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Longevity

 

Longevity JoAnn Guest Jun 13, 2005 18:15 PDT

 

 

by James Duke

courtesy of " Herbal Village, " Nature’s Herbs.

http://www.willner.com/article.aspx?artid=150

 

At age 69, Father Time is telling me I’d best dedicate

an issue to the

problems of aging, especially since even the Journal.

of the American

Medical Association dedicated their Oct. 22/29, 1997

issue to aging. As

I heard on CNN News, 5:30 pm. May 24,1998, the

twentieth century was

the

century of the juniors, the next century will be the

century of the

seniors. And this senior citizen hopes to five to see

that new century

and millennium with the help of my herbal crutches.

The only medicine I

invariably take daily at age 69 is celery seed

extract, my herbal

alternative for allopurinol. While I haven’t yet

proved that the celery

seed is hypouricemic (lowers levels of uric acid), I

have been gout

free

in the two yearssince I abruptly switched from

allopurinol to celery

seed extract.

 

But less regularly, and especially when I’m on the

road, stressed and

restaurant-fed, I have my regular travel kit of herbs,

most devoted to

problems more prevalent in the geriatric than the

juvenile. In my

carry-on suitcase, there’s bilberry (for failing

eyesight), echinacea

and garlic (for failing immune system, needing a boost

to help me avoid

the bugs on the road), pygeum and saw palmetto (for

failing prostate),

cranberry and/or bearberry (for failing urethra) milk

thistle (to spare

a busy liver on the road), ginkgo (for failing

memory), St. John’s Wort

(in case all these failing systems of the geriatric

lead me into a

depression; so far no), rosemary (for flagging CNS),

turmeric,

glucosamine and chondroitin (for failing joints), and

sweet annie when

venturing into malaria country. Yes, like some other

geriatrics with a

half dozen super pharmaceuticals, I have at least a

half dozen herbs in

my geriatric travel kit. I put a day’s capsule

assortment into

individual baggies, one for each day on the road, so

as not to travel

with all 612 bottles.

 

GERONTOLOGY

 

Even though records indicate that older people have

always existed in

human societies, survival beyond age 50 for most

members of a

population

was a rare event until this century. Today, 95 percent

of all babies

born in the developed world live past 50. Such

unprecedented survival

means that most of us will experience or at least

witness senescence,

that variety of physiological changes creeping up on

me, that accompany

the passage of time. Senescence on such a grand scale

is new to the

human race and may represent a unique phenomenon in

the history of

mankind. (Olshansky et al., 1998)

 

According to Banks and Fossel (1997), no one has ever

lived more than

122 years. Although the mean human fife span has

increased

significantly

during the last 2 centuries, the maximum life span has

not. I think

herbs help more than the hitech longevity studies (or

starvation). JAMA

reports here, " Several laboratories have successfully

extended the

maximum life spans of at least 2 multicellular species

genetically

(Drosophila and Caenorhabditis elegans) and several

more by dietary

restriction. " Two gene mutations increase the maximum

life span of C.

elegans 6-fold, provoking the query of what might lie

in store for

clinical medicine. " Increased life span occurs

predominantly through

the

genetic control of free radical metabolism. " That

doesn’t exactly give

us free license to promote our antioxidants as

lifeextenders, but more

people than JAMA have often said that oxidative damage

is one of the

most important causes of aging. Thus I will go so far

as to say that

antioxidants can slow the ravages of aging. I have

always maintained

that the synergistic mix of herbal antioxidants are

better than any

synthetic antioxidant in the long run. That’s what we

geriatric

longevity seekers are after. Synthetic antioxidants,

like synthetic

medicines, are not part of your evolutionary past and

hence are much

more likely to have serious side effects.

 

The number of Americans 65 or older has risen from

3,100,000 (4% of the

US population) in the early 1900s to over 33,000,000

(nearly 13% of the

population) in 1995. Over 17% of the American

population will be

elderly

by the year 2020, and 42% of this group will be older

than 75 years.

The

" oldest old " group (85 or older) will more than double

in size by 2030

and will nearly double again by 2050. If current

trends persist, longer

life spans may be accompanied by poorer health-related

quality of

life. "

(Clark et al., 1997)

 

Finch and Tanzi (1997) remind us that genes strongly

influence the

life-span and patterns of aging. Who knows why humans

five five times

longer than cats, cats live five times longer than

mice, and mice live

25 times longer than fruit flies, or why the onset of

Alzheimer’s

disease (AD) often differs by many years in identical

twins (Finch and

Tanzi, 1997) Our society is experiencing unprecedented

rates of

survival

into older ages, but this success has also been

accompanied by a rise

in

frailty and disability in the general population. This

is a consequence

for which neither the medical community nor society

was prepared as is

witnessed by the ongoing national concern over crisis

in the Social

Security program, Medicare, Medicaid and health-care

costs in general.

The reemergence of infectious and parasitic diseases

we thought we had

eradicated suggests that our species has far less

control over the

environment than we sometimes believe. The

introduction of antibiotics

in the 1940s may have actually accelerated the

evolution of

morevirulent

strains of microorganisms which now prey on our

species. (Olshansky et

al., 1998)

 

Truthfully, I believe that our herbal antioxidants

like the green tea

and olive leaf antioxidants were made first to protect

plants from

oxidative damage. Almost all of the oxygen we breathe

is produced by

green plants in the process called photosynthesis,

which not only makes

the best foods and medicines, it also liberates

oxygen. Photosynthesis

only takes place in the green parts of a plant,

through the magic of

chlorophyll, the vegetarian analogue to hemoglobin.

But in that process

oxygen is generated, increasing their need for

antioxidant protection.

That’s why, my good reader, leaves are by far our best

source of

antioxidants. We borrow from the plants those

phytochernicals that the

plant needed to protect its living cells from

oxidative damage.

 

Just as our eyesight fails, so does our sense of taste

and smell,

making

food less appealing and hence making us less eager to

eat and get the

nutrition we need now, even more than before. In JAMA

we read that

losses of smell and taste, common in senior citizens,

may result from

normal aging, certain diseasebstates (especially

Alzheimer’s disease),

medications, surgical interventions, and environmental

exposure.

