EMD Serono Launches One Million Euro Research Grant for Multiple Sclerosis Innovation

ROCKLAND, Mass., Oct. 11, 2012 /PRNewswire/ –EMD Serono, Inc., a subsidiary of Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany, announced today during the European Committee for Treatment and Research in Multiple Sclerosis (ECTRIMS) congress in Lyon, France, that the company has initiated a new global research award to improve understanding of multiple sclerosis for the ultimate benefit of patients.

(Logo: http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20101126/SF07905LOGO-a)

(Logo: http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20101126/SF07905LOGO-b)

The Grant for Multiple Sclerosis Innovation will award up to one million euros annually to fund innovative research into multiple sclerosis (MS) by academic researchers.Researchers can submit their project proposals via the program’s website, http://www.grantformultiplesclerosisinnovation.org, and awardees will be announced at next year’s ECTRIMS congress in Copenhagen.

“We are committed to driving innovative research to further contribute to our understanding of the disease and ultimately lead to new medical breakthroughs in multiple sclerosis,” said Annalisa Jenkins, Head of Global Drug Development and Medical for Merck Serono, a division of Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany. “While tremendous progress has been made over the years, we must continue to search for answers to important scientific questions in the field.”

Potential research topics which could be funded through the Grant for Multiple Sclerosis Innovation include MS pathogenesis, predictive markers for treatment response and potential new treatments.

This grant complements other existing programs like EMD Serono’s collaboration with the National Multiple Sclerosis Society, the FastFoward* collaborative fund.

The funds from the Grant for Multiple Sclerosis Innovation will be awarded by EMD Serono for projects based in the United States and Canada, and by Merck Serono to those based in the rest of the world.

For more information about the program, and to submit a scientific research project proposal, please visit http://www.grantformultiplesclerosisinnovation.org.

*For more details related to FastForward, please visit: http://www.nationalmssociety.org/fast-forward/index.aspx

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EMD Serono Launches One Million Euro Research Grant for Multiple Sclerosis Innovation

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Global Markets for Treatments for Syndromes of Dementia and Movement Disorders

NEW YORK, Oct. 11, 2012 /PRNewswire/ — Reportlinker.com announces that a new market research report is available in its catalogue:

http://www.reportlinker.com/p01009666/Global-Markets-for-Treatments-for-Syndromes-of-Dementia-and-Movement-Disorders.html#utm_source=prnewswire&utm_medium=pr&utm_campaign=Pathology

INTRODUCTION

This report explores present and future strategies within the neurodegenerative disorder market, which includes treatments and therapies for progressive dementia, progressive dementia with other neurological abnormalities and movement disorders. Market gains, setbacks and needs are discussed in this report. Comparisons, usage and the advantages and disadvantages of different types of technologies, including small molecules and monoclonal antibodies, are also presented in this report.

A detailed analysis of the structure of the syndromes of dementia and movement disorder industry has been conducted. Revenues are broken down by neurodegenerative disease and primary clinical/pathological feature. Sales figures are estimated for the five-year period from 2012 through 2017.

Applications for syndromes of dementia and movement disorder treatments, or therapeutic technologies, are also discussed separately in the report, with an emphasis on small molecule and monoclonal antibodies technology. The report also covers significant patents and their allotment in each category.

R&D spending, along with increasing competition, patent expiries and new technologies are taking the market in a new direction. Global market revenues increased from 2009 to 2011 and are expected to continue to show growth over the forecast period as new advances, launches and collaborations continue to influence the market. This study looks at most of the systems affected by these factors.

Acquisition strategies and collaborations by companies are also covered in this report. This study also discusses the strength and weaknesses of each type of technology in light of the new technologies, growing competition and changing customer needs.

Some of her other reports with BCC include Reagents for Chromatography; SpectroscopyAn Enduring Market; Advanced Drug Delivery SystemsTechnologies and Global Markets; Orthopedic Drugs, Implants and DevicesMedical Imaging Reagents and Analysis Equipment; Pharmaceutical Regulatory IndustryThe Dynamic Media, Sera and Reagent Market in Biotechnology; Contract Pharmaceutical Manufacturing, Research and PackagingGlobal Markets; Chiral TechnologyGlobal Markets; Autacoids and Related DrugsTechnologies and Global Markets; ContraceptivesTechnologies and Global Markets; Liver Disease TreatmentsThe Global Market; Hormone Replacement Therapies and Other Hormone TherapiesGlobal Markets; Cardiovascular MedicineDiagnostics, Drugs and Devices; and Cancer Therapies ? Technologies and Global Markets.

The lead consultant on this project is Ms. Ruma Chakravarty, who holds a master’s degree in biophysics. She has tremendous experience in market research, quality, process improvement and lean and six sigma concepts.

Continued here:
Global Markets for Treatments for Syndromes of Dementia and Movement Disorders

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http://www.longevitymedicine.tv/global-markets-for-treatments-for-syndromes-of-dementia-and-movement-disorders/

Global Markets for Treatments of Dementia and Movement Disorders — Focus on Movement Disorders

NEW YORK, Oct. 11, 2012 Reportlinker.com announces that a new market research report is available in its catalogue:

Global Markets for Treatments of Dementia and Movement Disorders — Focus on Movement Disorders http://www.reportlinker.com/p01009663/Global-Markets-for-Treatments-of-Dementia-and-Movement-Disorders—-Focus-on-Movement-Disorders.html#utm_source=prnewswire&utm_medium=pr&utm_campaign=Pathology

INTRODUCTION

STUDY OBJECTIVES

BCC’s goal in conducting this study is to provide an overview of the current and future characteristics of the global markets for treatments for syndromes of dementia and movement disorders. The key objective is to present a comprehensive analysis and the future direction of the market as it shapes drug and therapy development.

