Thursday, May 23, 2024
ADVT 
Health & Fitness

Key to healthy ageing hidden in balanced diet

Darpan News Desk IANS, 24 Jul, 2014 08:37 AM
  • Key to healthy ageing hidden in balanced diet
As scientists across the world are searching for some clues on how to achieve healthy ageing, a trio of ageing experts has called for moving forward with strategies that have been shown to delay ageing in animals.
 
In addition to promoting a healthy diet and regular exercise, these strategies include slowing the metabolic and molecular causes of human ageing, such as the incremental accumulation of cellular damage that occurs over time.
 
By treating the metabolic and molecular causes of human ageing, it may be possible to help people stay healthy in their 70s and 80s, researchers said in a commentary published in the journal Nature.
 
"You do not have to be a mathematician or an economist to understand that our current healthcare approach is not sustainable," said first author Luigi Fontana, a professor of medicine and nutrition at Washington University and Brescia University.
 
The diseases of old age - such as heart failure, diabetes, arthritis, cancer and Alzheimer's disease - tend to come as a package.
 
More than 70 percent of people over 65 years of age have two or more chronic diseases.
 
"We propose using lifestyle interventions - such as a personalised healthy diet and exercise programme - to down-regulate ageing pathways so the patient avoids heart failure in the first place," Fontana emphasised.
 
Fontana has found that people who eat significantly fewer calories, while still getting optimal nutrition, have "younger", more flexible hearts.
 
They also have significantly lower blood pressure, much less inflammation in their bodies and their skeletal muscles function in ways similar to muscles in people who are significantly younger.
 
"Healthy diets and calorie restriction are known to help animals live up to 50 percent longer," he maintained.
 
More efforts should be directed to promoting interventions that have the potential to prevent multiple chronic diseases and extend healthy lifespans, researchers emphasised.

MORE Health & Fitness ARTICLES

Fitness: Freshman 15

Fitness: Freshman 15
The freshman 15 is the name given to the weight that is put on by individuals during the first year of their college or university studies

Fitness: Freshman 15

Battling the Baby Blues

Battling the Baby Blues
Postpartum depression affects women, and sometimes men, in many different ways and can begin anytime within the first two months after giving birth

Battling the Baby Blues

GMO's – The Way of the Future?

GMO's – The Way of the Future?
Genetically Modified Organism’s (GMO’s) are an example of that awesome power. We can take the DNA from one organism and place it into another

GMO's – The Way of the Future?

South Asian Health Centre Officially Opens to Address Health Needs of Surrey Residents

South Asian Health Centre Officially Opens to Address Health Needs of Surrey Residents
The South Asian Health Centre will work with local physicians, health authority services, the community and families to help support people to manage their chronic conditions and improve their overall health

South Asian Health Centre Officially Opens to Address Health Needs of Surrey Residents

BC Scientists Develop Lifesaving Diagnostic Tool for Lung Cancer Patients

BC Scientists Develop Lifesaving Diagnostic Tool for Lung Cancer Patients
This study, being led by the Terry Fox Research Institute (TFRI), has developed software which can accurately categorize lung cancer lesions as being malignant or benign during preliminary CT scans

BC Scientists Develop Lifesaving Diagnostic Tool for Lung Cancer Patients

FOOD FADS: Is it Hype or is it Healthy?

FOOD FADS: Is it Hype or is it Healthy?
Making food to satisfy the masses seems to be getting harder these days. Between detoxes and diets, going gluten-free and becoming vegan, knowing what to serve to your dinner guests can be a guessing game

FOOD FADS: Is it Hype or is it Healthy?