Deficits in these chemical senses cannot only reduce

the pleasure and

comfort from food, but represent risk factors for

nutritional and

immune

deficiencies... " " Use of flavor-enhanced food can

increase enjoyment of

food and have a positive effect on food intake and

immune status. "

" Flavor enhancement of foods for wasting patients has

been used over

the

last 25 years to increase intake of nutrient-dense

foods. Flavor

amplification of food for elderly retirement home

residents resulted in

improved immune status. " (Schiffman, 1997). Here again

some of our

antioxidant culinary herbs can spice up our appetites,

our foods and

our

lives. Remember that those green leaves like parsley,

sage, rosemary

and

thyme, not to mention celery, cilantro, marjoram,

oregano, and savory

are not only good for spicing up your foods if your

senses are waning

or

jaded, but they are loaded with antioxidants. Small

wonder oregano is

getting so much press. Of seventy-five mints I

submitted for

antioxidant

analysis to French Scientist Dr. Lamaison, oregano was

tops, even

topping rosemary and sage, at least as far as that

antioxidant test was

concerned. (Lamaison et al., 1993)

 

ADDICTION

 

On the CBS morning show, June 4, 1998, Dr. Bernadine

Healy noted that

addiction to alcohol and prescription drugs was

particularly prevalent

in the elderly. Among elderly females, the largest

single group using

antidepressants and tranquilizers and the largest

single group visiting

the doctor’s office, there is a 7% addiction to

alcohol, and an 11%

addiction rate for prescription drugs. Both kudzu and

kava-kava might

be

useful at curbing the desire for alcohol or drugs,

kudzu cutting the

desire to drink in experimental animals by some 50%,

and kava-kava

serving more as an anxiolytic. The serotonin reuptake

inhibition

induced

by St. John’s Wort might well be worth a try, too.

Among herbs

suggested

for addiction in Goldberg’s massive Alternative

Medicine: The

Definitive

Guide are:

 

1. Milk thistle to protect the liver of addicts.

 

2. " Blood cleansing " herbs like burdock, echinacea,

licorice, wild

oats.

 

3. " Decaffeinating " herbs like camomile, feverfew, and

linden to help

break the caffeine habit.

 

4. Oats, long used to treat opium addiction and, more

recently,

smoking.

 

 

5. Siberian ginseng to normalize cerebral

neurotransmitters.

 

6. Natural tranquilizers like balm, skullcap, St.

John’s Wort,

valerian,

and vervain.

 

7. Ayurvedic herbs like ashwagandha and gotu kola.

 

Dopaminergic foods like faba beans and velvet beans

contain l-dopa

which

is converted into dopamine in the brain, possibly

correcting cerebral

dopamine deficiencies which sometimes aggravate

addictions. The

antidepressant herb St. John’s Wort is also said to be

dopaminergic.

 

ALZHEIMER’S

 

What can be more depressing to the elderly population

than a mate with

Alzheimer’s, which we covered in our last issue of

this newsletter. But

the JAMA issue on Aging is where ginkgo was finally

recognized as a

good

treatment for senile dementia, if not necessarily for

all Alzheimer’s

patients. Since we covered Alzheimer’s so recently, I

won’t devote as

much space to it as to the other problems of aging. I

should mention

one

of the Alzheimer papers from JAMAs Aging issue. It’s

nice to read in

the

hallowed halls of JAMA (Le Bars et al., 1997) that the

ginkgo extract

called EGb 761 is one popular plant extract used in

Europe to alleviate

symptoms associated with a range of cognitive

disorders. Its main

effects seem to be derived from its antioxidant

properties, which

require the synergistic action of the flavonoids, the

terpenoids

(ginkgolides, bilobalide), and the organic acids,

which are principal

constituents of EGb. Each of these acts as free

radical scavengers.

Free

radicals are often considered to be the mediators of

excessive lipid

peroxidation and Alzheimeran cell damage. The EGb

extract contains

several compounds believed to act synergistically on

diverse processes

involved in the homeostasis of inflammation and

oxidative stress,

providing membrane protection and neurotransmission

modulation. Such

may

be ginkgo’s effects on the CNS. Another green leaf, a

whole suite of

synergistic antioxidants, warding off antioxidant

damage to the brain.

The EGb 761 extracts were standardized to 24%

Ginkgoflavone glycosides

and additionally EGb 761 had 6% terpenelactones (3.1%

ginkgolides A B,C

7 2.9% bilobalide)

 

ARTHRITIS

 

Since our Arthritis newsletter in 1997, there has been

much positive

press on glucosamine and chondroitin. I found myself

benefitting from

this combination, following my knee going out on a

Mayan Ruin. It was

all I could do to get down from that pyramid in

Belize. But a month of

chondrotin and glucosamine had me believing that they

had helped me

start rebuilding the collagen cushion in the knee

joint. I was also

taking gelatin for the same purpose, and my usual

herbal

anti-inflammatory, celery seed. Others might fare

better with other

anti-inflammatory herbs: e.g. ashwagandha, bilberry,

borage oil,

boswellia, burdock, chamomile, cayenne, evening

primrose oil,

fenugreek,

garlic, ginger, ginkgo, horse chestnut, licorice,

pineapple, stinging

nettle, turmeric and willow. just as there are many

pharmaceutical

options for arthritis, there are also numerous herbal

alternatives.

What

works for one person will not necessarily work for

another. Some people

seem to be helped by avoiding the nightshade family,

while others are

clearly helped by the pain relief offered by topical

or ingested

capsaicin from cayenne, a member of the nightshade

family. Matter of

fact, those of us who have the time in the kitchen

could concoct

interesting antiarthritic juices and soups loaded with

the foods and

herbs listed above.

 

More recently, COX-2 inhibitors are being praised for

their potential

in

arthritis and pain. (Pennisi, 1998) Replacing willow

and other natural

salicylates, for the good or bad, happened almost a

century ago.

Aspirin, first introduced in 1899 (99 years ago),

still relieves pain

and soothes aching joints but at a cost; aspirin like

most

non-steroidal

anti-inflammatory drugs may eat the stomach lining,

causing bleeding or

ulcers, and may damage the kidneys. They block

cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2)

which promotes fever, inflammation and pain, but they

are better at

blocking COX-1, essential also for the health of

kidney and stomach. As

JAMA started stating in ads last year, COX-2

inhibitors may be the wave

of the future. Today, NSAIDS constitute a $14 billion

market.

" (E)pidemiological data have indicated that aspirin

and NSAIDs can

protect against certain cancers and Alzheimer’s

disease, and recent

laboratory results suggest that COX-2 inhibition is a

key factor in

these effects " . Monsanto scientists compared its drug

Celecoxib with

NSAIDs in 12,000 arthritics (They should have compared

it with my

gingemeric, a mix of ginger and turmeric with a total

of at least 6

natural COX inhibitors, to make sure that their

synthetics were better

and more selective than the naturals.) Monsanto’s

Philip Needleman,

said

Celecoxib is " fully as efficacious as the NSAIDs " but

didn’t injure the

gut. Pennisi warns, as we have come to expect with new

synthetics, long

term side effects cannot be projected. Potential

long-term negative

side

effects cannot yet be known. Gingemeric would probably

be less likely

to

cause long term side effects as both herbs have been

used in food for

hundreds of years here, thousands of years elsewhere.

