Exercise Training Clears Damaged Proteins That Accumulate With Age
Mayo Clinic study reveals how different exercise types help remove age-damaged muscle proteins in younger and older adults.
20 articles
Mayo Clinic study reveals how different exercise types help remove age-damaged muscle proteins in younger and older adults.
Greek researchers investigated whether whey protein can counter inflammation-driven muscle loss in older adults with chronic inflammation.
Comprehensive analysis of 100 centenarians identifies key biological markers associated with reaching 100+ years of age.
A completed RCT from the University of Copenhagen tests whether aerobic exercise, time-restricted feeding, or NR supplementation best improves biological aging markers in healthy older adults.
Six-month study compares intermittent fasting to calorie restriction for improving aging markers and metabolism.
German researchers tested whether 4g daily taurine could slow aging processes in adults 55-75 over 6 months of supplementation.
Researchers analyzed epigenetic changes in 124 Israeli centenarians to understand the molecular basis of exceptional longevity.
Study explores whether telomere biology and senescence biomarkers can forecast acute kidney injury following cardiac procedures.
Completed study of 102 older adults tested whether combined interventions can preserve brain volume and improve mobility through muscle-brain axis.
Small study tests whether protein blends can help older adults maintain muscle mass and strength through improved protein synthesis.
Clinical trial tested whether cysteine-rich whey protein enhances resistance training benefits for aging muscle mass and function.
French study reveals how aging influences metabolic responses to cancer, potentially explaining malnutrition patterns in elderly patients.
Ten-week trial examined how intermittent fasting affects aging markers and whether antioxidant supplements interfere with benefits.
Study reveals how combining strength training with protein supplementation dramatically improves muscle function in the very elderly.
Auburn University study tested whether peanut protein supplementation enhances muscle-building benefits of weight training in older adults.
German study explored how lifelong inflammatory burden contributes to cardiac aging by measuring heart rate variability changes.
French researchers tracked how kidney failure and dialysis speed up immune cell aging, revealing new connections between organ health and longevity.
Researchers developed retinal imaging techniques to identify Alzheimer's biomarkers decades before clinical diagnosis.
FDA-approved transplant drug tested in 70-95 year olds to combat age-related immune decline and improve longevity markers.
144-person study explores how rapamycin, amino acids, and resistance exercise combat sarcopenia and muscle wasting in aging adults.