Search:
  Scientists decode the aging process
 
Share |
WASHINGTON, Scientists are beginning to decode the complex biology of aging and are optimistic that recent advances in research may lead to treatments that can slow or even reverse degeneration and disease.

"We are seeing a major change, very important developments and real therapeutic efforts to try to treat age-related illnesses," said Norman Sharpless, professor of medicine and genetics at the University of North Carolina.

The French research, led by Jean-Marc Lemaitre at the Functional Genomics Institute, published in October, shows cells from elderly donors can be rejuvenated as stem cells, erasing the ravages of age and proving that aging is reversible.

"It's a major advance," Sharpless said, noting that if many age-related diseases such as cancer, cardiovascular problems or Alzheimer's are to be defeated, regenerative medicine will be required.

But he stressed that "cellular therapy is very difficult to develop," and expectations must be kept in check.

At the end of 2010 an American study in Boston showed that aging could be reversed in mice that were treated with telomerase, a naturally occurring enzyme in the body that protects DNA sequences (telomeres) at the end of chromosomes and which shorten cellular aging.

 
More News
 


Caretaker Punjab Chief Minister Najam Sethi has said that a comprehensive awareness campaign should be launched for administering anti-polio drops and special attention be paid to backward areas.

read more
 
 

Being HIV-positive raises a person's heart attack risk by about 50 percent, said a study released Monday that confirms earlier findings.

read more
 
 

Researchers said Sunday they had, for the first time, cured a baby born with HIV -- a development that could help improve treatment of babies infected at birth.

read more
 
 

Medical experts at a symposium called upon the government to implement and strengthen policies for the prevention and control of diabetes and disseminate tools to support national and local initiatives for the prevention and management of diabetes and its complications.

read more
 
 

A fatal disease was discovered in the rural areas of Sindh called “Ranikhet” which is found in Peacocks and can lead to their deaths.

read more
 
 

 

 


British scientists have moved a step closer to developing...

read more


Chickenpox is a common childhood illness that children...

read more


Planned relaxation calms anxiety and helps your body...

read more


Relying purely on breastfeeding for the first six...

read more
 
 

Copyright © www.pakwatan.com . All rights reserved.
Powered By Pakwatan-e-Services International