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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: restriction + heart + caloric  Related to the article below (Last Update: 12/1/2008)

 News results: Standard Version | Text Version | Image Version Results 1 - 10 of about 27 for restriction heart caloric. (0.32 seconds) 
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Is Resveratrol the Fountain of Youth?
Natural News.com, AZ - Nov 27, 2008
SIRT1 first drew attention as the primary gene signal involved with the longevity benefits of calorie restriction. A very simple explanation is that when ...
Oregon Scientific Delivers the Latest in Innovative Electronic ...
MarketWatch - Nov 25, 2008
Strap-free Heart Rate Monitor: The Strap-free Heart Rate Monitor offers the heart rate data an athlete needs without the restrictions of a chest belt. ...

Coolest Gadgets
Strap-Free Heart Rate Monitor
Coolest Gadgets, UK - Nov 27, 2008
In just seconds, your current heart rate is clearly displayed on the large LCD screen. A built-in stopwatch and calorie counter also help monitor your ...
Sugar Is The Devil
Big Island Weekly, HI - Nov 26, 2008
The site quotes that the AMA has recently concluded that HFCS "doesn't appear to contribute more to obesity than other caloric sweeteners," but they fail to ...
New Longevity Drugs Poised to Tackle Diseases of Aging
Wired News - Nov 21, 2008
Researchers verified that the cellular changes produced by caloric restriction ? a longevity-enhancing dietary intervention ? are enjoyed by mice taking ...
Lots to watch out for on a high-protein diet
Nashua Telegraph, NH - Nov 18, 2008
Kids are naive, presumed innocent to the menace of calorie restriction, body hatred and the latest fad diet. While some women select a new handbag each ...
How Much Exercise Is Enough?
Stop Aging Now, DC - Nov 13, 2008
By Maggie Spilner Doctors and researchers agree that it?s essential to combine exercise with calorie restriction in order to lose weight and keep it off in ...
Iris Shai and Meir J Stampfer
Am J Clin Nutr (subscription), CA - Nov 7, 2008
For example, participants who initially lost 22 kg in a very-low-calorie-diet program (3) had a net loss of 3.3 kg after 3 y of follow-up; only 12% of the ...
New diet: Eat every other day
KPNX-12, AZ - Nov 7, 2008
"It seems that something about eating very low calorie intake for a certain part of our time and it's more than just overnight fasting, stimulates this ...

ChattahBox
Obesity-fighting drug developed
The Press Association - Nov 4, 2008
A similar response occurs with calorie restriction, which alters metabolism and causes the body to burn fat. Prof Auwerx said: "These results show that new ...
Red wine pills to fight obesity, diabetes Times of India
all 96 news articles »
Source: Google News


 

Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: appears + aging + restriction  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/7/2008)


New Haven Advocate
Want to Live Forever?
New Haven Advocate, CT -
He has been researching life-extension methods, most notably the radically limited diet known as caloric restriction. Scarlato believes in the science ...
Anti-Aging Supplements May Have Same Benefits as Caloric ...
MarketWatch - Jul 9, 2008
Sirtris, whose drug candidates focus on those that mimic the health benefits of caloric restriction without requiring a change in eating habits, ...

Billings Outpost
Calendar of events
Billings Outpost, MT -
Camp stoves fueled solely by liquid petroleum or LPG fuels that can be turned on and off are exempted from the restriction. Such devices can only be used in ...
Always More Complex Than First Appears
Methuselah Foundation, DC - Jul 14, 2008
The same is true of research into the mechanisms of calorie restriction, such as the importance of enhanced autophagy to health benefits conferred by the ...
Should The FAA Revisit The Definitions Of LSA?
Aero-News Network, FL - Aug 5, 2008
The agency did not foresee the desire to downgrade to sport pilot aircraft to be able to have a less-restrictive medical policy, especially with aging ...
Live Longer: The One Anti-Aging Trick That Works
LiveScience.com, NY - Jul 9, 2008
Scientists aren't sure exactly why calorie restriction slows aging. But they're on the verge of a firm understanding. In a nutshell, it is thought to lower ...
The drive for immortality
National Post, Canada - Jul 11, 2008
Caloric Restriction lab tests have already worked on mice and primates, extending life about 30% longer than the species is typically able to live. ...

