Maintaining Health and Longevity: Understanding Aging and Disease Prevention

Circadian rhythm 2:12 0
“neurogenesis is the process by which neural stem cells generate new neurons and this is essential for maintaining cognitive capacity and compensating for neural damage and loss. However, neurogenesis declines with age and this ultimately contributes to cognitive deficits.”

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Circadian rhythm 2:19 0
“Circadian rhythm, our internal biological clock, is emerging as one of the key regulators of neurogenesis. Disruptions in circadian rhythm exacerbate neurogenesis decline and this is often observed in pathological brain aging disorders like Alzheimer's disease.”

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Circadian rhythm 2:59 0
“Circadian rhythm regulates critical biological processes in the body, ensuring that activities align with the active phase during the day and the rest phase at night.”

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Circadian rhythm 3:44 0
“This finely tuned system deteriorates with age and this leads to several changes in biological processes.”

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Genetics 11:57 0
“this is a simplified diagram of a small subset of what we know about how the body works and um any of you who have ever written software will immediately understand that this is the Ultimate Nightmare of uncommented spaghetti code”

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Disease prevention 11:25 0
“a century or so ago a few people started to think well maybe we could prevent all of this by being more preventative about everything by somehow addressing the things that happen that eventually cause all of these terrible problems”

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Disease prevention 11:46 0
“it turns out that everything that goes on early in life is also really really really really really complicated”

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Metabolic health 14:49 0
“we want to separate Metabolism from pathology we want to allow people to carry on being alive in other words performing metabolism without exhibiting pathology”

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Disease prevention 15:08 0
“we could separate Metabolism from pathology by separating damage from pathology but that hasn't really worked because it's too complicated and because anyway the damage is continuing to accumulate”

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Metabolic health 15:29 0
“or we could try to separate Metabolism from pathology by separating Metabolism from damage but again the complexity is just intractable”

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Disease prevention 15:55 0
“simply repairing the damage you know that would allow us to separate those two processes from each other without actually interfering in either of the processes”

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Disease prevention 17:43 0
“in the case of for example cell loss where cells are dying and not being automatically replaced by cell division we just heard a moment ago about neurogenesis of course we know that neurogenesis doesn't happen in the human brain um in most places”

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Disease prevention 18:00 0
“in principle we can do neurogenesis medically in other words we can transplant stem cells of the appropriate type that will divide and differentiate to replace the cells that the brain is not replacing on its own”

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Nutrition 23:49 0
“the first one we use rra a mice in is of course not a damage repair intervention it's a calor restriction mimetic”

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Genetics 24:30 0
“we used used um blood stem cells hematitic stem cells from Young mice heterochronic stem cell blood marrow transplant essentially”

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Substances 24:42 0
“we use Tas gene therapy um and we use atic notic LAX um uh modified in such such a way as to prevent it from being toxic to platelets which it naturally is”

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Disease prevention 26:08 0
“we're also measuring all manner of different aspects of Health”

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Disease prevention 29:32 0
“we did not do uh testing and needed our coloring of M um at pre-ordained chronological age rather what we did was we did it at pre-ordained points in the survival curve for each group treated individually”

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Disease prevention 30:24 0
“the thick lines the red line and the blue line show you the um controls which got nothing and the mice that got everything and you know it's it's very um much as we would have hoped the M got everything did really did lot better than the mice that didn't”

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Disease prevention 31:21 0
“we have definitely shown additivity of the interventions and that is what we were hoping for”

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Exercise 34:10 0
“the same applies for exercise we didn't have running wheels for these mice we're going to give them those this time”

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Exercise 44:07 0
“I suspect it'll be okay but inhibiting T might impair the response to exercise.”

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Exercise 44:40 0
“I would certainly be very interested in any information there is on the interaction between Romy and exercise in other people's hands which might influence how if at all we include exercise in the next studies.”

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Body weight 46:33 0
“One of the simple things we found is when things cancel each other out there's often a effect on weight gain in the mice so the M gain mice gain extra weight and that reduces their lifespan.”

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Disease prevention 50:57 0
“what we're seeing is a lot of these drugs that treat early stage risk factors are having overall effects on mortality that can't entirely be explained by the disease they were designed to treat”

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Disease prevention 51:21 0
“we might have been treating aging for a long time already, the problem is that the treatments we're using are not optimized to aging”

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Disease prevention 53:13 0
“we're learning along the way but I do think that that's the time to effective interventions is not that far maybe not to the level that you would like to achieve but in terms of modest interventions I think we're maybe even there already if we are careful about analyzing data”

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Disease prevention 57:35 0
“geroprotective interventions what's disentangling is modern medicine because we're keeping people alive longer by treating outcomes or diseases uh and not necessarily improving Health span as much so we're extending the period of Decline and morbidity by the medicine we're doing now.”

