Every day or so you can find an announcement or product launch - real or shaman-like - in the anti-aging field. For those who take this work seriously it appears to be a roller coaster ride reflecting on information grounded in real science versus commercial nonsense.
Two articles caught my attention on how science and pseudo-science merge in this billion-dollar arena. The first is about a dietary supplement called Telomorase Activator with published research in the scientific journal Rejuvenation Research. The product's researchers believe their magic bullet may help reverse the aging process by lengthening telomeres — the caps on the ends of chromosomes that keep DNA intact as cells divide. Click to read read more.
Additionally, there is an interesting article on prweb.com about a company, Growth Hormone Direct, who report a rise in the elderly buying human growth hormone.
Two articles caught my attention on how science and pseudo-science merge in this billion-dollar arena. The first is about a dietary supplement called Telomorase Activator with published research in the scientific journal Rejuvenation Research. The product's researchers believe their magic bullet may help reverse the aging process by lengthening telomeres — the caps on the ends of chromosomes that keep DNA intact as cells divide. Click to read read more.
Additionally, there is an interesting article on prweb.com about a company, Growth Hormone Direct, who report a rise in the elderly buying human growth hormone.