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TELOMERES AND AGING
Wrinkles, fatigue, grey hair? US heart surgeon shares 5 common habits that make you age faster than you thinkChasing quick fixes for aging overlooks fundamental habits. Dr. Jeremy London highlights five unconscious behaviors that accelerate aging: ...
High-cocoa dark chocolate with theobromine may help slow aging, support healthy cells, and promote biological youthDark chocolate with high cocoa has a chemical called theobromine that may help slow aging and keep cells healthy. Studies show it can make ...
Drinking 3–4 cups of coffee a day may help you live longer, study findsA new study links daily coffee drinking to longer life. Researchers found that moderate coffee intake may slow aging at the cell level. Dri...
Scientists say coffee could help you live longer — here’s the daily amount that worksNew research published in BMJ Mental Health indicates that drinking three to four cups of coffee per day may help extend lifespan as much a...
Could your daily coffee habit be keeping your cells younger? Study finds moderate intake may slow biological agingModerate coffee consumption, specifically 3-4 cups daily, may help slow biological aging in individuals with severe mental health condition...
Apollo neurologist links drinking coffee to slower ageing benefits, but he has a warningA recent study suggests moderate coffee consumption may slow biological aging in people with mental disorders. Drinking three to four cups ...
Forget costly longevity supplements: This everyday vitamin may hold the secret to slowing aging, new research revealsA new clinical trial suggests that vitamin D3 may slow biological aging by protecting telomeres, the chromosome caps linked to longevity. O...
How to stay young at DNA level? Harvard research finds surprising link between daily supplement and longevityA Harvard-affiliated study suggests that daily vitamin D supplementation may help slow biological aging by protecting DNA and preserving te...
Shocking study: This everyday exercise can make you 9 years younger, naturallyA recent Brigham Young University study reveals that high-impact exercise can significantly slow down cellular aging. Adults engaging in re...
Want to grow younger? Harvard-backed study reveals a surprising vitamin that may reverse aging at the cellular levelResearchers at Brigham and Women’s Hospital discovered that vitamin D supplements may reverse signs of aging at the cellular level. Partici...
Learning to become more stress-resilient can help you stay youthfulSmoking, excess alcohol consumption, being overweight and stress are all associated with telomere loss.
- Exposure to famine may curtail lifespan of male descendants
New York, Dec 6 (IANS) Famine may have a lasting impact on the male descendants of its victims, suggests new research focused on survivors ...
Young and restless? Impatient women age fasterFor young women seeking longevity and youth, a little patience may help you live longer.
Having more kids may slow down ageing: StudyResearchers at Simon Fraser University in Canada found that women who give birth to more surviving children exhibited longer telomeres.
Cellular signal tells when a woman is about to go into labourResearchers found a cellular signal in the amniotic fluid around the foetus that builds up when a pregnant woman is about to go into labour.
Scientists crack secret of centenariansScientists have cracked the secret of why some people live a healthy and physically independent life over the age of 100.
Extending telomeres reverses ageing in human skin cells: studyThe RNA used in this experiment contained the coding sequence for TERT, the active component of a naturally occurring enzyme called telomer...
New compound that kills cancer cells foundA small new molecule that can kill cancer cells and shrink tumour growth by targeting the 'biological clock' has been discovered.
Sugary drinks may age you fasterSoda consumption might promote disease independently from its role in obesity, according to researchers from the University of California, ...
- Poor age faster than the rich
People with lower socio-economic status appear to age faster than their better-off counterparts, British researchers said on Thursday.