ideas and actions for longer, healthier lives
"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

Roots of Age-Related Hearing Loss (Monday November 23 2009)
From ScienceDaily: "Age-related hearing loss is a very common symptom of aging in humans, and also is universal among mammal species, and it's one of the earliest detectable sensory changes in aging. ... In mice, the new study shows that the damage starts with free radicals, which are key suspects in many harmful changes of aging. Free radicals trigger a process called apoptosis, or programmed cell death, by which damaged cells 'commit suicide.' Apoptosis is often beneficial, as it eliminates cells that may be destined for cancer. Before the study, it was already clear [that] aging was associated with a major loss of hair cells and ganglion cells, so it was plausible that programmed cell death was playing a role in hearing loss. We also thought that oxidative stress - the presence of free radicals - contributes to age-related hearing loss, so we put two and two together and showed that oxidative stress does indeed induce age-related hearing loss. ... [Researchers] found that the suicide program was operating in hair cells and spiral ganglion neurons, and that the suicide program relied on activity in a suicide gene called bak. Activity of the bak gene [is] required for the development of age-related hearing loss. The strongest evidence for this was the fact that a strain of mice that did not have the bak gene did not show the expected hearing loss at 15 months of age."
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