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PERIODICAL
FASTING AND CALORIC RESTRICTION FOR LIFE EXTENSION,
DISEASE TREATMENT AND CREATIVITY.
(clinical and experimental data)
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FASTING AND CALORIC RESTRICTION PRODUCE VARIOUS BIOLOGICAL
EFFECTS |
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2005
Deutsches Institut fur Ernahrungsforschung
Potsdam, Nuthetal und Abteilung fur Endokrinologie,
Diabetes und Ernahrungsmedizin, Charite-Universitatsmedizin
Berlin, Campus Benjamin Franklin, Deutschland
INTRODUCTION: Obesity is a risk
factor for type 2 diabetes, hypertension, dyslipidemia
and cardiovascular disease. We aimed to analyse the
changes of parameters of the metabolic syndrome and
to investigate which markers are useful in the prediction
of a successful weight loss. Preliminary data of an
ongoing study are presented. METHODS: 18 obese individuals
(15 female, 3 male, mean age 50.9 years, mean BMI
36.1) finished a 12 month weight loss program. This
weight loss program was based on a hypocaloric diet
(50 % carbohydrates, 30 % fat, 20 % protein) and at
least 60 min physical activity per week. At baseline,
6 months and 12 months physical examination, indirect
calorimetry, bioimpedance analysis were performed
and blood was taken for routine laboratory. An oral
glucose tolerance test and an euglycemic hyperinsulinemic
clamp (n = 13) were carried out at baseline and after
6 months. RESULTS: There was a decrease of the BMI
(+/- SEM) from 36.1 +/- 1.3 to 33.4 +/- 1.2 after
6 months and 32.8 +/- 1.3 after 12 months. Waist circumference
(-8.8 cm), fasting blood glucose (98.0 to 91.2 and
92.5 mg/dl) and HDL cholesterol (47.2 to 64.6 mg/dl
after 12 months) improved significantly. Other parameters
of the metabolic syndrome (blood pressure, lipids,
insulin resistance) and adiponectin improved slightly,
but changes failed to be significant. In a linear
regression analysis age, insulin resistance (M-value)
and adiponectin at baseline were significant and independent
predictors of a successful weight loss. CONCLUSION:
In conclusion, most parameters of the metabolic syndrome
improved after successful weight reduction, although
changes of most parameters were modest and did not
reach statistical significance.
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2003
Research Institute of Experimental
Medicine, 12 Akademika Pavlova Str., 197376, Saint-Petersburg,
Russia.
A review of biochemical mechanisms
underlying the known approaches to extension of lifespan
and/or slowing down of ageing suggests that they all
modify balances between generation of active oxygen
and carbonyl species and the mechanisms that protect
from their damaging effects or repair their consequences.
A likely common target of the geroprotector effects
of antioxidants, melatonin, and antidiabetic biguanides
is the mitochondrial respiratory chain. In biological
species that evolved through r-selection (nematodes,
fruit flies, mice, and rats), the balance between
anabolic/reproductive and self-maintenance/protective
functions is the most significant modifiable factor
of longevity and ageing. At the molecular level, the
pivot of this balance is formed by the forkhead-type
transfactors, whereas at the physiological level the
balance is determined by dietary calories and physical
activity via mechanism in which the central role is
played by insuline-like peptides and, also, growth
hormone and leptin or their functional analogs. In
biological species that evolved through K-selection
(higher primates, particularly humans), the latter
balance is less important, and the biochemical factors
of aging are more refracted through the higher regulatory
systems, of which the most significant are catecholaminergic
mechanisms of regulation of neuroendocrine-immune
interrelationships and the circulatory system. This
results in a decreased geroprotector potential of
calory restriction and in an increased importance
of the optimal physical activity. When these conclusions
are compared with demographic data, it comes out that
virtually all advances in gerontology may be reduced
to maxims of healthy ageing known from extreme antiquity.
Under optimal socioeconomic conditions, the chances
to approach the documented world record of human longevity
(122 years) may be increased by (not to mention getting
rid of smoking and other abuses) high physical activity,
adequate nutrition enriched in fresh fruits, optimism,
and timely treatment of specific diseases. The most
important bottleneck in the realization of these reserves
is currently the public consciousness rather than
the science.
