What's the big deal about trying to
live longer? As you grow older (and the American population grows older alongside you) you
may want to postpone the inevitable. Few wish to hasten "the journey from which no
traveler returns." But as we approach that final bon voyage, chances are we desire
clear sailing-aging without disability and with a peaceful easy feeling.
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- How Do We Age
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- Science has long puzzled about what causes the wrinkles, pains and deterioration of aging. In the
search for causes, two basic theories have won over the most proponents: The first holds
that cells are programmed with biological clocks that predetermine how many times they can
reproduce before becoming non-functional. This theory has been largely formulated by the
researcher Leonard Hayflick, MD.
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- The second basic theory, introduced by Denham Harman,
MD, PhD, in the mid 1950s, holds that cells eventually break down due to attack by caustic
molecules called free radicals that cause oxidative stress.
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- Programmed Cell Theory
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- In the early '60s, Dr. Hayflick observed that human fibroblasts (cells from connective tissue) in the
laboratory refused to divide more than about 50 times. Dr. Hayflick also found that even
if he froze the fibroblasts after 20 divisions, they would remember that they only had 30
divisions left after thawing.
Fifty cell divisions have been called the
"Hayflick limit." Based on this research, scientists theorize that cells
maintain a genetic clock that winds down as old age ensues. Many researchers believe the
hypothalamus gland is the force behind our aging clocks, signaling the pituitary gland to
release hormones that cause aging.
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- Free Radical/Oxidative Stress
Theory
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- The other popular theory of aging pictures the human
body as a cellular battlefield where attackers called free
radicals damage our cells and tissues, making them age. In this scenario, a process
called oxidation is the chief aging villain.
On a microscopic level, oxidation generally entails
molecules or atoms losing electrons. (Gaining electrons is called reduction.) The
molecules or atoms that take these electrons are oxidizing agents. Free radicals are
substances that can exist with missing electrons, making them readily able to donate or
accept electrons and damage structures in cells. As such, they are highly reactive,
binding with and destroying important cellular compounds. Most of the free radicals in
your body are made during metabolic processes. More are added from the food you eat and
environmental pollution.
Most of these free radicals contain oxygen
molecules. As each cell makes energy in little structures called mitochondria, free
radicals result. These oxidant by-products can damage DNA, proteins and lipids (fats).
Consequently, toxic by-products of lipid peroxidation may cause cancer, inhibit enzyme
activity and produce mutations in genetic material that make you age faster.
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- DNA Repair Theory
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- Free radical damage to DNA
can cause cells to mutate or die. Your body makes enzymes that can repair this damage and
slow aging. But, over time, the amount of damage overwhelms the body's ability to fix
things. As cells grow older, their ability to patch up DNA diminishes and the rate of
damage proceeds faster than repair. The result: We age and eventually die.
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- What Can We Do
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- The free radical theory of aging suggests that taking antioxidants (compounds known to prevent free
radical damage) in our food or as supplements may slow aging. In the publication Age
(18 [51] 1995: 62), it was reported that "aging appears to be caused by free radicals
initiated by the mitochondria at an increasing rate with age. Superoxide and hydrogen
peroxide radicals formed by the mitochondria during normal metabolism are major risk
factors for disease and death after about the age of 28 in developed countries.
Antioxidants from the diet lower the production of free radicals without impairing
essential reactions to maintain body function."
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 | Antioxidant Protection |
- Common dietary antioxidants include: vitamins E
and C, carotenes, sulphur containing amino acids, co-enzyme Q10 and flavonoids (a group of plant compounds
or pigments responsible for the color in fruits and flowers). In addition, melatonin, DHEA and the amino acid
compound glutathione may also prove of benefit.
Glutathione along with the enzyme glutathione peroxidase are an essential part of free
radical "quenching." (Quenching means changing free radicals into benign
substances no longer capable of harm.)
Deficiencies may suggest a decreased capacity to
maintain detoxification and metabolic reactions in which glutathione plays a role, resulting in increased free
radical stress and/or lipid peroxidation. Drinking too many alcoholic beverages can result
in glutathione deficiency.