(Pennisi, 1998)

 

CANCER

 

Astute readers of my Green Pharmacy may have noted

that I give no

herbal

remedies for cancer there, but I do have a cancer

prevention chapter

there. The editors at Rodale apparently shared the

belief of many

physicians that cancer is too serious a disease for

the herbalist. They

did not want to include a chapter on herbal approaches

to cancer. If

you’ll look at the layout for the Green Farmacy Garden

(Volume 111,

Issue 11, News from the Herbal Village), you’ll see

that I do mention a

few plants, mostly sources of hard core drugs, like

the taxol from yew

for ovarian cancer, the superstars vincristine and

vinblastine from

Madagascar periwinkle for leukemia and Hodgkins’

Disease, and the

etoposide from mayapple for lung and testicular

cancer.

 

One dietary and nutritional source of antiangiogenic

activity is the

legume family (e.g. alfalfa, kudzu, licorice, red

clover, and last, but

by no means least, soy). Stakianos et al. (1997) say

of soy’s genistein

that it is an important dietary component with many

health-related and

clinical benefits. Soy protein consumption is

associated with a lower

risk for several cancers. ‘(G)enistein, conjugated to

an antibody to

the

CD-19 receptor, was highly effective in treating

leukemia in a nude

mouse in a model of pre-B cell human leukemia ...

(G)enistein, and to a

lesser extent daidzein, inhibits proliferative growth

.. Both soy and

genistein cause chemoprevention effects in vivo animal

models of

cancer.

.... (I)soflavones (particularly genistein) are

important contributors

to

the anticancer effect. " In the concluding sentence of

their abstract

they say ‘Genistein is highly bioavailable in rats and

because of its

enterohepatic circulation may accumulate within the

gastrointestinal

tract " . In their discussion: " Although genistein, like

many therapeutic

drugs used in the treatment of cancer, could be used

in the pill form

for delivery as a chemopreventive agent, its delivery

in soy foods

would

be far more economical. Such a food delivery mechanism

is used by

southeast Asians who have the lowest breast and

prostate cancer

rates...

and lowest cardiovascular disease risk among nations

of the world. " My

liberal translation: Genistein, highly available even

orally, at least

in rats, can help prevent cancer, leukemia, and

cardiopathy, if not

osteoporosis, even when isolated from the soy. Natives

of Asia (eating

more bean sprouts, kudzu, mung bean and soy than we

normally do) have

the lowest rates of breast and prostate cancers and

cardiovascular

disease.

 

CARDIOPATHY

 

Exercise, good food, good herbs and weight loss,

coupled with several

of

Nature’s antiaggregant, antioxidant and hypotensive

herbs can help

reduce the incidence of cardiopathy in the elderly.

Yes, that sounds

like what used to be called quackery but now is called

alternative

and/or complementary medicine. Let’s take a quote from

a very

conservative trade magazine.

 

How’s this: Food Farmacy from American Medical News,

" To our knowledge,

there are no single pharmaceutical interventions

capable of inducing

simultaneous improvements in these cardiovascular risk

factorsors. "

McCarron, DM et al., Jan 27, (as quoted in American

Medical News, Feb

10, 1997. p. 10) " A nutritionally balanced diet [17%

fat, 62 %

carbohydrate, and 21 % protein; meeting daily

nutritional guidelines

for

the intake of sodium, fat, cholesterol, refined

sugars, fiber and

complex carbohydrates, fortified to meet at least 100%

of the

recommended dietary allowances for adults for most

nutrients except

vitamin D (77%) and copper (91%)] benefits people at

risk for

cardiovascular disease (hypertension, dyslipidemia, or

NIDM diabetes)

and also improves quality of life. "

 

Noteworthy as antioxidant herbs are grapeseed, green

tea, olive leaf,

rosemary, and sage. Notable blood thinning herbs

include garlic,

ginger,

ginkgo, saw palmetto, and willow. Notice: consult a

physician before

taking any of these if you are on a pharmaceutical

blood thinner like

coumadin or warfarin!!!.

 

Among the major hypotensive herbs are celery seed,

garlic, and

hawthorn.

Several herbs, especially in the carrot family, are

well endowed with

calcium-antagoinists, some as potent as verapamil;

among them angelica,

celery seed, dill, fennel, and parsley. This rela

tively new bit of

information led me to propose a cardioprotective

herbal beverage I call

angelade.

 

Angelade (for the heart): Celery is close kin to the

herb angelica

which

contains 15 calcium-antagonistic compounds. Celery has

at least five

calcium blockers: apigenin, bergapten (1-520 ppm);

isopimpinellin

(4-122

ppm); psoralen and xanthotoxin (6-183 ppm). Parsnip

and parsley are

even

better endowed with the coumarin calcium blockers. I’m

not about to

suggest ingestion of coumarins in foods as

calcium-antagonists, just

here to ask of our federal health watchers: would

ANGELADE be as safe,

efficacious and cheap as verapamil as a calcium

blocker? It consists of

juiced angelica, carrot, celery, fennel, parsley, and

parsnip, all

recognized food plants, cautiously mixed in with or

chased with

grapefruit juice. Might all this partially explain the

lower incidence

of cardiopathy in vegetarians? Celery contains

hypotensive,

hypocholesterolemic, and calcium blocker

phytochemicals. How about

anti-arrhythmic compounds? There’s apigenin, apiin,

magnesium, and

potassium. Is heart of celery better for the heart

than what your

physician suggests? Would ANGELADE, with a wider

variety of 6

vegetables

be better? Methinks yes! But I’ll probably never know.

I’d bet,

however,

it would exhibit several more heartwise beneficial

activities than

would

the silver bullet verapamil. Will grapefruit

potentiate these natural

calcium blockers like it does some of the synthetic

calcium blockers,

maybe even dangerously so? Nobody knows. We should

know.

 

CATARACTS

 

Some 20% of the world’s population are afflicted with

cataracts,

including about half the population over 75. Margolis

suggests it’s

worse in the US; about 75% of people over 60 show some

signs of

cataracts. The prevalence of senile cataract is 4.5%

in ages 52-64, 18%

in ages 65-74, and 45.9% in ages 75-85. New data

suggests that smoking

causes 20% of US cataract cases. Smokers face an

estimated 200%

increased risk of developing a posterior subcapsular

cataract - a

visually disabling condition that strikes the back of

the lens - and an

estimated 100% increased risk of nuclear sclerosis

cataract, a less

serious form in which the opacity occurs in the center

of the lens.

