Most readers of this blog are
familiar with assorted advice on how to age well. But if I asked you to name
the two most important lifestyle influences on aging, in two words, could you
do it?
The answer is (drum roll please): diet and exercise. Both
animal and human research confirm the major role of diet and exercise.
Fortunately, we have control over both of these factors, yet sadly neglect to
eat and exercise as properly as we should.
A prime example is the popularity of fast-food meals. They
are typically loaded with calories, saturated fat, preservatives, and salt.
Mice fed on a fast-food diet developed nearly triple their amount of body fat
in just four months. Other mice that were given access to an exercise wheel
benefitted from the exercise. Those that were on a fast-food diet gained more
weight and fat mass than their counterparts that could exercise. The exercise
also reduced the development of senescent cells, which are cells that lose
their ability divide and replace themselves. As impaired ability to divide
happens in organs like the liver, lungs, immune cells, and gut, it promotes
development of disease. Normally, the cell turnover time needs to occur:
·
every 10 days for immune cells in the blood and
cells in the lungs and gut
·
every month for pancreas cells, skin, and
certain bone cells
·
every year for liver cells
You might think that turnover could yield new replacement
cells that are more healthy, assuming that a person improved their diet and exercised
more. It is certain that precursor cells, once damaged, have been tagged with
epigenetic changes that transfer the damage to new replacements.
So what makes a good diet? Eat more foods containing omega-3
fat (a special kind of unsaturated fat found in fish (especially sardines and
salmon), shrimp, canola and soybean oil, walnuts, and to a lesser extent, green
leafy vegetables. Pill-form supplements are widely available.
Eat a wide variety of foods high in anti-oxidants (most
foods have different chemical varieties of anti-oxidants). This includes citrus
fruits (vitamin C), brightly colored berries (especially blueberries), dark
grapes, red wine (resveratrol), nuts, dark green veggies, beans, coffee, and
tea. Vitamin D supplements in moderate
dose are probably a good idea too, because this vitamin confers many health
benefits even though it is not a primary anti-oxidant.
As for exercise, you don't have to be a marathon runner. In
fact, some research shows that marathon-level exercise is actually harmful.
Various recommendations have been made, but the consensus advice seems to be
combined aerobic and strength building exercises at least three times a week,
lasting 30 minutes to an hour.
Why exercise improves health is not entirely clear, but the
evidence is consistently clear. Exercise certainly reduces emotional stress,
which in itself is a major source of poor health. The effects on circulation
and heart function are readily demonstrated. In my own case when I was 35,
during the first weeks after I stopped smoking and started jogging, it would
take a full 15 minutes to get my breath back to normal after a jog. Within a
few months, I could recover in less than a minute. I no longer recommend
jogging, because for some people it will damage joints. But plenty of aerobic
forms of exercise can substitute (biking, rowing, use of ellipticals, swimming,
singles tennis or handball, even vigorous walking). Most commercial gyms have stationary bikes,
treadmills, and elliptical and rowing machines.
So you only have to remember two words to know how to age
well. The problem is mustering the will power to eat right and exercise.
Sources:
http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/308046.php
http://www.nature.com/nrm/journal/v8/n9/full/nrm2233.html
http://book.bionumbers.org/how-quickly-do-different-cells-in-the-body-replace-themselves/
Documentation and
further explanation on aging well is found in Dr. Bill's inexpensive e-book, Improve Your Memory for a Healthy Brain.
Memory Is the Canary in Your Brain's Coal Mine. The book is available in
all formats from Smashwords.com.
A positive attitude is also essential to help you in aging well in a positive way.
ReplyDeleteStudent Accommodation Liverpool
Good article, touches important health issues. Healthy diet and sport activity are both essential. There is also the alternative kind of eating which has already brought the health of many people on a totally new level. So called strict vegetarianism, also known as veganism does a good job reducing cholesterol,cleaning the body from chemiacals and toxins, and fills it with all sorts of vitamins and nutrients. The advantages are limitless. Such a diet can help people recover from many diseases and live longer feeling sound health. If you got interested, this source will provide you with more information https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Veganism#Health_effects
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