In a study in which 39 healthy men and 130 healthy
women between the ages of 20 and 94 were evaluated for glutathione levels, the older subjects had significantly
decreased levels (especially in the 60 to 79-year-old group). The authors felt that
physical health and longevity were closely related to glutathione levels (Jrnl Lab &
Clin Sci 120(5), Nov. 1992: 720-725).
Poor nutrition and/or deficiencies in essential
micronutrients and many prescription medications may contribute significantly to
detoxification capacity in an aged individual. All of these circumstances are common in
the elderly.
Eating a poor diet that contains too many processed
foods without many fruits and vegetables can compromise your body's ability to detoxify
pollutants, toxins and other harmful compounds. That can set off metabolic processes
capable of fomenting large increases in free radical stress that can accelerate aging.
Unfortunately, even in a country as prosperous as our own, nutrient deficiencies are
frequent, especially in older citizens.
 | Nutrition Deficiencies |
A study that looked at what elderly people consumed
compared their reported intake with the 1989 Recommended Dietary Amount (RDA) and 1980
RDA: One of four people consumed only two-thirds of the RDA for calories and 60% consumed less than two-thirds of the RDA for vitamin D. As for other
nutrients, 50% were found to have inadequate zinc levels (less than two-thirds of the
RDA), 31% lacked calcium, 27% were short of vitamin B6, 25% didn't get enough magnesium,
7% missed out on folate and 6% ate less than two-thirds of the requirement for vitamin C
(Nutrition Reviews (II), September 1995: S9-S15).
When researchers examine what everyone in the U.S.
eats, they find that only 9% of Americans consume the recommended five servings of fruits
and/or vegetables per day (Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Sept 1993).
A diet high in fruits and vegetables is naturally
high in antioxidant compounds and is believed to help you live longer. Unfortunately, if
you buy your produce in the supermarket, those fruits and vegetables may also be rich in
pesticide and herbicide residues (Consumer Reports, March 1999). Obviously, organic
produce lacks these residues. But, in any case, research continues to indicate that a diet
low in meats and animal fat and high in vegetables protects against antioxidant damage.
 | Longevity Diets |
- A six-year study of 182 people over age 70 in rural
Greek villages found that those following their traditional diet
of olive oil, whole grain breads, fresh fruits and vegetables and wine were less likely to
die during the study than those who consumed more red meat and saturated fat. The most
important foods in lowering the risk of early death included fruits, vegetables, legumes
(peas and beans), nuts, dairy products and cereals (BMJ 311, 1995: 1457-1460)
Another article in Epidemiology highlights the
evidence that eating a vegetarian diet increases your chances of living longer. Included
in this survey is a recent country-wide study of diet and health in China, showing that
the traditional near vegetarian diet of 10% to 15% of calories coming from dietary fat
reduced the chances of heart disease, diabetes and many types of cancers. (Epidemiology
3[5], 1992: 389-391).
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disease. One double blind study found that acetyl-L-carnitine slowed progression of
the disease in people under the age of sixty-five but paradoxically appeared to have the
opposite effect in older patients. Overall, however, most research indicates improvement
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- Staying Alive
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- Staying skinny
and limiting what you eat may also increase longevity. Scientific studies have previously
shown that being overweight can theoretically curtail your life, increasing the risk of
heart disease, diabetes and other life-shortening conditions. Animal studies have also
shown that restricting food can slow diseases associated with aging. Researchers believe
that cutting calories helps your immune system stay younger by reducing the formation of
substances that are called proinflammatory cytokines.
Specifically reducing your intake of fatty foods may
decrease your chance of coming down with autoimmune diseases. Researchers think omega-6
fatty acid vegetable oils (like corn oil) may increase free radical formation and decrease
levels of antioxidant enzyme messenger RNA in addition to other effects. (Nutrition
Reviews 53[4], 1995: S72-S79). Another study found that cutting calories lowers the levels
of oxidative stress and damage, retards age-associated changes and extends maximum life
span in mammals (Science 273, July 5, 1996: 59-63).
In yet another study, it was shown that caloric
restriction early in the life of lab animals increased their life span by a whopping 40%
(Australian Family Physician 23[7], July 1994: 1297-1305). Today's modern higher-fat,
low-fiber diet with substantial sugar consumption represents everything the longevity
researchers say you shouldn't eat.