(Science News 142:134, 1992) Murray and Pizzorno

(1991) note that about

4 million people have some degree of sight-impairing

cataracts, with at

least 40,000 blind due to cataracts. Over 541,000

cataract extractions

occur each year; over $3.5 billion is spent per year

on these

extractions and related doctor visits. This is largely

a geriatric

ailment, and many cases are caused or aggravated by

oxidative damage,

much of which could be reduced a bit by antioxidant

herbs, again

grapeseed, green tea, olive leaf, rosemary, and sage.

But probably one

of the best herbs for cataracts and several other

degenerative eye

disorders is bilberry. I think Heinerman (1994) is

right in crediting

bilberry or huckleberry juice and the anthocyanosides

which occur

generously in many members of the blueberry family,

with many useful

activities besides cataracts. Purists who like the

whole food or juice

should consider bilberry, which is so closely related

to our blueberry,

that most amateurs cannot tell them apart. The juicers

might also

consider aronia (chokecherry), cranberry, or

huckleberry, or other

bluish fruits like blackberries, grapes, plums and

wild cherries. I

take

two 475 mg bilberry capsules, standardized at 25%

anthocyanosides, at

breakfast, and two at supper, chasing with water.

 

There’s promising data on garlic (Allium sativum) and

onion (Allium

cepa), the latter one of our best sources of

quercetin, especially in

the outer portions of the bulb. Onion may share many

of the biological

activities reported for quercetin by Stavric (1994).

It has been shown

to help with diabetic cataracts (Buist, 1995). Put

onions And/or garlic

(both Biblical herbs with folk reputations for

cataracts), on most of

those dishes where you used to consider them optional.

 

What I call the ACES in the hole (previtamin A

{beta-carotene}, vitamin

C, vitamin E and selenium) can apparently reduce

cataract risk. People

with low antioxidant blood serum levels are 4 to 5

times more likely to

get cataracts than people with high status (USDA,

VERIS).

 

I have heard so many favorable reports of surgery that

I would

certainly

resort to surgery were I diagnosed with serious

cataracts.

 

Diabetes

 

Don’t forget good balanced diet,exercise, weight loss,

when you reach

for those herbal crutches. My colleague, Dr. Leigh

Broadhurst, who has

done a lot of primary research on diabetes will be in

charge of

thediabetes issue of this newsletter in the

nearfuture. Hence, I will

treat it only cursorily here today. One of the

emerging superstars in

the antidiabetic arena is the bitter melon, Momordia

charantia.

Wherever

I have traveled in the tropics, local folk have

praised this herb for

" lowering the sugar " , alluding to its proven

hypoglycemic activity. Few

herbs have attracted as much interest as this food

plant, known both as

balsam pear and bitter melon. Fruit juice, dried

fruits and/or seeds

have proven oral hypoglycemic activity due to several

identified

compounds, including one called p-insulin (p for

plant). Werbach and

Murray (1994) recommend 2 oz fresh juice or 100 ml

decoction (Chop 100

g

fresh fruit and boil in 200 ml water down to 100 ml).

Bitter melon

delayed the development of cataracts and other

diabetic complications

in

rats. (Srivastava, 1993) Studies in Bilthoven suggest

that only 5-10%

of

diabetes patients are insulin deficient, with most

merely showing an

increased resistance to insulin. There they use bitter

melon as an

insulin substitute in insulin-dependent diabetics.

Research on the

hypoglycaemic properties of Momordica was first

published in India in

the 1960s. In more recent trials, a fall of 54% in

blood sugar was

achieved. In the 90% of cases where insulin resistance

is the problem,

treatment includes livercleansing agents such as

dandelion and milk

thistle.

 

Consider this short list of antidiabetic herbs as a

checklist, on which

we will expand with the upcoming Diabetes issue, e.g

balsam pear, cat’s

claw, chicory, celery seed, fenugreek, ginkgo,

grapeseed,

gurmar,licorice, stevia, and tea...

 

HIGH BLOOD PRESSURE

 

We’ve covered this superficially up under cardiopathy,

but we must

repeat, exercise, good diet, good herbs and weight

loss.

 

IMPOTENCE

 

Just as the synthetic drug for impotence, Viagra, was

reporting sales

of

the millionth prescription, the fine print started

spilling out in the

same press that had been praising it for two weeks as

the wonder drug.

The press reported six deaths, mostly in males who

were on

nitroglycerine-type drugs. These drugs tend to release

nitric oxide,

which is the mechanism by which Viagra increases blood

flow to the

corpus cavernosum. For a complete discussion, see the

Q & A section (pg.

19) of this issue.

 

[Q & A Ask Jim Duke: ...If there is an effective herbal

alternative to

Viagra, I don’t know about it. but a lot of people are

looking. There

is

limited, perhaps speculative, evidence that garlic and

ginseng can

cause

the liberation of nitric oxide. Nitric oxide released

in the corpus

cavernosum is said to be part of the mechanism by

which viagra works.

Free arginine may trigger such a release of nitric

oxide. Sunflower is

a

generous source of arginine, but little if any of that

arginine is

free.

Garlic is one of our best sources of free arginine.

Viagra is also said

to work via phosphodiesterase inhibition.

Amentoflavone, a

phosphodiesterase inhibitor, is reported from ginkgo,

a reported aid to

impotence, and St. John’s wort. Recently at a talk in

Ogdensburg, New

York, I mentioned Epimedium, the horny goat weed, as

one candidate for

inclusion in an herbal approach to ‘viagroid’

activity....]

 

INSOMNIA

 

According to Lamberg (1997) ‘Nocturnal micturition,

pain, and

complaints

of sleeplessness were cited by 70% of families and

caregivers as the

key

factor in their decision to institutionalize an older

person. " Of 200

nursing home residents, they were rarely asleep for a

full hour and

rarely, if ever, awake for a full hour throughout the

24-hour day.

While

estrogen replacement therapy reduces hot flashes and

improves sleep,

fewer than 25% of women use it. And we read elsewhere

that most of

those

on ERT are looking for natural alternatives. Women who

do not suffer

hot

flashes, still experience more fragile sleep following

menopause.

Though

sleepdisturbed breathing seems not to be age-related

in men, it rarely

occurs in women until after menopause. Sleep apnea may

affect as many

as

24% of community- dwelling and 41% of

institutionalized geriatrics.

