by Martin Ettington | Dec 31, 2013 | Aging, Anti-Aging, Food, Healthy Aging, Longevity, Longevity Article, Longevity Q&A, Science Research
Posted in: Anti-Aging and the Brain, Anti-Aging Food by Marni Andrews An estimated five million Americans are living with Alzheimer’s disease or a related form of dementia, according to 2013 statistics. One in every three seniors will die with Alzheimer’s or another...
by Martin Ettington | Dec 28, 2013 | Anti-Aging, antioxidants, Diet, Healthy Aging, Longevity, Longevity & Health, Longevity Article, Nutrition
In a study published November 20, 2013 in the New England Journal of Medicine, researchers looked at the association of nut consumption with total and cause-specific mortality among 76,464 women in the Nurses’ Health Study and 42,498 men in the Health...
by Martin Ettington | Dec 28, 2013 | Healthy Aging |
Antioxidant drug knocks down multiple sclerosis-like disease in mice Researchers have discovered that an antioxidant designed more than a dozen years ago to fight damage within human cells significantly helps symptoms in mice that have a multiple sclerosis-like...
by Martin Ettington | Dec 27, 2013 | Aging, Anti-Aging, Cells, Healthy Aging, Longevity, Longevity Article, Longevity Q&A, Rejuvination, Science Research
Humans have long pursued the fountain of youth, and certainly there have been extraordinary breakthroughs in years past. But there’s new evidence suggesting we may be drinking from that fountain sooner rather than later. Researchers announced this past week that...
by Martin Ettington | Dec 26, 2013 | Aging, Anti-Aging, Healthy Aging, Herbalism, Longevity, Longevity & Health, Longevity Article, Longevity Q&A, Science Research
Note: The Personal Longevity Program’s management is not a fan of illegal drugs, but we are open minded to new types of medical treatments which is why we are posting this article…. Posted in: Anti-Aging Advice, Anti-Aging and the Brain by Soriyya Bawa Not...
by Martin Ettington | Dec 25, 2013 | Aging, Anti-Aging, Cells, Genetics, Longevity, Longevity & Health, Longevity Article, Longevity Q&A, Science Research
Dec. 16, 2013 — Senescent cells, which are metabolically active but no longer capable of dividing, contribute to aging, and senescence is a key mechanism for preventing the spread of cancer cells. A study in The Journal of Cell Biology identifies a common, early...
by Martin Ettington | Dec 24, 2013 | Aging, Genetics, Healthy Aging, Longevity, Longevity & Health, Longevity Article, Longevity Q&A, Science Research
Dec. 12, 2013 — What are the limits to longevity? New research in simple animals suggests that combining mutants can lead to radical lifespan extension. Scientists at the Buck Institute combined mutations in two pathways well-known for lifespan extension and report a...
by Martin Ettington | Dec 23, 2013 | Aging, Diet, Food, Healthy Aging, Lifestyle, Longevity, Longevity & Health, Longevity Article, Science Research
Posted in: Anti-Aging and the Body, Anti-Aging Food by Soriyya Bawa It’s no secret that here in North America, consumers’ anti-aging diets have become overpowered by three particular ingredients, no matter what type of food they’re consuming for breakfast, lunch, or...
by Martin Ettington | Dec 23, 2013 | Healthy Aging |
Where Alzheimer's starts and how it spreads Using high-resolution fMRI imaging in patients with Alzheimer’s disease and in mouse models of the disease, researchers have clarified three fundamental issues about Alzheimer’s: where it starts, why it...
by Martin Ettington | Dec 22, 2013 | Anti-Aging, Healthy Aging, Longevity, Longevity & Health, Longevity Article, Longevity Q&A, Science Research
Naturally Produced Compound Rewinds Aspects of Age-Related Demise in Mice The essence of this finding is a series of molecular events that enable communication inside cells between the nucleus and mitochondria. As communication breaks down, aging accelerates. By...
by Martin Ettington | Dec 21, 2013 | Aging, Definitions, Healthy Aging, Longevity, Longevity & Health, Longevity Article, Longevity Q&A, Science Research
Dec. 12, 2013 — A groundbreaking study published in the journal Population and Development Review by IIASA population researchers Warren Sanderson and Sergei Scherbov reorients the way demographers study population aging, providing a new toolbox of methodologies for...
by Martin Ettington | Dec 21, 2013 | Healthy Aging |
Living at home with dementia Most people with dementia who live at home have multiple unmet health and welfare needs, any number of which could jeopardize their ability to remain home for as long as they desire, new research suggests.