Peter Attia· MD
caloric restriction seems to delay delay prevent those declines as well
The evidence is convergent. Multiple independent sources reach the same conclusion, the underlying mechanism is well-characterized, and even the field's most cautious voices treat it as worth doing.
caloric restriction seems to delay delay prevent those declines as well
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what i would say is you know mice do develop functional declines in every tissue and organ as they age very much like people do so you know a person may die from cardiovascular disease but at the same time if they're in their 80s their kidney isn't functioning as well their heart isn't functioning as well their brain probably isn't functioning as well so mice show all of those
mice do develop functional declines in every tissue and organ as they age very much like people do
mice do develop functional declines in every tissue and organ as they age very much like people do so you know a person may die from cardiovascular disease but at the same time if they're in their 80s their kidney isn't functioning as well their heart isn't functioning as well their brain probably isn't functioning as well so mice show all of those same declines in function with age
what I would say is you know mice do develop functional declines in every tissue and organ as they age very much like people do
caloric restriction seems to delay out prevent those declines as well