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Page 20 - ரோஸ்வெல் பூங்கா விரிவான புற்றுநோய் மையம் News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Scientists predict the maximum human lifespan - and suggest 150 is the oldest age we ll EVER reach

Dozens of lines of health data from hundreds of thousands of volunteers to predict that humans can live to 150, according to the team from Gero, Singapore and Roswell Park in Buffalo New York.

The human lifespan probably tops out at 150 years, new research finds

Humans probably can t live longer than 150 years, new research finds CNET 2 days ago © Provided by CNET What s the longest we might live? Getty Images Science is once again casting doubt on the idea that we could live to be nearly as old as the biblical Methuselah or Mel Brooks famous 2,000-year-old man. New research from Singapore-base biotech company Gero looks at how well the human body bounces back from disease, accidents or just about anything else that puts stress on its systems. This basic resilience declines as people age, with an 80-year-old requiring three times as long to recover from stresses as a 40-year-old on average.

Gero scientists found a way to break the limit of human longevity

Credit: GERO PTE. LTD. The research team of Gero, a Singapore-based biotech company in collaboration with Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center in Buffalo NY, announces a publication in Nature Communications, a journal of Nature portfolio, presenting the results of the study on associations between aging and the loss of the ability to recover from stresses. Recently, we have witnessed the first promising examples of biological age reversal by experimental interventions. Indeed, many biological clock types properly predict more years of life for those who choose healthy lifestyles or quit unhealthy ones, such as smoking. What has been still unknown is how quickly biological age is changing over time for the same individual. And especially, how one would distinguish between the transient fluctuations and the genuine bioage change trend.

NCI-designated cancer centers call for action to get HPV vaccination back on track

 E-Mail IMAGE: HPV infection causes cells to undergo changes. If not treated these cells can, over time, become cancer cells. view more  Credit: National Cancer Institute Today, doctors and scientists across America at National Cancer Institute (NCI)-designated cancer centers and other organizations issued a joint statement urging the nation s health care systems, physicians, parents and children, and young adults to get the human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination back on track. Dramatic drops in annual well visits and immunizations during the COVID-19 pandemic have caused a significant vaccination gap and lag in vital preventive services among U.S. children and adolescents especially for the HPV vaccine. The pandemic also has exacerbated health disparities, leaving Black, Indigenous and other people of color; rural; and sexual minority adolescents at even greater risk for missed doses of this cancer prevention vaccine.

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