This report explores present and future strategies within the neurodegenerative disorder market, which includes treatments and therapies for progressive dementia, progressive dementia with other neurological abnormalities and movement disorders. Market gains, setbacks and needs are discussed in this report. Comparisons, usage and the advantages and disadvantages of different types of technologies, including small molecules and monoclonal antibodies, are also presented in this report.

A detailed analysis of the structure of the syndromes of dementia and movement disorder industry has been conducted. Revenues are broken down by neurodegenerative disease and primary clinical/pathological feature. Sales figures are estimated for the five-year period from 2012 through 2017.

Applications for syndromes of dementia and movement disorder treatments, or therapeutic technologies, are also discussed separately in the report, with an emphasis on small molecule and monoclonal antibodies technology. The report also covers significant patents and their allotment in each category.

REASONS FOR DOING THIS STUDY

Extensive research in the field of syndromes of dementia and movement disorders and company collaborations with research institutes have highlighted the importance of understanding the nature of these disorders. New technological developments are providing disease-modifying therapies for the late stages of the disorders. Collaborations between research institutes and pharmaceutical companies are on the rise as state-of-the-art technology is being explored to develop more efficient products and therapies. R&D spending, along with increasing competition, patent expiries and new technologies are taking the market in a new direction. Global market revenues increased from 2009 to 2011 and are expected to continue to show growth over the forecast period as new advances, launches and collaborations continue to influence the market. This study looks at most of the systems affected by these factors. Acquisition strategies and collaborations by companies are also covered in this report. This study also discusses the strength and weaknesses of each type of technology in light of the new technologies, growing competition and changing customer needs.

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Global Markets for Treatments of Dementia and Movement Disorders — Focus on Movement Disorders

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http://www.longevitymedicine.tv/global-markets-for-treatments-of-dementia-and-movement-disorders-focus-on-movement-disorders/

Global Markets for Treatments of Dementia and Movement Disorders — Focus on Progressive Dementia with Other …

NEW YORK, Oct. 11, 2012 /PRNewswire/ — Reportlinker.com announces that a new market research report is available in its catalogue:

Global Markets for Treatments of Dementia and Movement Disorders — Focus on Progressive Dementia with Other Neurological Abnormalities

http://www.reportlinker.com/p01009664/Global-Markets-for-Treatments-of-Dementia-and-Movement-Disorders—-Focus-on-Progressive-Dementia-with-Other-Neurological-Abnormalities.html#utm_source=prnewswire&utm_medium=pr&utm_campaign=Pathology

INTRODUCTION

STUDY OBJECTIVES

BCC’s goal in conducting this study is to provide an overview of the current and future characteristics of the global markets for treatments for syndromes of dementia and movement disorders. The key objective is to present a comprehensive analysis and the future direction of the market as it shapes drug and therapy development.

This report explores present and future strategies within the neurodegenerative disorder market, which includes treatments and therapies for progressive dementia, progressive dementia with other neurological abnormalities and movement disorders. Market gains, setbacks and needs are discussed in this report. Comparisons, usage and the advantages and disadvantages of different types of technologies, including small molecules and monoclonal antibodies, are also presented in this report.

A detailed analysis of the structure of the syndromes of dementia and movement disorder industry has been conducted. Revenues are broken down by neurodegenerative disease and primary clinical/pathological feature. Sales figures are estimated for the five-year period from 2012 through 2017.

Applications for syndromes of dementia and movement disorder treatments, or therapeutic technologies, are also discussed separately in the report, with an emphasis on small molecule and monoclonal antibodies technology. The report also covers significant patents and their allotment in each category.

REASONS FOR DOING THIS STUDY

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Global Markets for Treatments of Dementia and Movement Disorders — Focus on Progressive Dementia with Other …

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http://www.longevitymedicine.tv/global-markets-for-treatments-of-dementia-and-movement-disorders-focus-on-progressive-dementia-with-other/

Dementia care plan consultation

17 October 2012 Last updated at 03:26 ET

Plans to halve the number of hospital beds for people with dementia in the Harrogate area are to go out to public consultation.

The 32 inpatient beds for dementia patients are equally divided between Harrogate Hospital and Alexander House in Knaresborough.

The Tees, Esk and Wear Valleys NHS Foundation Trust plan to close all 16 beds in Knaresborough.

The trust said the plan was based on the changing needs of patients.

Under the proposals, the 16 beds at Alexander House would be closed but the unit would still offer respite care.

The trust said bed occupancy in Knaresborough had fallen and the environment at Harrogate hospital was more appropriate to treat patients with complex needs.

Savings generated by bed closure would enable the trust to “protect and invest” in community services as more people with dementia were being treated outside hospital, it said.

The Alzheimer’s Society said the trust should ensure services were sufficient to meet the needs of people at all stages of dementia.