Sleep disordered breathing may increase risk for

cardiovascular and

cerebrovascular problems and deaths. Though people

over 65 comprise

only

13% of the US population, they receive 30% of

prescriptions for

hypnotics. Drivers over age 60 using long-acting

benzodiazepines -often

prescribed for insomnia or anxiety -had 30% more

injurious motor

vehicle

crashes than comparable drivers using short-term

benzodiazepines or not

taking such medications at all. Of 43 healthy but

sedentary adults 50

to

76 years old with moderate sleep complaints, those who

exercised fell

asleep faster, and reported higher sleep quality,

gaining about an hour

of sleep per day. " (Lamberg, 1997)

 

OBESITY

 

Go, Geriatric, Go with that exercise. (But don’t do it

strictly for

shedding pounds; see below) Russel and Mayer (1997)

note that between

1988 and 1991, Americans gained an average ofmore than

3.6 kg, with an

8% increase in the prevalence of obesity. " Exercise

increases energy

expenditure but, in so doing, also reduces the risk of

obesty-related

conditions: coronary artery disease, high blood

pressure, noninsulin

dependent diabetes mellitus, colon cancer, and

psychological

depression. " " ...Risk for developing coronary artery

disease by

physical

inactivity is as strong as that for smoking, high

blood pressure, or

high cholesterol. " (Russel and Mayer, 1997) ‘Currently

22.5% of the

U.S.

population is considered to be clinically obese -

compared to only

14.5%

in 1980. " (Taubes, 1998)

 

Obesity is not necessarily a disease of the elderly,

but obesity

aggravates almost all of the lethal problems of the

geriatric. " Many

studies have linked being overweight to increased risk

for heart

disease, diabetes, and cancer " , the big killers,

leading C. Everet Koop

" to declare an epidemic of obesity in the United

States " (Wickelgren,

1998). It is estimated that fat people are costing

citizens more than

70

billion in direct health care and indirect lost

productivity. Americans

spend 40 billion annually on weight loss, mostly in

diet and dietary

foods, an approach that is not working. Wickelgren and

the scientists

she quotes stress that exercise is the better half of

valor. I’m

researching this on my stationary bike, trying to ride

the ten miles

it’ll take to bum off that small dish of ice cream I

had following my

vegetarian soup and salad. There is also evidence that

high tryptophan

products like evening primrose seed may lead to more

serotonin in the

brain, sending the same satiety signals that Prozac is

alleged to send,

telling your obese body that you are not still hungry.

Exercise and a

high fiber low fat diet, coupled with herbs like aloe,

brindleberry,

bitter orange, celery seed, chickweed, dandelion,

evening primrose,

garlic, guarana, gugulipid, mate, peppermint, and St.

John’s Wort can

help those who are serious about losing weight

 

But no, Geriatric, Don’t overdo it on the slimming. It

may be too late

to lose weight hoping to add years! Better you had

never put on the

weight in your youth. Geriatrics often drop back into

nutritional

deficiencies because of less interest in eating. If

someone tells a

75year old geriatric to lose weight to gain years,

that geriatric could

challenge them with quotes from Science. " The link

between excess

weight

and increased risk of death apparently does not hold

for the elderly. "

Scientists found no increase in the death rate as BMIs

increased, even

to very high levels, for subjects 75 or older. A

number of prospective

epidemiological studies have shown that weight loss

actually increases

mortality. " ®ecommending weight loss is often futile

.. . . ©ritics

of obligatory weight loss favor emphasizing a

healthier lifestyle,

including exercise and an improved diet. Last year,

researchers

reported

that participants in the Dietary Approaches to Stop

Hypertension Trial

could lower their blood pressure within 2 weeks by

consuming more

fruits

and vegetables and less saturated fat - without losing

weight. "

(Wickelgren, 1998)

 

OSTEOPOROSIS

 

The more I read, the more I believe that several

legumes especially

those estrogenic-isoflavone containers like soy,

kudzu, licorice, and

red clover can help reduce the ravages of

osteoporosis. Much that has

been said positive about soy will apply to other food

grade legumes.

Soy

protein, in addition to lowering cholesterol, may

contribute to bone

health. Urinary calcium excretion can be an indicator

of bone mineral

density and calcium balance. Some people blame the

high rate of

osteoporosis in the west on the hypercalciuric content

of too much

animal protein. Compared to animal protein, soy

protein causes less

urinary excretion of calcium. Isoflavones may also

directly inhibit

bone

resorption. Many and more of those isoflavones can be

found in several

other species of more palatable legumes, thank

goodness. And as Tori

Hudson hints ‘Much like the drug Tamoxiphen has a

beneficial effect on

bone density with simultaneous antiestrogenic effects

in breast tissue,

medicinal and dietary phytoestrogens may offer these

same benefits. "

But

Hudson cautions: " evidence to support the use of

botanical medicines

that contain phytoestrogens for prevention and

treatment of

osteoporosis

is currently theoretical. " (They are effective in

relieving some of the

symptoms of menopause. Hudson, 1997) And the following

hints, as do

several studies, that some of genistein’s effects may

be reversed with

high doses. Anderson, Ambrose, and Garner (1995)

concluded that low

dose

genistein (1 mg/day, but not high-dose {10 mg/day})

acts similarly to

Premarin, administered orally at 5 ug/day in the feed

for preventing

bone loss in experimental rats.

 

On a more positive side, Holt stresses soy, while

phaseoliphile (bean

lover) Jim Duke thinks that many other legumes may be

satisfactorily

substituted for soy. " It is recognized that inclusion

of soy protein in

diets may promote calcium retention in the body.; .

(A)nimal protein

may

tend to increase urinary calcium excretion, and

increase uric acid

excretion. "

 

Dietary isoflavones (daidzein, genistein, glycitein)

" have been shown

to

be preventive and therapeutic in osteoporosis in

controlled studies in

animals and humans. " (Holt, 1998)

 

And Stakianos et al. (1997) say " The soy isoflavone

genistein ... has

recently emerged as an important dietary component

associated with many

health-related and clinical benefits. . . Much of this

development

occurred after the discovery that genistein is a

potent and specific

inhibitor of protein tyrosine kinase. . . As such it

is considered to

be

an important modulation of many mitogen-stimulated

signal-transduction

events ... Consumption of soy protein is associated

with a reduction in

the risk of several cancers . . and causes a reduction

in serum

hyper-cholesterol-emia in animals and in humans ...

