of Health and known as Calerie, which stands for Comprehensive Assessment of Long-Term Effects of Reducing Intake of Energy. ... the Calerie project [is] that it is not meant to study weight loss or if one type of diet is better than another. Instead, Calerie is investigating how (and if) a spartan diet affects the aging process and its associated diseases. To the Calerie researchers, these are quite distinct. The aging process, which researchers sometimes call 'primary' or 'intrinsic' aging, refers to the damage that ordinarily accumulates in our cells as we grow older, a natural condition that seems to have limited the maximal lifespan of humans to 120 years. Diseases that accompany the aging process - often called 'secondary aging' - are those afflictions increasingly prevalent in the elderly, like cancer, diabetes and cardiovascular disease."
Link to original article  
Share |
 

Prior News

Later News

We help you stay up to date with the most interesting news in medicine, politics and the healthy life extension community. You can help us by contacting us when you see interesting items online. You can search past news postings through Google by using the form to the right.
Search Past News

   

Search