A public consultation on the plans will run until January 2013.

Read more here:
Dementia care plan consultation

Source:
http://www.longevitymedicine.tv/dementia-care-plan-consultation/

Global Markets for Treatments of Dementia and Movement Disorders — Focus on Progressive Dementia

NEW YORK, Oct. 11, 2012 /PRNewswire/ — Reportlinker.com announces that a new market research report is available in its catalogue:

Global Markets for Treatments of Dementia and Movement Disorders — Focus on Progressive Dementia

http://www.reportlinker.com/p01009665/Global-Markets-for-Treatments-of-Dementia-and-Movement-Disorders—-Focus-on-Progressive-Dementia.html#utm_source=prnewswire&utm_medium=pr&utm_campaign=Pathology

INTRODUCTION

STUDY OBJECTIVES

BCC’s goal in conducting this study is to provide an overview of the current and future characteristics of the global markets for treatments for syndromes of dementia and movement disorders. The key objective is to present a comprehensive analysis and the future direction of the market as it shapes drug and therapy development.

This report explores present and future strategies within the neurodegenerative disorder market, which includes treatments and therapies for progressive dementia, progressive dementia with other neurological abnormalities and movement disorders. Market gains, setbacks and needs are discussed in this report. Comparisons, usage and the advantages and disadvantages of different types of technologies, including small molecules and monoclonal antibodies, are also presented in this report.

A detailed analysis of the structure of the syndromes of dementia and movement disorder industry has been conducted. Revenues are broken down by neurodegenerative disease and primary clinical/pathological feature. Sales figures are estimated for the five-year period from 2012 through 2017.

Applications for syndromes of dementia and movement disorder treatments, or therapeutic technologies, are also discussed separately in the report, with an emphasis on small molecule and monoclonal antibodies technology. The report also covers significant patents and their allotment in each category.

REASONS FOR DOING THIS STUDY

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Global Markets for Treatments of Dementia and Movement Disorders — Focus on Progressive Dementia

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http://www.longevitymedicine.tv/global-markets-for-treatments-of-dementia-and-movement-disorders-focus-on-progressive-dementia/

Modern humans found to be fittest ever at survival, by far

Modern humans have gotten incomparably good at survival, doing more to extend our lives over the last century than our forebears did in the previous 6.6 million years since we parted evolutionary ways with chimpanzees, according to a new study.

In fact, humans in societies with plentiful food and advanced medicine have surpassed other species used in life-extending medical research in stretching our longevity and reducing our odds of dying at every point along our ever-lengthening life spans, the study finds.

The research, published online Monday by the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, touches upon the hotly debated question of whether an upper limit to longevity is inscribed in our genes. It makes clear that life extension begins at birth, with a child born in the last four generations standing a better chance of being alive during infancy, adolescence, the reproductive years and after than in any of the 8,000 human generations that came before.

The study authors, from Germany's Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research, began by comparing people who have lived or now live in primitive hunter-gatherer societies around the globe in which life spans have been well documented with citizens of industrialized countries in Europe and Asia. A typical Swede, for instance, is more than 100 times more likely to survive to the age 15 than a typical hunter-gatherer. And a hunter-gatherer who has reached the ripe old age of 30 is about as likely to die in the following year as the world's champion of longevity a 72-year-old woman in Japan.

In evolution's actuarial table, the researchers wrote, "72 is the new 30."

The bulk of that progress has been made since 1800, when the average life span of a Swede at birth was 32. That is roughly on a par with the 31 years that the average hunter-gatherer can expect to live today.

By the year 1900, the average life span in Sweden had reached 52, and today it stands at 82 an increase of more than 150% in just over 200 years.

That puts to shame efforts to extend the lives of laboratory animals, the study authors noted. By inducing genetic mutations in various species, scientists have boosted the longevity of nematode worms by more than 100%, of fruit flies by about 85% and of mice by roughly 50%. Experiments in caloric restriction have also extended the lives of lab animals, but they also fall short of humans' real-world gains.

No species dramatizes the breathtaking rate of humans' life extension more than chimpanzees, mankind's closest relative. At any age, the life expectancy of a human in a hunter-gatherer society is closer to that of a chimp in the wild than it is to a modern-day resident of Japan or Sweden, according to the study.

The authors wrote that the rapid improvements in human survival could only be accounted for by environmental changes, including better nutrition and medical advances; changes in the genome accumulate far too slowly to explain the progress.

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Modern humans found to be fittest ever at survival, by far

Exercise Vital Sign Could Aid Treatment of Disease, Cut Healthcare Costs

ACSM Study: Asking patients about their exercise routine could improve care and treatment.

Indianapolis, IN (PRWEB) October 17, 2012

This research offers preliminary support that implementing an exercise vital sign in addition to the traditional vital signs pulse, blood pressure, temperature, and respirations in a large healthcare system is very possible and could offer many benefits as well as additional patient data, said the primary investigator, Karen Coleman, Ph.D., of Kaiser Permanentes Department of Research and Evaluation.

The authors reviewed data from April 2010 to March 2011 from more than 1.7 million outpatient visits to Kaiser Permanente Southern California. Kaiser Permanente began using the exercise vital sign in October 2009. Patients at Kaiser are routinely asked questions about their usual daily levels of activity and are assigned a minutes-per-week value based on their answer. Using a regression model, this study demonstrated that a greater disease burden increased the likelihood of physical inactivity among the sample patient population. As expected, researchers also found lower activity levels among patients who were older, obese or members of ethnic minorities.

