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How to Age Gracefully
From human growth hormone to immortal cells, Dr. Andrew Weil explains the science behind the process of aging and proffers his own prescription for living a longer and healthier life.
Healthy Aging: A lifelong guide to your physical and spiritual well-being
by Andrew Well, M.D., 304 pages, Knopf, $27.95
Dr. Andrew Weils Twelve-Point Program for Healthy Aging
1. Eat an anti-inflammatory diet.

2. Use dietary supplements wisely to support the body's defenses and natural healing power.

3. Use preventive medicine intelligently: know your risk of age-related disease, get appropriate diagnostic and screening tests and immunizations, and treat problems (like elevated blood pressure and cholesterol) in their early stages.

4. Get regular physical activity throughout life.

5. Get adequate rest and sleep.

6. Learn and practice methods of stress protection.

7. Exercise your mind as well as your body.

8. Maintain social and intellectual connections as you go through life.

9. Be flexible in mind and body: learn to adapt to losses and let go of behaviors no longer appropriate for your age.

10. Think about and try to discover for yourself the benefits of aging.

11. Do not deny the reality of aging or put energy into trying to stop it. Use the experience of aging as a stimulus for spiritual awakening and growth.

12. Keep an ongoing record of the lessons you learn, the wisdom you gain, and the values you hold. At critical points in your life, read this over, add to it, revise it, and share it with people you care about.
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Healthy Aging: A Lifelong Guide to Your Well-Being
Post Staff
For anyone who is getting older and would like to know if there is anything they can do about it, Dr. Andrew Weils latest book. Healthy Aging, offers some expert advice. America's best-known integrative medicine specialist and popular author has been delving into the growing field of biogerontology as well as the more visible but less conventional realm of antiaging medicine. What he has found may be disappointing to some--namely, that "at present there are no effective anti-aging medicines." This includes the much-hyped and expensive HGH (human growth hormone) treatments that have become a staple of anti-aging practitioners. HGH may provide temporary reversal of metabolic components of aging, Weil writes, but it comes with a significant risk of side effects, and there is a distinct possibility that HGH treatments could end up actually shortening life rather than extending it.

On the other hand, biogerontologists, working away in their laboratories, are reporting some initial successes in the fight against aging. Using various techniques, they have tripled the lifespans of nematodes by altering their genes and increased the lifespan of mice by 50 percent through calorie deprivation. Such research may someday lead to doubling of the human lifespan, but Weil believes widespread significant increases in longevity won't come in time for anyone now reading his book.

On the bright side, Weil focuses on two prominent theories of aging that have "practical import" in that they allow us to do something right now to help reduce our risk of age-related diseases that reduce lifespan. One has to do with the carmelization, or browning reaction, that makes cooked foods turn brown as a result of the interaction between proteins and sugars when heated. This process also takes place in our bodies, where it is called glycation. According to the theory, the waste products of these reactions inside our cells interefere with other proteins and with RNA and DNA, ultimately leading to sagging skin, chronic diseases, and other age-related conditions. Our high sugar and carbohydrate diets are helping feed this aging process.

The other aging theory is that of free radical damage in which oxidation in body cells leads ultimately to chronic disease. Eating a high-antioxidant diet with varied fruits and vegetables and taking multivitamins may help protect us in this regard.

Weil incorporates these theories in his Anti-Inflammatory Diet, which is aimed at countering inflammation that current research indicates may be the culprit in many chronic diseases, including cardiovascular disease. The science of nutrition is developing rapidly, he notes, but the new findings are not included in medical school curriculums, "leaving doctors functionally illiterate in this most important field." The Anti-Inflammatory Diet is part of Weirs Twelve-Point Program for Healthy Aging (right) that encompasses nutrition, physical activity, proper rest, and stress avoidance, as well as the preservation of mental ability and acuity as we age.

Weil writes with clarity, skill, and humor, and readers will come away with a real understanding of the biology and genetics that make us age, as well as a fuller appreciation of the contentment and reward that growing older has to offer.

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