(B)eneficial

effects

of soy are due to isoflavones... (A) synthetic

isoflavone, ipriflavone

(7isopropoxyiso-flavone) has been successfully used in

the treatment of

postmenopausal and senile osteoporosis. Genistein

administered in the

diet also prevents bone loss. " (Stakianos et al.,

1997)

 

Kudzu (Pueraria spp): Hudson (1997) cites in animal

studies showing

that

daidzein and genistein, both represented in kudzu root

and in soybean,

directly stop bone demineralization Kudzu root

reportedly contains 950

mg daidzein and 315 mg genistein. (Kaufmann et al.,

1997)

 

Stinging Nettle (Urtica dioica): As one of our best

sources of the

androgenic mineral boron, the folkloric aphrodisiac

fluorine, and as a

good source of calcium and silica, stinging nettle may

actually help

osteoporosis through both mineral and androgenic

activity. Hudson

(1997)

notes that in vitro androgens, like testosterone

(lower in

postmenopausal women with osteoporosis), stimulate

osteoblasts to

differentiate and proliferate. Androgen derivatives,

like anabolic

steroids, seem to increase bone density of the

forearm, femoral

diaphysis and vertebrae as well as elevate total body

calcium. Their

use

may also be associated with protection against

vertebral fractures.

Patients on a mix of estrogen and testosterone showed

increases in bone

density (2.5-5.7%), while it remained unchanged in

patients on just

estrogen (Hudson, 1997). But if we are to believe that

blocking the

conversion of testosterone to DHT helps prevent

osteoporosis (a mild

form of estrogenization), then we should also consider

saw palmetto as

a

candidate for osteoporosis.

 

SINUSITIS

 

I was surprised to find sinusitis ranking 7th in AOA`s

geriatric

survey.

But like allergic rhinitis, asthma, and hay fever,

sinusitis seems to

be

on the rise. There are several herbal crutches for

sinusitis, most of

them covered well by Yarnell (1998).

 

Coneflower (Echinacea spp.) Yarnell’s sinusitis

formula includes as its

most prominent ingredient Echinacea. His formula

consists of 20%

echinacea (angustifolia) root, 15% solidago shoot, 15%

yerba mansa

root,

10% sage, 10% eyebright, 10% horseradish. 10% ephedra

(or 5% more each

of sage and thyme), 5% bayberry bark and 5% thyme (1

tsp 3x day, or 1/2

tsp 6x day for 4-5 days). (Yarnell, 1998) Yarnell

notes that

echinacea’s

proof is in for cold and flu, but not yet proof for

sinusitis. But it’s

" immunologic effects are bound to be helpful for many

sinus sufferers. "

Attributing most of the activity (other than immune

stimulating

ability)

to ma huang, Yarnell notes that the alkaloids

ephedrine and

pseudoephedrine are perhaps the best known natural

drugs for allergic

rhinitis and sinusitis. ‘When used in isolation,

ephedrine has many

more

potential side effects than whole ephedra, as had been

confirmed in

human studies. " Functioning as an adrenergic agonist,

ephedra is

especially helpful with comorbid asthma or other

chronic bronchospastic

conditions. (Yarnell, 1998). Sad, the FDA seems poised

to take this

herb

(used medicinally for some 60,000 years) away from the

herbalist and

place reliance on the more risky silver bullet,

prescription strength

ephedrine. Ma Huang is reported to have killed some 30

people last

year,

but mostly people who were abusing it. I don’t know

how many people

were

killed by prescription grade ephedrine, being used

medicinally or being

abused, but the potential for abuse is clearly there.

It’s another

case,

though, where the whole herb seems safer and gender

than the isolated

silver bullet.

 

Elderberry (Sambucus spp.): Studies in Israel

demonstrate antiviral

activity of elderberry flower extracts. That, coupled

with the new

phytotherapy book out of Germany (Schulz et al., 1998)

leads me to add

elderberry to the list of promising herbal alternative

candidates for

sinusitis. Surprisingly the proprietary Sinuset for

Sinusitis (with 18

mg each elder flowers, European verbena, primrose

flowers and sorrel,

and 6 mg gentian root) is Germany’s most commonly

prescribed

medication.

Elder was approved by Commission E in 1994 for

treating " acute and

chronic inflammations of the paranasal sinuses " ,

available as coated

tablets since 1968 or hydro-ethanolic extracts. In

Germany elder flower

tea uses 150 ml boiling water over 2 tsp (3g) dried

flowers steeped for

5 minutes and strained. Drink 1-2 cups quite hot.

 

Garlic (Allium satimm): Dr. James Balch, MD,

Urologist, and his wife

Phyllis Balch, Certified Nutritional Consultant,

teamed up to prepare a

useful Prescription for Natural Healing wherein they

recommend garlic

(2

capsules a day) for sore throat, adding that sore

throat is typically

an

extension of the common cold, sinusitis, tonsillitis

or some other

viral

infection. Surely onion and garlic should also belong

in the same

category. Dr. Jane Guiltinan, ND, Chief Medical

Officer, Bastyr

University in Seattle, like me, prefers food grade

garlic to capsules,

or extracts. Garlic can improve the clinical status of

AlDs patients

fearing opportunistic infections, not the least among

them sinusitis.

(Hardy (1994) appropriately recommends garlic in the

diet or in the

capsule, noting that it is effective in bacterial

infections. With my

perverse affinity for alliterative license, may I

suggest my SINUSOUP,

an onion/ garlic soup heavy with all the hot spices:

chile, ginger,

horseradish, mustard seed, pepper and turmeric.

 

Goldenseal (Hydrastis canadensis): Naturopaths Murray

and Pizzorno

(1991) state strongly that goldenseal is the most

effective botanical

for acute bacterial infection. Hoffmann suggests that

goldenseal, the

double whammy for many infections, has anticatarrhal

activity. Hoffmann

recommends activities of three kinds, anti-catarrhal,

anti-microbial

and

decongestant. Hoffmann suggests drinking a cup of tea

every hour of 1

part each of echinacea, goldenrod, goldenseal, and

marshmallow leaf.

Naturopaths say the goldenseal activity is enhanced by

combining with

250-500 mg bromelain from pineapple. Though I enjoy

pineapple juice

more

than goldenseal, I’m still looking for the proof

behind this.

 

Nettle (Urtica dioica) More studied for allergic

rhinitis than

sinusitis, anti-inflammatory nettle should also

benefit the sinusitis,

according to Yarnell. I believe that nettle greens and

pot-likker (the

greenish broth or tea left after steeping the nettle

in hot water)

might

be as useful as freeze-dried extract, but so far there

have been no

clinical trials here in the US, except on freeze-dried

leaves. I’ll

provide 2 pounds of fresh leaves and 1 pound dried

leaf to any

physician

interested in comparing the two in his/her

rhinitic/sinusitic patients.