There is no better indicator of a persons health and longevity than the minutes per week of activity a patient engages in, said Robert E. Sallis, M.D., one of the authors and also the chairman of the Exercise is Medicine advisory board. When incorporated in a healthcare setting, the exercise vital sign can be an important tool for prevention and management of disease.

The American College of Sports Medicine is the largest sports medicine and exercise science organization in the world. More than 45,000 international, national and regional members and certified professionals are dedicated to advancing and integrating scientific research to provide educational and practical applications of exercise science and sports medicine.

Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise is the official journal of the American College of Sports Medicine, and is available from Lippincott Williams & Wilkins at 1-800-638-6423. For a complete copy of the research paper (Vol. 44, No. 11, pp: 2071-2076) or to speak with a leading sports medicine expert on the topic, contact the Department of Communications and Public Information at 317-637-9200 ext. 133. Visit ACSM online at http://www.acsm.org.

The conclusions outlined in this news release are those of the researchers only, and should not be construed as an official statement of the American College of Sports Medicine.

Annie Spencer American College of Sports Medicine (317) 637-9200 Email Information

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Exercise Vital Sign Could Aid Treatment of Disease, Cut Healthcare Costs

Art gallery tours a treat for dementia patients

Tags: dementia, national gallery of australia, toowoomba regional art gallery

DEMENTIA care specialist Marjorie Crawford hopes residents from her memory support unit will soon be able to enjoy a National Gallery of Australia project in Toowoomba.

She will travel to Canberra with Toowoomba Regional Art Gallery education program co-ordinator Sue Lostroh tomorrow for a seminar on the National Gallery of Australia’s Outreach Program.

The program encourages local galleries to facilitate guided tours for people living with dementia.

Mrs Crawford, who is the clinical nurse consultant overseeing Blue Care’s Toowoomba memory support unit, said a trial visit to the Toowoomba Regional Art Gallery by patients in June was successful.

“It was just amazing to see the conversation it invoked,” Mrs Crawford said.

“That’s the thing about dementia; it is all about the here and now.

“It is that whole gallery experience that makes it so special.”

She said she hoped the specialised tours could become a regular occurrence.

“Hopefully, this seminar is another opportunity to talk about the program and how we can deliver it.”

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Art gallery tours a treat for dementia patients

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http://www.longevitymedicine.tv/art-gallery-tours-a-treat-for-dementia-patients/

Aubrey de Grey on Longevity Science

Here is a recently posted video in which SENS Foundation cofounder Aubrey de Grey discusses the mechanisms of aging and what to do about them:

Aubrey de Grey is a well-known researcher on the process of ageing.
He sees ageing as a disease and believes science will soon be able to slow it down so that we’ll have more time for science to advance even further so we can fix the cellular damages of ageing and – maybe one day – live forever.

“Live forever” is such a clumsy shortage for agelessness achieved through medical technology, given that you’d have to put in a lot of work to push much past a few thousand years in a human body – even with a risk function for fatal accidents that is small compared to the present day. But you can’t exactly stop people from using the phrase.

The video above was published by Basil Gelpke, who is also behind Human 2.0, a DVD release that examines the prospects for engineered longevity, among other topics of interest to transhumanists. It’s subtitled in German, but is English language:

The human being will be the first species able to understand its own blueprint. The rapidly increasing knowledge of genetics, nanotechnology, robotics, and AI will dwarf everything philosophers, scientists, science fiction writers and other visionaries have ever conceived. Human life without disease and possibly even without death doesn’t seem impossible anymore.

Source:
http://www.fightaging.org/archives/2012/10/aubrey-de-grey-on-longevity-science.php

Source:
http://www.longevitymedicine.tv/aubrey-de-grey-on-longevity-science/

Stem Longevity Research Links with BioProtein Technology – Renowned Partnership to Elevate Brand’s Innovative …

BioProtein Technology, a company that manufactures therapeutic proteins in the form of growth factors, has announced an alliance with Stem Longevity Research, a company partnered by Dr. Joseph Purita and CNC Reid Eckert.

(PRWEB) October 15, 2012

Stem Longevity Research has expertise in the medical applications of stem cells. Dr. Purita and Eckert will offer their high level of credibility to increase the exposure of BioProtein Technology's products on the part of physicians across the United States.

We are thrilled to welcome Dr. Purita and Reid Eckert to our team, as they are among the world's most respected stem cell researchers, said Paul Morave, National Sales Director for BioProtein Technology. With their endorsement of our products, we immediately gain a tremendous level of credibility in the eyes of doctors and medical professionals. Were very excited to begin our work with Stem Longevity Research and are looking forward to leveraging the knowledge they bring to our company.

Dr. Joseph Purita is one of the pioneers of PRP and stem cell injection research. His passion for stem cell research has helped him create the Institute of Regenerative and Molecular Orthopedics, where the standard is set for orthopedic stem cell treatments. Doctors from all over the world train in the use of PRP and stem cell treatment with Dr. Purita at the Institute.