CTV.ca
Lessons on longevity from world's longest-living
CTV.ca, Canada - Jul 13, 2008
Partially funded by the National Institute on Aging, explorer Dan Buettner and a team of researchers identified four geographic regions where small groups ...
Gen Y workers need sexier tech
NEWS.com.au, Australia - Aug 3, 2008
In Freeman?s experience, smaller businesses tend to disappoint Gen Y with ageing equipment, or by placing restrictions on internet use, such as access to ...
Compound in red wine fights ravages of age
Press & Sun-Bulletin, NY - Jul 9, 2008
The authors noted that prior research has touted the healthy benefits associated with daily caloric restriction of between 30 percent and 50 percent below ...
Source: Google News

Gene Expression Profile of Aging and Its Retardation by Caloric Restriction -
CK Lee, RG Klopp, R Weindruch, TA Prolla - Science, 1999 - sciencemag.org
... of aging-related pathology in humans (6), but the only intervention that appears
to slow the intrinsic rate of aging is caloric restriction (CR) (7). Most ...

Calorie Restriction, Aging, and Cancer Prevention: Mechanisms of Action and Applicability to Humans* -
SD Hursting, JA Lavigne, D Berrigan, SN Perkins, … - Annual Reviews in Medicine, 2003 - Annual Reviews
... of dietary compositions, feeding strategies, and levels of restriction, appears
to be ... these mechanisms will reveal important clues about the biology of aging. ...

The Retardation of Aging in Mice by Dietary Restriction: Longevity, Cancer, Immunity and Lifetime … -
R Weindruch, RL Walford, S Fligiel, D Guthrie - Journal of Nutrition, 1986 - Am Soc Nutrition
... 9). The extension of maximum life span by weaning-initiated restriction is more ... used
in an attempt to retard aging in rodents ... The effect appears to depend on a ...

An intervention resembling caloric restriction prolongs life span and retards aging in yeast -
JC Jiang, E Jaruga, MV Repnevskaya, SM Jazwinski - The FASEB Journal, 2000 - FASEB
... 5). It appears that a reduction in blood glucose levels is an ... It suggests that a
key component of the anti-aging effect of caloric restriction in mammals ...

[CITATION] Mechanisms of Caloric Restriction Affecting Aging and Disease a -
A TURTURRO, K BLANK, D MURASKO, R HART - Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1994 - Blackwell Synergy
... major diseases, and this may be why CR slows ?aging rate? so ... be affected at any time
in the life span, and appear to be modifiable by restriction at any ...

Evolution of ageing -
TBL Kirkwood - Mechanisms of Ageing and Development, 2002 - Elsevier
... The result appears to have been a compromise ... kind of plasticity in specification
of ageing processes that ... of the life-extension effects of dietary restriction. ...

Sirtuin activators mimic caloric restriction and delay ageing in metazoans -
JG Wood, B Rogina, S Lavu, K Howitz, SL Helfand, M … - Nature, 2004 - palgrave-journals.com
... and whose somatic and reproductive ageing are independent ... least for the fly, this
action appears to function through a pathway related to caloric restriction. ...

Genomic profiling of short-and long-term caloric restriction effects in the liver of aging mice -
SX Cao, JM Dhahbi, PL Mote, SR Spindler - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2001 - National Acad Sciences
... Thus, the amelioration of physiological stress appears to be a ... specific patterns
of gene regulation by aging and CR ... CR, caloric restriction; LT-CR, long-term CR ...

Oxidative damage and mitochondrial decay in aging -
MK Shigenaga, TM Hagen, BN Ames - Proc Natl Acad Sci US A, 1994 - pubmedcentral.nih.gov
... Acetyl-L-carnitine, a high-energy mitochondrial substrate, appears to reverse many
age-associated ... Does food restriction retard aging by reducing the ...

The Free Radical Theory of Aging -
D Harman - Antioxidants and Redox Signaling, 2003 - liebertonline.com
... 5 million Man appears. Page 4. ... Gene expression profile of aging and its retardation
by caloric restriction. Science 285: 1390?1393, 1999. 41. ...

Source: Google Scholar
 
 

Caloric restriction appears to prevent primary aging in the heart

Ultrasound examinations showed that the hearts of people on caloric restriction appeared more elastic than those of age- and gender-matched control subjects. Their hearts were able to relax between beats in a way similar to the hearts in younger people.

" This is the first study to demonstrate that long-term calorie restriction with optimal nutrition has cardiac-specific effects that ameliorate age-associated declines in heart function," says principal investigator Luigi Fontana, at Washington University in St. Louis and an investigator at the Istituto Superiore di Sanita, Rome, Italy.

Research on mice and rats has shown that stringent and consistent caloric restriction increases the animals' maximum lifespan by about 30 percent and protects them against atherosclerosis and cancer, but human study has been difficult because the caloric restriction lifestyle requires a strict diet regimen, both to keep the total number of calories low and to insure that people consume the proper balance of nutrients.

