Bio age reversal

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Biological age of humans reversed by years in groundbreaking study

Biological age of humans reversed by years in groundbreaking study, scientists suggest
Small study is ‘not rock solid’ but could have huge consequences for ageing, experts say

Scientists might be able to reverse process of ageing, a new study suggests.

Volunteers who were given a cocktail of drugs for a year actually “aged backwards”, losing an average of 2.5 years from their biological ages, according to the new study. The research showed that the marks on their genomes that represent their “epigenetic clock”, as well as their immune systems, actually improved despite the passing of time.

The scientists involved in the study were shocked by the results.

“I’d expected to see slowing down of the clock, but not a reversal,” researcher Steve Horvath from the University of California, Los Angeles told Nature, which first reported the findings. “That felt kind of futuristic.”

In the study, participants were given a growth hormone and two diabetes medications. Scientists then monitored the test subjects’ epigenetic clocks, to understand the effect on how they aged.

The epigenetic clock is measured by the body’s epigenome – a record of chemical changes to an organism’s DNA. As people age, chemical modifications or tags are added to people’s DNA, and those change throughout their lives, so by looking at those tags a person’s biological age can be measured.

Researchers had actually intended to look at how the growth hormone would change the tissue in the thymus gland, which helps with the body’s immune functions and sits in the chest. It normally shrinks after puberty but they hoped to see whether it could be pushed to regrow, by giving participants the growth hormone.

It was only as a secondary consideration that researchers then checked how the drugs changed their epigenetic clocks. The study had finished when the analysis began.

Professor Horvath then looked at four different measures of the epigenetic clock to understand the differing ages of each of the patients. And he found that every one of them had reversed significantly – so significantly that he is optimistic about the results, despite the limited number of participants.

Scientists now hope to test the same effects with more people, through a controlled study, and with different age groups, ethnicities and with women.

The changes could still be seen in the blood of six participants who provided samples long after the study finished.

Some of the drugs used in the cocktail are already being researched as ways of fighting age-related diseases. But the discovery of the combined effect of the three of them could have major implications for the ways that a variety of different drugs are tested, scientists say.


 
LOL Paul, you have strange thoughts. :p
I told ya the other day, before entering my mind to please read the warning signs posted at the entrance, sign the waiver and please stay on the pathway.......exits are well marked for your safety.
 
What they don't know yet though is that it doesn't stop and in 10 years these test subjects are gonna be tadpoles again.......
ROFL!!! Omg Paul. I didn’t think of that. I was thinking we won’t age but will die of some drug related secondary ailment. You know if this works only the powerful and rich will have it. They can’t have us peons living too long and using up resources.
 
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Well,
This spells super good news for space exploration, doesn't it?
I mean, all the technology we have today, yes I am including photonic propulsion, for long distance travel through space takes a long time time to get to distant star systems.

But with this, we'll have all the time in the world!
 
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ROFL!!! Omg Paul. I didn’t think of that. I was thinking we won’t age but will die of some drug related secondary ailment. You know if this works only the powerful and rich will have it. They can’t have us peons living too long and using up resources.

Well,
If life gets this long, who says we'd have to stay peon all our lives?
 
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