Eckert specializes in the treatment of diseases and disorders for people of all ages. He is a certified nutritional counselor who is dedicated to bringing nutritional education and quality of life to those suffering from health challenges. Eckert also currently serves as a medical advisor for InHealth Media, a media and marketing firm that works with brands in the nutraceutical and sports nutrition industries.

BioProtein Technology offers a family of natural treatment therapies that combine the effective concepts of traditional medicine with modern technological breakthroughs. The company differentiates itself by dedicating unparalleled time and energy into a single raw material, giving its team complete top-down control of the manufacturing process.

The BioProtein Technology product line includes Velvet Antler Extract, which promotes anti-aging and naturally supports healthy cell regeneration and repair. This product balances hormones, modulates endocrine and immune systems and improves memory and cognition, among many other benefits. Other products include natural hormone and immune modulator Sub-L Tropin, topical anti-inflammatory solution Derma-T Tropin and Derma-T Tropin, an anti-aging skin care solution.

Its an honor to join the team of BioProtein Technology, a company that is doing groundbreaking work in creating top-quality alternative treatment products, said Eckert. Our goal is to significantly increase physicians awareness of this brand and the numerous benefits these products offer to individuals. Were very pleased to take part in what BioProtein Technology is doing for both doctors and their patients.

Stem Longevity Researchs work with BioProtein Technology will begin effective immediately. For more information, visit http://www.bioproteintech.com.

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Stem Longevity Research Links with BioProtein Technology - Renowned Partnership to Elevate Brand’s Innovative ...

Einstein Establishes the Paul F. Glenn Center for the Biology of Human Aging Research

BRONX, N.Y., Oct.15, 2012 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ --Albert Einstein College of Medicine of Yeshiva University has received a $3 million grant from the Glenn Foundation for Medical Research to establish the Paul F. Glenn Center for the Biology of Human Aging Research. The grant will fund research to translate recent laboratory and animal discoveries into therapies to slow human aging.

(Logo: http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20120531/DC16559LOGO)

Aging contributes to many of the debilitating and costly diseases including cancer, cardiovascular disease and diabetes that burden the United States and many other countries. This complex but universal condition causes individual cells and the body as a whole to decline in function. Finding the mechanisms that underlie the aging process may lead to treatments that slow aging, prevent or limit common diseases, and allow people to live healthier, longer lives.

"Unless we find protective mechanisms to delay aging, we will not make progress against age-related diseases," said Nir Barzilai, M.D., co-director of the new center as well as director of the Institute for Aging Research, the Ingeborg and Ira Leon Rennert Chair in Aging Research, and professor of medicine and of genetics at Einstein. "With this valuable grant from the Paul F. Glenn Foundation, we hope to make significant advances toward understanding the aging process and improving human health."

"The generosity of Paul F. Glenn and his foundation is a welcome shot in the arm for aging research in the United States, which is chronically underfunded," said Jan Vijg, Ph.D., co-director of the new center, the Lola and Saul Kramer Chair in Molecular Genetics, and professor and chair of genetics and professor of ophthalmology and visual sciences at Einstein. "This grant will help Einstein to maintain its position as one of the world's leaders in this rapidly growing field."

"Paul F. Glenn has been a visionary in aging research for more than 30 years," said Ana Maria Cuervo, M.D., Ph.D., co-director of the new center, the Robert and Renee Belfer Chair for the Study of Neurodegenerative Diseases, and professor of developmental and molecular biology, of anatomy and structural biology and of medicine at Einstein. "Some of us got to know him when we were still graduate students and he came to scientific conferences to see the data as it was being developed. Paul's personal approach to science has made a big difference to many of us in the field of aging research and has contributed to the career development of many young investigators."

The funding, in the form of pilot and feasibility study grants, is targeted to several specific research projects: uncovering the genetic and epigenetic mechanisms that protect humans against aging and age-related diseases, testing the effectiveness of the first-generation pro-longevity therapies, and developing novel preventive and therapeutic interventions against cellular aging in humans.

Drs. Barzilai and Cuervo are also co-directors of Einstein's Institute for Aging Research and, together with Dr. Vijg, of the Nathan Shock Center for the Basic Biology of Aging. Both centers are funded by the National Aging Institute, part of the National Institutes for Health.

Other Einstein researchers in the Paul F. Center for the Biology of Human Aging Research include Jill Crandall, M.D.; Mark Einstein M.D., M.S.; Claudia Gravekamp, Ph.D.; John Greally, M.B.B.Ch., Ph.D.; Meredith Hawkins, M.D.; Fernando Macian, M.D., Ph.D.; and Yousin Suh, Ph.D.

Founded in 1965 by Paul F. Glenn, The Glenn Foundation for Medical Research aims to extend the healthy productive years of life through research on the biological mechanisms of aging.

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Einstein Establishes the Paul F. Glenn Center for the Biology of Human Aging Research

A Cryonics Photo Essay at Wired

Wired is running a photo essay on cryonics, the low-temperature preservation technique that intends to preserve the structure of the mind sufficiently well for patients to be restored to life by future technology:

The Prospect of Immortality is a six-year study by UK photographer Murray Ballard, who has traveled the world pulling back the curtain on the amateurs, optimists, businesses and apparatuses of cryonics.