The researchers studied 25 calorie-restricted individuals who had voluntarily been consuming a very low-calorie diet for an average of six years ( consuming about 1,400 to 2,000 calories per day ). They ranged in age from 41 to 65.
The study compared their heart function to 25 age- and gender-matched individuals who ate a typical Western diet ( about 2,000 to 3,000 calories per day ).

In Western countries, heart attacks and strokes are responsible for about 40 percent of all deaths. Cancer causes about another 30 percent. According to Fontana, deaths in both groups can be attributed to what scientists call secondary aging. That's the term used to characterize health problems that result from conditions such as high cholesterol, diabetes, high blood pressure and other preventable conditions that contribute to premature death. A healthy diet and regular exercise can reduce risks from secondary aging. But this study suggests calorie restriction with optimal nutrition can do even more.

Normal aging causes a decline in cardiac performance.

 
" This decline in diastolic function is a marker of primary aging," Fontana says. " Diastolic function declines in most people as they get older, but in this study we found that diastolic function in calorie-restricted people resembled diastolic function in individuals about 15 years younger." It may even be possible that eating a very low-calorie, nutrient dense diet reverses declines in diastolic function. People in the study averaged only six years on the diet, but their hearts looked 15 years younger. So Fontana says it's possible that the diet has a rejuvenating effect.

He notes that most study subjects had parents, grandparents or siblings who suffered heart attacks or strokes, making it unlikely that their genetic makeup is a contributor to the unusual healthiness of their hearts. In the case of one subject, both parents and younger brother currently take medication for high blood pressure and high cholesterol. Some subjects actually took medicine for high blood pressure themselves before they started on caloric restriction.

Fontana and colleagues previously have found that people on the very low-calorie diet have low blood levels of cholesterol and triglycerides, blood pressure scores equivalent to those of much younger individuals, a lower risk of developing diabetes and reduced body fat. These markers indicate less secondary aging.

In this study, Fontana's team found that markers of inflammation indicative of primary aging were much lower in the caloric restriction group. Their serum levels of a pro-inflammatory molecule called tumor necrosis factor-alpha ( TNFa ) were significantly lower. They also had less C-reactive protein ( CRP ).

In addition, they had lower amounts of a substance called transforming growth factor-beta ( TGFb ), a molecule that both helps reverse inflammation and activates cells called fibroblasts to produce collagen. If, for example, you cut yourself, your body will work to repair the damage by activating fibroblasts to produce collagen and make scar tissue to heal the wound.

Fontana says the low levels of TNFa, CRP and TGFb, combined with evidence of "younger" hearts in people on caloric restriction, has led his research team to hypothesize that inflammation may play a key role in the aging process.

" Our hypothesis is that low-grade, chronic inflammation is mediating primary aging," he says. "It's not the only factor, of course -- aging is a complex process. But we found less inflammation in these people -- less TNFa, C-reactive protein and TGFb -- as well as a more flexible ventricle in their hearts."

Overweight and obese people also tend to have higher levels of inflammation than lean people. In this study, those on caloric restriction had about 7 percent total body fat. The control group had about 25 percent body fat.

“ It's very clear from these studies that caloric restriction has a powerful, protective effect against diseases associated with aging," says co-investigator John O. Holloszy." We don't know how long each individual will end up living, but they certainly have a longer life expectancy than average because they're most likely not going to die from a heart attack, stroke or diabetes. And if, in fact, their hearts are aging more slowly, it's conceivable they'll live for a very long time."

Members of the Caloric Restriction Optimal Nutrition Society try to consume between 10 and 25 percent fewer calories than average Americans while still maintaining proper nutrition. Fontana says that's a very important point. People on this type of diet don't simply consume less food. " Caloric restriction does not mean eating half a hamburger and half a pack of French fries and drinking half of a sugary beverage," he says. " These people have very good nutrition. They eliminate calories by eating nutrient-dense foods."

He says caloric restriction tends to resemble a traditional Mediterranean diet, which includes a wide variety of vegetables, olive oil, beans, whole grains, fish and fruit. The diet avoids refined and processed foods, soft drinks, desserts, white bread and other sources of so-called "empty" calories.

But Fontana and Holloszy don't believe that caloric restriction is for everyone. Instead, they recommend a moderate reduction in calories, combined with moderate, regular exercise.

" If you change the quality of your diet by increasing the servings of nutrient-dense food and reducing -- actually, it would be better to slowly eliminate -- all of the servings of 'empty' calorie foods, you improve your chances of living a healthier and longer life," Fontana says.

Source: Washington University School of Medicine, 2006
 
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