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2001
Laboratory of Neurosciences,
Gerontology Research Center, National Institute on
Aging, National Institutes of Health, 5600 Nathan
Shock Drive, Baltimore, MD 21224, USA. doni@vax.grc.nia.nih.gov
If effective anti-aging interventions
are to be identified for human application, then the
development of reliable and valid biomarkers of aging
are essential for this progress. Despite the apparent
demand for such gerotechnology, biomarker research
has become a controversial pursuit. Much of the controversy
has emerged from a lack of consensus on terminology
and standards for evaluating the reliability and validity
of candidate biomarkers. The initiation of longitudinal
studies of aging in long-lived non-human primates
has provided an opportunity for establishing the reliability
and validity of biomarkers of aging potentially suitable
for human studies. From the primate study initiated
in 1987 at the National Institute on Aging (NIA),
the following criteria for defining a biomarker of
aging have been offered: (1) significant cross-sectional
correlation with age; (2) significant longitudinal
change in the same direction as the cross-sectional
correlation; (3) significant stability of individual
differences over time. These criteria relate to both
reliability and validity. However, the process of
validating a candidate biomarker requires a greater
standard of proof. Ideally, the rate of change in
a biomarker of aging should be predictive of lifespan.
In short-lived species, such as rodents, populations
differing in lifespan can be identified, such as different
strains of rodents or groups on different diets, such
as those subjected to calorie restriction (CR), which
live markedly longer. However, in the NIA primate
study, the objective is to demonstrate that CR retards
the rate of aging and increases lifespan. In the absence
of lifespan data associated with CR in primates, validation
of biomarkers of aging must rely on other strategies
of proof. With this challenge, we have offered the
following strategy: If a candidate biomarker is a
valid measure of the rate of aging, then the rate
of age-related change in the biomarker should be proportional
to differences in lifespan among related species.
Thus, for example, the rate of change in a candidate
biomarker of aging in chimpanzees should be twice
that of humans (60 vs 120 years maximum lifespan);
in rhesus monkeys three times that of humans (40 vs
120 years maximum lifespan). The realization of this
strategy will be aided by developing a primate aging
database, a project that was recently launched in
cooperation with the NIA, the National Center for
Research Resources, and the University of Wisconsin
Regional Primate Research Center.
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Department of Physiology, Tanta
Faculty of Medicine, University of Tanta, Tanta, Egypt.
We investigated the plasma levels
of tumour necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha), leptin
and insulin, and their relation to body mass index
(BMI) in 80 male patients who presented with chronic
heart failure (mean age: 47 +/- 4 years) at Tanta
University Hospital. Plasma leptin, TNF-alpha and
insulin were significantly increased and BMI significantly
decreased in New York Heart Association classes III
and IV patients. TNF-alpha, leptin and insulin were
positively correlated, and TNF-alpha and BMI and leptin
and BMI were negatively correlated in stages III and
IV of heart failure. We conclude that cytokine neuroendocrine
activation may form part of advanced stage heart failure.
It may also be responsible for worsening cachexia,
and can be used as a marker to determine disease severity.
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1997
Gerontology Research Center,
Nathan W. Shock Laboratories, National Institutes
of Health, Johns Hopkins University Bayview Campus,
Baltimore, Maryland 21224, USA.
The adrenal steroids, dehydroepiandrosterone
(DHEA) and its sulfate (DHEAS), have attracted attention
for their possible antiaging effects. DHEAS levels
in humans decline markedly with age, suggesting the
potential importance of this parameter as a biomarker
of aging. Here we report that, as seen in humans,
male and female rhesus monkeys exhibit a steady, age-related
decline in serum DHEAS. This decline meets several
criteria for a biomarker of aging, including cross-sectional
and longitudinal linear decreases with age and significant
stability of individual differences over time. In
addition, the proportional age-related loss of DHEAS
in rhesus monkeys is over twice the rate of decline
observed in humans. Most important is the finding
that, in rhesus monkeys, calorie restriction, which
extends life span and retards aging in laboratory
rodents, slows the postmaturational decline in serum
DHEAS levels. This represents the first evidence that
this nutritional intervention has the potential to
alter aspects of postmaturational aging in a long-lived
species.
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