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- Longevity and Exercise:
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- Exercise may
slow aging. When researchers looked at the exercise habits of 17,000 men, average age of
46, they found that those who took part in vigorous activity lived longer. Exercise can
improve both cardiac and metabolic functions within the body, while also decreasing heart
disease risk. Even modest exercise has been shown to improve cholesterol and blood sugar
levels (JAMA 273[15], April 19, 1995: 1179-1184).
In a study of how exercise affects your chances of
living longer, 9,773 men underwent preventive medicine examinations on two different
occasions. When the researchers looked at who lived longest, they found the highest death
rate was in men who were unfit during both physical exams.
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- The Treadmill of Life
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- The lowest death rate was in the men who worked out
and were in good shape. The researchers concluded that for each minute increase in how
long a man could keep treading on a treadmill (between the first and second exam) there
was a corresponding 7.9% decrease in the risk of dying. (JAMA 273 [14], April 12, 1995:
1093-1098).
Since exercise can increase oxygen consumption up to
10 times, boosting the rate of production of free radicals, researchers believe that older
individuals need more antioxidant nutrients to protect them. In a paper published in Aging
Clinical and Experimental Research (1997), researchers stated that if you regularly
exercise in your golden years, you should take more antioxidant vitamins to compensate for
this risk.
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- Longevity Supplementation
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- Melatonin is not often thought of as an antioxidant, but,
instead, as a sleep aid. Melatonin, however, is an effective and efficient free
radical scavenger and may help stave off the effects of aging.
Melatonin protects against what are called hydroxyl
free radicals. Research shows that older people's lack of melatonin may make them more
susceptible to oxidative stress. In one study, researchers felt that new therapies aimed
at stimulating melatonin synthesis may eventually lead to therapies for the prevention of
diseases related to premature aging (Aging and Clinical Experimental Research 7[5], 1995:
338-339). Melatonin was shown to provide antioxidant protection in several ways.
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- Toning Down Enzymes
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- Melatonin can ease the effects of enzymes that generate free radicals, enhance the production of
glutathione peroxidase (an antioxidant) and defuse the caustic action of free radicals
that contain hydroxyls.
In several studies, DHEA supplementation has been shown to
potentially revive immune function in older adults (Exp. Opin. Invest. Drugs 4[2], 1995:
147-154). In a study of 138 persons older than 85 years compared to 64 persons 20 to 40
years of age, scientists found that the younger people had four times as much DHEA in
their bodies.
The researchers believe that our bodies make less
and less DHEA as we get
older. The authors of this study raise the possibility that declining DHEA may be partly to blame for our
biological clocks running down (New York Academy of Sciences 1994: 543-552).
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- Vitamins E & C
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- A growing body of research also supports the benefits
of taking vitamins E and C to hold off the effects of getting old. Researchers writing in
Free Radicals and Aging (1992: 411-418) point out that as you get older your body is home
to more and more free radical reactions that may lead to degenerative diseases like heart
disease and arthritis. Research has found that in older people with exercise-induced
oxidative stress, taking vitamin E every day may significantly fight off free radicals.
(To investigate this effect, scientists measured waste products in urine that result from
free radical reactions.) Their conclusion: Dietary antioxidants such as vitamin E may be
beneficial.
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- Chronological Age Vs.
Biological Age
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- Vitamin C also looks to scientists like a good
anti-aging bet. Research in the Journal of Advancement in Medicine, (7[1], Spring 1994:
31-41) showed that folks consuming larger amounts of vitamin C were less likely to
experience clinical problems at all ages. Those taking in less than 100 mg of vitamin C
per day also suffered the most problems. In this research, individuals over 50 years of
age who daily consumed the largest amount of vitamin C were as healthy or healthier than
the 40 year olds who were taking the least amount of vitamin C.
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- Similar Relationship
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- A similar relationship appears to exist for vitamin E
and serum cholesterol levels. In a study of 360 physicians and their
spouses, researchers found that people in their 50s who consumed more vitamin E had lower
cholesterol than those in their 30s who were taking less. And the longevity beat goes on:
In a study evaluating environmental tobacco smoke and oxidative stress,
researchers divided 103 people into three groups. Researchers blew smoke at 37 of these
folks without protection while 30 of them got to breathe tobacco smoke but took
antioxidant supplementation. Another 36 of them merely had to read magazines from doctors'
offices. The results: After 60 days of supplementation the antioxidant folks had a 62%
reduction in evidence of oxidative damage to their DNA. Cholesterol levels dropped and so
did antioxidant enzyme activities. The researchers concluded
that taking antioxidants provided a modicum of protection against environmental poisons.