“It’s not a large industry,” says Ballard, who visited the Alcor Life Extension Foundation in Phoenix, Arizona; the Cryonics Institute in Detroit, Michigan; KrioRus in Moscow, Russia; and Suspended Animation Inc in Boytan Beach, Florida; among others.

Cryonics is the preservation of deceased humans in liquid nitrogen at temperatures just shy of its boiling point of -196°C/77 Kelvin. Cryopreservation of humans is not reversible with current science, but cryonicists hypothesize that people who are considered dead by current medical definitions may someday be recovered by using advanced future technologies.

Stats are hard to come by, but it is estimated there are about 2,000 people signed up for cryonics and approximately 250 people currently cryopreserved. Over 100 pets have also been placed in vats of liquid nitrogen with the hopes of a future recovery.

Link: http://www.wired.com/rawfile/2012/10/murray-ballard-cyronics/

Source:
http://www.fightaging.org/archives/2012/10/a-cryonics-photo-essay-at-wired.php

Source:
http://www.longevitymedicine.tv/a-cryonics-photo-essay-at-wired/

Noting Progress in Artificial Cornea Development

The development of artificial replacements proceeds in parallel with tissue engineering as a way to build replacement parts for damaged corneas. Here, publicity materials tout recent progress in artificial corneas:

ArtCornea is based on a polymer with high water-absorbent properties. [Researchers] have added a new surface coating to ensure anchorage in host tissue and functionality of the optic. The haptic edge was chemically altered to encourage local cell growth. These cells graft to the surrounding human tissue, which is essential for anchorage of the device in the host tissue. The researchers aimed to enlarge the optical surface area of the implant in order to improve light penetration beyond what had previously been possible … Once ArtCornea is in place, it is hardly visible, except perhaps for a few stitches. It’s also easy to implant and doesn’t provoke any immune response

The specialists have also managed to make a chemically and biologically inert base material biologically compatible for the second artificial cornea, ACTO-TexKpro. [They] achieved this by selectively altering the base material, polyvinylidene difluoride, by coating the fluoride synthetic tissue with a reactive molecule. This allows the patient’s cornea to bond together naturally with the edge of the implant, while the implant’s inner optics, made of silicon, remain free of cells and clear. The ACTO-TexKpro is particularly suitable as a preliminary treatment, for instance if the cornea has been destroyed as a consequence of chronic inflammation, a serious accident, corrosion or burns.

TexKpro and ArtCornea [were] first tested by the doctors in the [laboratory] in vivo in several rabbits. After a six month healing process, the implanted prostheses were accepted by the rabbits without irritation, clearly and securely anchored within the eye. Tests carried out following the operation showed that the animals tolerated the artificial cornea well. [Clinical trials will] soon commence at the Eye Clinic Cologne-Merheim.

Link: http://www.fraunhofer.de/en/press/research-news/2012/october/artificial-cornea-gives-the-gift-of-vision.html

Source:
http://www.fightaging.org/archives/2012/10/noting-progress-in-artificial-cornea-development.php

Source:
http://www.longevitymedicine.tv/noting-progress-in-artificial-cornea-development/

How Did Woman Live to 132?

Possibly the last person on the planet who knew the taste of the air in 1880 has died.

Antisa Khvichava, who claimed to be 132 years old, was enjoying her 47th year of retirement in Sachino, a remote village in the former Soviet republic of Georgia, when she passed away, according to a British newspaper, the Independent. If she was as old as she said, Khvichava would've been the oldest person to ever live.

Though a birth certificate and passport indicate Khvichava was born July 8, 1880, they are replacements of documents she had lost over the years, raising skepticism over her claim.

But science can't rule out her feat absolutely. If there's a maximum possible human age, it hasn't been found yet.

In 1798, the then-oldest verified person died at 103, according to the Gerontology Research Group. In 1997, France's Jeanne Calment, the current verified oldest, died at 122. [Infographic: Global Life Expectancy]

If Kvichava did, indeed, walk the Earth for well over a century, what did she do right?

Based on current science, the answer might be that, other than avoiding obvious physical threats, she didn't do much to earn her longevity.

Researchers at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine of Yeshiva University showed last year that, among a studied population of people older than 95, bad health habits such as smoking, drinking, poor diet and lack of exercise were about as common as in the general population, meaning their longevity seemed to be largely based on genes.

But this does not mean the general population should abandon healthy living and adopt a doctrine of genetic fatalism. Rather, that study and others suggest longevity outliers like Kvichava, a reported daily brandy drinker, have rare genetic protections that transcend unhealthy habits, propelling them into very old age in spite of lifestyle.

For people who aren't prepared to take a gamble that they're genetically predisposed to break 100 (the 2010 Census counted 53,364 centenarians in the United States), the famously abstemious and healthy-living Seventh-Day Adventists seem to hint at a practical regimen for increasing lifespan.

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How Did Woman Live to 132?

Shared Mechanisms for Longevity via Calorie Restriction and AC5 Knockout

One of the handful of genetic alterations shown to extend life in mice is removal of adenylyl cyclase 5 (AC5). Researchers have noted in the past that this seems to share mechanisms with the longevity induced by calorie restriction – indeed, it is suspected that many of the varied known ways of altering laboratory animals to extend healthy life are in fact different methods to activate the same few base changes in metabolism. Here is another paper on this topic:

Adenylyl cyclase type 5 knockout mice (AC5 KO) live longer and are stress resistant, similar to calorie restriction (CR). AC5 KO mice eat more, but actually weigh less and accumulate less fat compared to [wild type] mice. CR applied to AC5 KO result in rapid decrease in body weight, metabolic deterioration and death. These data suggest that despite restricted food intake in CR, but augmented food intake in AC5 KO, the two models affect longevity and metabolism similarly.