 

Sage (Salvia officinalis): Yarnell suggests the

antimicrobial

activities

of thyme and sage, the latter containing compounds

which arrest

staphylococcus, a germ often involved in late

sinusitis. Sage is also

beneficial as an antisialogogue (drying secretions)

(Yarnell, 1998)

 

References:

 

Balch, J., Balch P. 1990. Prescription for Natural

Healing. Avery

Publishing Group, Garden City Park, NY.

 

Banks, DO., Fossel, M. 1997. Telomeres, cancer, and

aging. JAMA.

278(16):1345-1348.

 

Block, G., Patterson, B. and Subar, A. 1992. Fruit,

Vegetables, and

Cancer Prevention: A Review of the Epidemiological

Evidence. Nutrition

and Cancer. 18(1): 1-29.

 

Brody, J. 1995. Scientist at Work - Bruce N. Ames

Strong Views on

Origins of Cancer. New York Times July 5, 1994. pp.

B8-9.

 

Buist, R. A. 1995. Thumbs Up to Quercetin. ICNR.

15(2):65.

 

Clark, F., et al. 1997. Occupational Therapy for

Independent-Living

Older Adults. A randomized controlled trial. JAMA.

278(16):1321-1326.

 

Finch, CE., Tanzi, RE. 1997. Genetics of aging.

Science 278:407-411.

 

Goldberg, B et al. (including hundreds of alternative

specialists, even

Jim Duke). 1993. Alternative Medicine: The Definitive

Guide. Future

Medicine Publishing, Inc. Puyallup, WA. 1068 pp.

 

Guiltnan, J. 1995. Medical Herbalism, {1 & 2}: p. 15

 

Heinerman, J. 1994. Heinerman’s Encyclopedia of

Healing Juices, Parker

Publishing Company, West Nyack, NY 10995, 303 pp.

 

Holt, S. 1998. Bone and joint health - Part 1 - The

optimal diet. Alt.

&

Compl. Therapies. 4(2): 101-107 Jim.

 

Hudson, T. 1997. Osteoporosis: an overview for

clinical practice. J.

Naturopathic Medicine. 7(1): 27-34.

 

Kaufman, P.B., Duke, J.A., Brielmann, H., Boik, J. and

Hoyt, JE. 1997.

A

Comparative Survey of Leguminous Plants as Sources of

the Isoflavones

Genistein and Daidzein: Implications For Human

Nutrition and Health.

Journal of Alternative & Complementary Medicine. 3(l):

7-12.

 

Lamaison, J.L., Petitjean-Freytet, C., Duke, J.A., and

Walker, J. 1993.

Hydroxycinnamic Derivative Levels and Antioxidant

Activity in North

American Lamiaceae. Plantes medicinales et

phytotherapie 26(2):143-148.

 

Lamberg, L. 1997. ‘Old and Gray and Full of Sleep? Not

Always " . JAMA

278(16):1302-1304.

 

Lamberts, S.W.J., van den Beld, A.W., van der Lely,

A.J. 1997. The

endocrinology of aging. Science 278:419-424.

 

Le Bars, PL., et al. 1997. A placebo-controlled,

doubleblind,

randomized

trial of an extract of Ginkgo biloba for dementia.

JAMA

278(16):1327-1332.

 

Murray, M. and Pizzorno, J., 1991. Encyclopedia of

Natural Medicine.

Prima Publishing, Rocklin, CA 95677, 622 pp.

 

Olshansky, SJ., Carnes, BA., Grahn, D. 1998.

Confronting the boundaries

of human longevity. American Scientist. 86(l):52-61.

 

Pennisi, E. 1998. Building a better aspirin. Science

280 (22 May,

1998);

p 1191-2.

 

Peters, R., Sikorski, R. 1997. Vintage Care.

Geriatrics resources on

the

Net. JAMA. 278(16): 1299-1300.

 

Russell, RM., Mayer, J. 1997. JAMA 277(23) 1876-1878

(Annual Contempo

Issue)

 

Schiffman, SS. 1997. Taste and smell losses in normal

aging and

disease.

JAMA. 278(16):1357-1362.

 

Schulz, V., Hansel, R. and Tyler, VE. 1998. Rational

Phytotherapy - A

Physician’s Guide to Herbal Medicine. 3rd ed. 1st

English Edition.

Translated by Terry C. Telger. Springer Verlag,

Heidelberg. 306 pp.

 

Shklar, G. 1996. Anticancer mechanisms of antioxidant

nutrients -

preliminary evidence of immunosurveillance, control of

genes and

angiogenesis. Alt. & Compl. Ther. 2(3):156-62.

 

Stakianos, J., Coward, L., Kirk, M. and Barnes, S.

1997. Intestinal

uptake and biliary excretion of the isoflavone

genistein in rats.

J.Nutr.127(7):1260-8.

 

Stavric, B. 1994. Quercetin in Our Diet: From Potent

Mutagen to

Probable

Anticarcinogen. Clin. Biochem. 27(4): 2358.

 

Taubes, G. 1998, As obesity rates rise, experts

struggle to explain

why.

Science. 280 (May 29): 1367-8.

 

Trefil, J. 1995. How the body defends itself from the

risky business of

living. (2nd Part of Risk)

 

Smithsonian (December): 42.

 

Werbach, M. R. and Murray, M. T 1994. Botanical

Influences on Illness,

Third Line Press, Tarzana CA. 344 pp.

 

Wickelgren, 1. 1998. Obesity how big a problem?

Science 280: 1364-7.

 

Yarnell, E. 1998. The botanical approach to chronic

sinusitis. Alt. &

Compl. Therapies. 4(2): 109-111.

 

Reprinted from Nature’s Herbs, " News from the herbal

village. " Vol.III,

Issue III.

 

James A. Duke is a Phi Beta Kappa graduate of the

University of North

Carolina. Following a 2 1/2 year tour of military

duty, he took his PhD

in Botany at the University of North Carolina, moving

on to

postdoctoral

activities at Washington University and the Missouri

Botanical Garden

in

St. Louis, Missouri, where he assumed professor and

curator duties,

respectively. Dr. Duke spends a significant amount of

his time

exploring

the ecology and culture of the Amazonian Rain Forest.

In addition to a

distinguished 30-year career with the United States

Department of

Agriculture (USDA), Dr. Duke sits on the board of

directors and

advisory

councils of numerous organizations involved in plant

medicine and the

rainforest.