The range of antioxidant
nutrients used in this study included: beta-carotene, vitamin C, vitamin E, zinc and
selenium as well as copper (Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev 7, November 1998: 981-988).
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- Carotenoids
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- When you mention carotene or carotenoids, most people
think of the beta carotene that makes carrots orange. But more than 600 carotenoids are
present in colorful vegetables and many of these misunderstood substances are more potent
antioxidants than beta-carotene.
Carotenoids have been shown to destroy oxygen free
radicals in lipids (fats), help protect our cells from the sun's ultra violet radiation
and enhance our natural immune response (J. Nutr 119(1), Jan. 1989: 112-115).
Some evidence seems to show that how much
carotenoids you (and other mammals) have in your cells may be the predominant factor in
determining life span (Proc Natl Acad Sci 82 [4], 1985: 798-802). Therefore, a diet rich
in carotenoids (leafy green vegetables, carrots, yams, sweet potatoes, squash, citrus
fruits and tomatoes) along with supplementation seems to be just what the fountain of
youth ordered.
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- Flavonoids
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- Flavonoids, a group of antioxidant plant pigments,
seem to be able to protect specific organs. For instance, the flavonoids in milk thistle
(Silybum marianum) have been used for ages for liver problems. Bilberry has been found
protective for the eye and hawthorn for the heart and circulatory system.
Numerous studies have shown the many beneficial
effects of flavonoids with perhaps the best known being the ability of anthocyanidins in
wine and grape seed extract to help protect your blood vessels and capillaries from
oxidative damage (Phytotherapy 42, 1986: 11-14; Am J Clin Nutr 61, 1995: 549-54).
Flavonoids are found in vegetables and such fruits
as blackberries, blueberries, cherries and grapes. A diet rich in these foods helps ensure
an adequate intake of these important nutrient compounds.
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- Amino Acid Health
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- Methionine and cysteine are sulphur containing amino
acids (protein building blocks), both of which are essential in
maintaining levels of glutathione, a substance that plays a major
role in quelling free radicals. Studies have found that as we age, the level of these
important amino acids in our bodies decreases. (NEJM 312 [1], 1985: 159-68).
As it has been shown that adding cysteine
to the diet of test animals can increase their life expectancy considerably, researchers
believe these amino acids can help us live longer too.
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- Attitude & Behavior
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- Get more sleep! A recent study showed that men who
habitually napped were less likely to have a heart attack. The men in this research who
regularly napped for at least 30 minutes per day had about a 30% reduction in heart
problems while those who napped for a full hour had a 50% reduction compared to non
nappers. Naps of longer duration did not seem to increase the benefit.
In the same research, investigators also found that
spending time with a pet or merely contemplating nature could also improve cardiac health.
Sensuality, optimism and altruism also appeared to have health benefits (Family Practice
News, December 15, 1998: 14-15).
In another study, this one in American Psychologist,
researchers from the University of California found that people who are self-indulgent,
pampered and achieve by running roughshod over the competition are less likely to outlive
their healthy peers. Being egocentric, impulsive, undependable and tough-minded were
predictors of poor physical health and a shorter life. So loosen up and be nice to your
fellow humans! (U.C. Davis Magazine, Fall 1995: 14).
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- Longevity at Last
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- While no one has suggested that taking supplements,
eating vegetables or exercising can, as of yet, extend the human life span past the
generally recognized limit of about 120 years, researchers believe they can improve your
odds of living longer. An added benefit: By staying healthier, your old age won't only be
longer, it will be more enjoyable, too.
And, who knows, if you hang around long enough,
taking your nutrients and getting a comfortable amount of consistent exercise, while
meditating and refusing to succumb to stress, that magic bullet that will keep you alive
for centuries may be discovered. Some day a new antioxidant or other substance may finally
prove to provide the elusive fountain of youth. Stay tuned.
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