Andrew Huberman· PhD
listen our organs don't all age at the same rate just like most people eventually die because some organ goes first and then it cascades into other things.
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.
listen our organs don't all age at the same rate just like most people eventually die because some organ goes first and then it cascades into other things.
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what uh researchers have discovered and this was first I think Monica Driscoll uh was the first to show in worms that when she looked at at the ultraructural level that some of these organs in the worm seem to look more aged than others and over the years now we have molecular tools where we can look at a single cell level or within an organ. And what we clearly see is that organs and cells within uh an organism can have slightly different rates of aging.
The body’s organs and biological processes begin accumulating aging damage at different ages and speeds.
different organs age at different at different rates