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Cut calories, look younger
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Trimming a few calories in the daily diet could lessen the effects of aging
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LIMIT YOUR INTAKE It is good for your waist as well as your liver
A lifelong habit of trimming just a few calories from the daily diet can do more than slim the waistline, as a new study has shown that it may help lessen the effects of aging.
Scientists from the University of Florida's Institute on Aging have found that eating a little less food and exercising a little more over a lifespan can reduce or even reverse aging-related cell and organ damage in rats.
The discovery, described in the journal Antioxidants and Redox Signaling, builds on recent research in animals and humans that has shown a more drastic 20 per cent to 40 per cent cut in calories slows aging damage. The UF findings indicate even small reductions in calories could have big effects on health and shed light on the molecular process responsible for the phenomenon, which until now has been poorly understood.
"This finding suggests that even a slight moderation in intake of calories and a moderate exercise programme is beneficial to a key organ such as the liver, which shows significant signs of dysfunction in the aging process," said Christiaan Leeuwenburgh, Ph.D., an associate professor of aging and geriatric research at the UF College of Medicine and the paper's senior author.
UF scientists found that feeding rats just 8 per cent fewer calories a day and moderately increasing the animals' activity extended their average lifespan and significantly overturned the health.
An 8 per cent reduction is the equivalent of a few hundred calories in an average human diet and moderate exercise is equivalent to taking a short walk.
To reveal the workings of the body's chemical climate when aging-related damage happens, UF researchers tracked levels of biomarkers chemicals and molecules present in the liver in groups of rats.
The liver, a crucial organ for maintaining good health during aging, cleans the blood and helps regulate the body's immune system.
The researchers also plan to assess the same biomarkers in a study of rats' hearts, muscle and brains. (ANI)
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