 

Visit Jim Duke at the Nature’s Herb’s Web site:

 

http://www/naturesherbs.com

 

Questions for Dr. Jim Duke can be sent c/o Nature’s

Herbs, 600 East

Quality Drive, American Fork, UT 84003.

 

Dr. James Duke is also a regular guest on The Willner

Window radio

program.

 

The Willner Window airs every Sunday evening, from 8

to 10 pm, on WOR

Radio, 710 on the AM dial.

 

(you can listen to the radio show over the web at

www.broadcast.com/radio/talk/wor/)

 

 

 

 

AIM Barleygreen

" Wisdom of the Past, Food of the Future "

 

http://www.geocities.com/mrsjoguest/Diets.html

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Guest guest

In addition to fighting degenerative and autoimmune

diseases, and obesity, and promoting detoxification, I

also promote longevity. One of the scientisits

involved in developing my supplements from the very

beginning of the company is also the founder of a

famous longevity institute out in California (I can't

think of the name of it right now. I'm having a " chemo

brain " moment. Thanks again for sharing, Kel, and

caring!

 

Blessings, Renee

 

--- " Kelly W. " <kellykebby wrote:

 

> Longevity

>

> Longevity JoAnn Guest Jun 13, 2005 18:15 PDT

>

>

> by James Duke

> courtesy of " Herbal Village, " Nature’s Herbs.

> http://www.willner.com/article.aspx?artid=150

>

> At age 69, Father Time is telling me I’d best

> dedicate

> an issue to the

> problems of aging, especially since even the

> Journal.

> of the American

> Medical Association dedicated their Oct. 22/29, 1997

> issue to aging. As

> I heard on CNN News, 5:30 pm. May 24,1998, the

> twentieth century was

> the

> century of the juniors, the next century will be the

> century of the

> seniors. And this senior citizen hopes to five to

> see

> that new century

> and millennium with the help of my herbal crutches.

> The only medicine I

> invariably take daily at age 69 is celery seed

> extract, my herbal

> alternative for allopurinol. While I haven’t yet

> proved that the celery

> seed is hypouricemic (lowers levels of uric acid), I

> have been gout

> free

> in the two yearssince I abruptly switched from

> allopurinol to celery

> seed extract.

>

> But less regularly, and especially when I’m on the

> road, stressed and

> restaurant-fed, I have my regular travel kit of

> herbs,

> most devoted to

> problems more prevalent in the geriatric than the

> juvenile. In my

> carry-on suitcase, there’s bilberry (for failing

> eyesight), echinacea

> and garlic (for failing immune system, needing a

> boost

> to help me avoid

> the bugs on the road), pygeum and saw palmetto (for

> failing prostate),

> cranberry and/or bearberry (for failing urethra)

> milk

> thistle (to spare

> a busy liver on the road), ginkgo (for failing

> memory), St. John’s Wort

> (in case all these failing systems of the geriatric

> lead me into a

> depression; so far no), rosemary (for flagging CNS),

> turmeric,

> glucosamine and chondroitin (for failing joints),

> and

> sweet annie when

> venturing into malaria country. Yes, like some other

> geriatrics with a

> half dozen super pharmaceuticals, I have at least a

> half dozen herbs in

> my geriatric travel kit. I put a day’s capsule

> assortment into

> individual baggies, one for each day on the road, so

> as not to travel

> with all 612 bottles.

>

> GERONTOLOGY

>

> Even though records indicate that older people have

> always existed in

> human societies, survival beyond age 50 for most

> members of a

> population

> was a rare event until this century. Today, 95

> percent

> of all babies

> born in the developed world live past 50. Such

> unprecedented survival

> means that most of us will experience or at least

> witness senescence,

> that variety of physiological changes creeping up on

> me, that accompany

> the passage of time. Senescence on such a grand

> scale

> is new to the

> human race and may represent a unique phenomenon in

> the history of

> mankind. (Olshansky et al., 1998)

>

> According to Banks and Fossel (1997), no one has

> ever

> lived more than

> 122 years. Although the mean human fife span has

> increased

> significantly

> during the last 2 centuries, the maximum life span

> has

> not. I think

> herbs help more than the hitech longevity studies

> (or

> starvation). JAMA

> reports here, " Several laboratories have

> successfully

> extended the

> maximum life spans of at least 2 multicellular

> species

> genetically

> (Drosophila and Caenorhabditis elegans) and several

> more by dietary

> restriction. " Two gene mutations increase the

> maximum

> life span of C.

> elegans 6-fold, provoking the query of what might

> lie

> in store for

> clinical medicine. " Increased life span occurs

> predominantly through

> the

> genetic control of free radical metabolism. " That

> doesn’t exactly give

> us free license to promote our antioxidants as

> lifeextenders, but more

> people than JAMA have often said that oxidative

> damage

> is one of the

> most important causes of aging. Thus I will go so

> far

> as to say that

> antioxidants can slow the ravages of aging. I have

> always maintained

> that the synergistic mix of herbal antioxidants are

> better than any

> synthetic antioxidant in the long run. That’s what

> we

> geriatric

> longevity seekers are after. Synthetic antioxidants,

> like synthetic

> medicines, are not part of your evolutionary past

> and

> hence are much

> more likely to have serious side effects.

>

> The number of Americans 65 or older has risen from

> 3,100,000 (4% of the

> US population) in the early 1900s to over 33,000,000

> (nearly 13% of the

> population) in 1995. Over 17% of the American

> population will be

> elderly

> by the year 2020, and 42% of this group will be

> older

> than 75 years.

> The

> " oldest old " group (85 or older) will more than

> double

> in size by 2030

> and will nearly double again by 2050. If current

> trends persist, longer

> life spans may be accompanied by poorer

> health-related

> quality of

> life. "

> (Clark et al., 1997)

>

> Finch and Tanzi (1997) remind us that genes strongly

> influence the

> life-span and patterns of aging. Who knows why

> humans

> five five times

> longer than cats, cats live five times longer than

> mice, and mice live

> 25 times longer than fruit flies, or why the onset

> of

> Alzheimer’s

> disease (AD) often differs by many years in

> identical

> twins (Finch and

> Tanzi, 1997) Our society is experiencing

> unprecedented

> rates of

> survival

> into older ages, but this success has also been

> accompanied by a rise

> in

> frailty and disability in the general population.

> This

> is a consequence

> for which neither the medical community nor society

> was prepared as is

> witnessed by the ongoing national concern over

> crisis

> in the Social

> Security program, Medicare, Medicaid and health-care

>

=== message truncated ===

 

 

 

 

 

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