To determine shared molecular mechanisms, mRNA expression was examined genome-wide for brain, heart, skeletal muscle and liver. Significantly more genes were regulated commonly rather than oppositely in all the tissues in both models, indicating commonality between AC5 KO and CR.

Gene Ontology analysis identified many significantly regulated, tissue-specific pathways shared by the two models, including sensory perception in heart and brain, muscle function in skeletal muscle, and lipid metabolism in liver. Moreover, when comparing gene expression changes in the heart under stress, the glutathione regulatory pathway was consistently upregulated in the longevity models but downregulated with stress. In addition, AC5 and CR shared changes in genes and proteins involved in the regulation of longevity and stress resistance, including Sirt1, ApoD and olfactory receptors in both young and intermediate age mice. Thus, the similarly regulated genes and pathways in AC5 KO and CR [suggest] a unified theory for longevity and stress resistance.

Link: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23020244

Source:
http://www.fightaging.org/archives/2012/10/shared-mechanisms-for-longevity-via-calorie-restriction-and-ac5-knockout.php

Source:
http://www.longevitymedicine.tv/shared-mechanisms-for-longevity-via-calorie-restriction-and-ac5-knockout/

A Speculative Order of Arrival for Important Rejuvenation Therapies

A toolkit for producing true rejuvenation in humans will require a range of different therapies, each of which can repair or reverse one of the varied root causes of degenerative aging. Research is underway for all of these classes of therapy, but very slowly and with very little funding in some cases. The funding situation spans the gamut from that of the stem cell research community, where researchers are afloat in money and interest, to the search for ways to break down advanced glycation endproducts (AGEs), which is a funding desert by comparison, little known or appreciated outside the small scientific community that works in that field.

While bearing in mind that progress in projects with little funding is unpredictable in comparison to that of well-funded projects, I think that we can still take a stab at a likely order of arrival for various important therapies needed to reverse aging. Thus an incomplete list follows, running from the earliest to the latest arrival, with the caveat that it is based on the present funding and publicity situation. If any one of the weakly funded and unappreciated lines of research suddenly became popular and awash with resources, it would probably move up in the ordering:

1) Destruction of Senescent Cells

Destroying specific cells without harming surrounding cells is a well-funded line of research thanks to the cancer community, and the technology platforms under development can be adapted to target any type of cell once it is understood how to target its distinctive features.

The research community has already demonstrated benefits from senescent cell destruction, and there are research groups working on this problem from a number of angles. A method of targeting senescent cells for destruction was recently published, and we can expect to see more diverse attempts at this in the next few years. As soon as one of these can be shown to produce benefits in mice that are similar to the early demonstrations, then senescent cell clearance becomes a going concern: something to be lifted from the deadlocked US regulatory process and hopefully developed quickly into a therapy in Asia, accessed via medical tourism.

2) Selective Pruning and Support of the Immune System

One of the reasons for immune system decline is crowding out of useful immune cells by memory immune cells that serve little useful purpose. Here, targeted cell destruction can also produce benefits, and early technology demonstrations support this view. Again, the vital component is the array of mechanisms needed to target the various forms of immune cell that must be pruned. I expect the same rising tide of technology and knowledge that enables senescent cell targeting will lead to the arrival of immune cell targeting on much the same schedule.

Culling the immune system will likely have to be supported with some form of repopulation of cells. It is already possible to repopulate a patient’s immune system with immune cells cultivated from their own tissues, as demonstrated by the limited number of full immune system reboots carried out to cure autoimmune disorders. Alternatives to this process include some form of tissue engineering to recreate the dynamic, youthful thymus as a source of immune cells – or more adventurous processes such as cultivating thymic cells in a patient’s lymph nodes.

3) Mitochondrial Repair

Our mitochondria sabotage us. There’s a flaw in their structure and operation that causes a small but steadily increasing fraction of our cells to descend into a malfunctioning state that is destructive to bodily tissues and systems.

There are any number of proposed methods for dealing with this component of the aging process – either repairing or making it irrelevant – and a couple are in that precarious state of being just a little more solidity and work away from the point at which they could begin clinical development. The diversity of potential approaches in increasing too. Practical methods are now showing up for ways to put new mitochondria into cells, or target arbitrary therapies to the interior or mitochondria. It all looks very promising.

Further, the study of mitochondria is very broad and energetic, and has a strong presence in many areas of medicine and life science research. While few groups in the field are currently engaged in work on mitochondrial repair, there is an enormous reservoir of potential funding and workers awaiting any method of repair shown to produce solid results.

4) Reversing Stem Cell Aging

The stem cell research field is on a collision course with the issue of stem cell aging. Most of the medical conditions that are best suited to regenerative medicine, tissue engineering, and similar cell based therapies are age-related, and thus most of the patients are old. In order for therapies to work well, there must be ways to work around the issues caused by the aged biochemistry of the patient. To achieve this end, the research community will essentially have to enumerate the mechanisms by which stem cell populations decline and fail with age, and then reverse their effects.