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Nutrition 1:02:03 0
“diet wasn't mentioned other than CR but we know it's important how can you take it into account well actually you know what actually isn't all that importance um I mean when I say that what I'm talking about here of course is the difference between an average average diet and a good diet it's certainly straightforward to shorten one's life whether one is a mass or a human by having a really bad diet no question about that but the question that matters is can you whether you're a m or a human can you do significantly better by changes to your diet or anything else in your lifestyle for that matter relative to Simply living the way your mother told you to and the answer is no the answer is you can make hardly any difference.”

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Exercise 1:05:27 0
“I'm not crazy about getting up at 6:00 in the morning and going to the Y to be there at 8: for a tough class but I know it has fantastic benefits.”

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Exercise 1:05:46 0
“Activity is very important at any age. It's one of the best ways that you can stay healthy and independent.”

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Exercise 1:06:33 0
“Exercise is beneficial for so many things not just for preventing Falls but also for keeping your cardiovascular system strong decreasing your risk of things like diabetes and heart disease.”

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Social connection 1:06:58 0
“One of the best things that you can do as you get older is stay socially active as well as physically active. It's making friends and they all have the same goal.”

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Cognitive stimulation 1:07:11 0
“There are several good studies that indicate that staying Physically Active um really decreases your risk for dementia rather significantly.”

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Most important takeaways of the video

  1. Neurogenesis, the process of generating new neurons, is crucial for cognitive health and recovery from neural damage. However, it naturally declines with age, leading to cognitive deficits.
  2. Circadian rhythm plays a critical role in regulating neurogenesis, and disruptions in circadian rhythms can worsen the decline in neurogenesis, especially in conditions like Alzheimer's disease.
  3. Aging deteriorates the circadian rhythm system, impacting various biological processes.
  4. Genetics play a significant role in understanding the complexity of the body's functions, similar to intricate software systems.
  5. Disease prevention strategies often involve separating metabolism from pathology, repairing damage, and inducing neurogenesis through stem cell transplantation. These approaches aim to address aging-related issues effectively.

Overview of Circadian Rhythms and Neurogenesis

Neurogenesis, the generation of new neurons from neural stem cells, is a critical process for cognitive health and recovery from neural damage. Shara Kapimpin, a PhD candidate, highlights that neurogenesis supports cognitive capacities and the compensation for neural loss, but declines with age, leading to cognitive deficits in the elderly. This decline is notably exacerbated by disruptions in circadian rhythms, which are internal biological clocks regulating various bodily functions to align with day-night cycles.

Circadian Rhythm’s Impact on Biological Processes and Aging

Circadian rhythms are essential in timing biological processes, ensuring activities occur during appropriate day or night phases. However, this system deteriorates with age, affecting multiple biological processes. This deterioration is significant as it contributes to pathological aging in disorders like Alzheimer’s disease by worsening the natural decline in neurogenesis. This information underpins the importance of circadian rhythms in maintaining not just sleep cycles but overall physiological health and age-related conditions.

Genetics and Disease Prevention

Aubrey de Grey, a renowned biomedical gerontologist, compares the human body’s function and disease prevention complexity to “uncommented spaghetti code,” emphasizing our intricate biological functions and the challenges in preempting aging-related diseases. Early life’s complexity affects later diseases, indicating a need for targeted disease prevention that understands these fundamental processes.

Metabolic Health and Longevity Interventions

Metabolism and pathology are closely linked, with ongoing research aimed at decoupling these processes to extend healthy life spans. Despite efforts, the complexity of such separations often makes strategies like damage repair more pragmatic by targeting the effects rather than underlying causes.

Nutritional Interventions and Long-Term Health

Nutritional approaches, like caloric restriction mimetics, are researched for their potential to mimic the benefits of dieting without reducing food intake, thereby potentially extending lifespan. However, discussions highlight that while poor diets significantly decrease life expectancy, the difference between average and excellent diets might not be as impactful as once thought.

Exercise, Social Connection, and Cognitive Stimulation

Physical activity is repeatedly emphasized for its broad health benefits, including preventing falls, strengthening the cardiovascular system, and lowering diabetes and heart disease risks. Social engagements and maintaining a physically active lifestyle also play crucial roles in managing aging, with both activity types linked to reduced dementia risks.

Concluding Insights

The integration of findings from genetics, circadian biology, disease prevention, and lifestyle factors like diet and exercise provides a comprehensive view of aging. The challenge remains in effectively integrating these strategies to not only extend lifespan but also enhance the health span, reducing the duration of morbidity in later life stages.