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Science of Aging

Overview

Why do we age and die? Aging, or senescence as it is sometimes called, is an inevitable progressive deterioration of physiological function with increasing age, demographically characterized by an age-dependent increase in mortality and decline of fecundity (capacity to produce an abundance of offspring). Or so you would think.

The truth is that a
ging is not universal. Some animals and many plants have escaped from aging entirely. Many more pass through long periods of their lives without aging. Some
 plants and animals die when they are done reproducing as evolutionary theory predicts; but among those that long outlive their fertility, there are some that don’t tend to their children or grandchildren. 

​
A few animals and many plants don’t age at all, but grow larger and stronger and more fertile through their entire lifespans. Some even have been observed to regress from mature states, and start life anew as larvae, with a full life expectancy ahead of them.

​The lingering question: can aging be reversed in humans?



The Latest Research    Last update  11.2.20
  • ​A Pill to Slow the Aging Process?, Kaiser
  • An Anti-Aging Protein May Rejuvenate Immune Cells, SciBlog
  • Bacteria in Gut May Alter Aging Process, MedPress
  • ​Blood Cells Could Hold Master Clock Behind Aging, MedX
  • Breakdown of Gene Coordination and Aging, PHYS
  • Can Aging Be Reversed, Medical News Today
  • Cleaning Out Zombie Cells to Live Longer, Healthier Life, NYPost
  • ​Could This Enzyme Slow Aging, Medical News Today
  • ​Delaying Aging Through Autophagy, SciBlog
  • Effect of Telomeres on Aging & Cancer, Learn.Genetics
  • Epigenetic Clocks (Horvath, Hannum), Wikipedia
  • Genetics and Lifespan, SciBlog
  • Geroscience, BostonGlobe
  • Mitochondrial Dysfunction (Disease), UMDF
  • ​New Anti-Aging Trial to Begin Using Blood Plasma, SciBlog
  • New Insight into Aging, Learning and Brain Plasticity, SciBlog
  • Our Bodies Age in Three Distinct Shifts, ScienceAlert
  • ​Preserving Your Brain to Bring You Back in the Future, STAT
  • Promising Treatment Options in Anti-Aging Science, SciBlog
  • ​Reversing Aging at the Mitochondrial Level, SciBlog
  • Senolytics, Removing Aged Cells for Rejunvination, STAT
  • Seven Surprising Things That Help You Live Longer, NextAve
  • Skin Serums to Reverse Aging, HarvardMed
  • ​Somatic Mutations (DNA) and Aging, MBG
  • ​Tartigades, the Immortal Animal, AgingFree
  • The Varieties of Aging in Nature, SciBlog
  • The Evolution of Aging, Nature.com
  • The Role  of Senescent Cells in Aging, NIH
  • The Search For Anti-Aging Interventions, NCBI
  • ​To Stay Young, Kill Zombie Cells, Scientific American
  • What Worms Can Tell Us About Aging, SciBlog​




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  • Home
    • Caring for Elderly Parent
    • Eating & Exercise
    • Emerging Technology & Concepts >
      • End of Life Options/Issues/Grieving >
        • VSED Primer
    • Entrepreneurship
    • Health Challenges
    • History of Aging >
      • Ancient Egypt, India, China
      • Before 1500
      • 1500s & 1600s
      • 1700s & 1800s
      • 1900s & 2000s
      • Early New England (1600s)
      • Quest To Look Young
      • Books
    • Housing Options & Aging in Place Guide
    • Insurance, Security, Fraud
    • Intergenerational Programs
    • LGBT
    • Positive/Successful Aging
    • Retirement/Estate Planning
    • Science of Aging
    • Support Resources
    • Travel
  • About
  • Contact