Where stem cells themselves are damaged by age, stem cell populations will have to be replaced. This is already possible for many different types of stem cell, but there are potentially hundreds of different types of adult stem cell – and it is too much to expect for the processes and biochemistry to be very similar in all cases. A great deal of work will remain to be accomplished here even after the first triumphs involving hearts, livers, and kidneys.

Much of the problem, however, is not the stem cells but rather the environment they operate within. This is the bigger challenge: picking out all the threads of signalling, epigenetic change, and cause and effect that leads to quieted and diminished stem cell populations – and the resulting frailty as tissues are increasingly poorly supported. This is a fair sized task, and little more than inroads have been made to date – a few demonstrations in which one stem cell type has been coerced into acting with youthful vigor, and a range of research on possible processes and mechanisms to explain how an aging metabolism causes stem cells to slow down and stop their work.

The stem cell research community is, however, one of the largest in the world, and very well funded. This is a problem that they have to solve on the way to their declared goals. What I would expect to see here is for a range of intermediary stopgap solutions to emerge in the laboratory and early trials over the next decade. These will be limited ways to invigorate a few aged stem cell populations, intended to be used to boost the effectiveness of stem cell therapies for diseases of aging.

Any more complete or comprehensive solution for stem cell aging seems like a longer-term prospect, given that it involves many different stem cell populations with very different characteristics.

5) Clearing Advanced Glycation Endproducts (AGEs)

AGEs cause inflammation and other sorts of mischief through their presence, and this builds up with age. Unfortunately, research on breaking down AGEs to remove their contribution to degenerative aging has been a very thin thread indeed over the past few decades: next to no-one works on it, despite its importance, and very little funding is devoted to this research.

Now on the one hand it seems to be the case that one particular type of AGE – glucosepane – makes up 90% or more the AGEs in human tissues. On the other hand, efforts to find a safe way to break it down haven’t made any progress in the past decade, though a new initiative was launched comparatively recently. This is an excellent example of how minimally funded research can be frustrating: a field can hover just that one, single advance away from largely solving a major problem for years on end. All it takes is the one breakthrough, but the chances of that occurring depend heavily on the resources put into the problem: how many parallel lines of investigation can be followed, how many researchers are working away at it.

This is an excellent candidate for a line of research that could move upward in the order of arrival if either a large source of funding emerged or a plausible compound was demonstrated to safely and aggressively break down glucospane in cell cultures. There is far less work to be done here than to reverse stem cell aging, for example.

6) Clearing Aggregates and Lysomal Garbage

All sorts of aggregates build up within and around cells as a result of normal metabolic processes, causing harm as they grow, and the sheer variety of these waste byproducts is the real challenge. They range from the amyloid that features prominently in Alzheimer’s disease through to the many constituents of lipofuscin that clog up lysosomes and degrade cellular housekeeping processes. At this point in the advance of biotechnology it remains the case that dealing with each of the many forms of harmful aggregate must be its own project, and so there is a great deal of work involved in moving from where we stand today to a situation in which even a majority of the aggregates that build up with age can be removed.

The most promising lines of research to remove aggregates are immunotherapy, in which the immune system is trained or given the tools to to consume and destroy a particular aggregate, and medical bioremediation, which is the search for bacterial enzymes that can be repurposed as drugs to break down aggregates within cells. Immunotherapy to attack amyloid as a treatment for Alzheimer’s is a going concern, for example. Biomedical remediation is a younger and far less funded endeavor, however.

My expectation here is that some viable therapies for some forms of unwanted and harmful metabolic byproducts will emerge in the laboratory over the next decade, but that will prove to be just the start on a long road indeed. From here it’s hard for me to guess at where the 80/20 point might be in clearing aggregates: successfully clearing the five most common different compounds? Or the ten most common? Or twenty? Lipofuscin alone has dozens of different constituent chemicals and proteins, never mind the various other forms of aggregate involved in specific diseases such as Alzheimer’s.

But work is work: it can be surmounted. Pertinently, and again, the dominant issue in timing here is the lack of funding and support for biomedical remediation and similar approaches to clearing aggregates.

Source:
http://www.fightaging.org/archives/2012/10/a-speculative-order-of-arrival-for-important-rejuvenation-therapies.php

Source:
http://www.longevitymedicine.tv/a-speculative-order-of-arrival-for-important-rejuvenation-therapies/

Pig cell Parkinson’s treatment okayed

Pig cells will be transplanted into the brains of New Zealanders with Parkinson’s disease as part of an experimental treatment of the neurological disorder.

Kiwi scientists will undertake the clinical trial after Living Cell Technologies, which has its research and development based in this country, got the go-ahead to test the treatment in humans next year.

Government approval was given this week for the trial.

‘Receiving regulatory approval to conduct clinical trials is a critical step in developing a treatment for this debilitating condition,’ said the company’s chief executive Andrea Grant said in a statement.

She says pre-clinical trials suggest the treatment, known as NTCELL, can protect brain tissue which would otherwise die, potentially delaying or preventing the effects of Parkinson’s.

Only those who have been diagnosed with the neurodegenerative disease for at least four years will be part of the study, which will last for up to 60 weeks.

The trial will involve patients getting either the pig cells or the current gold standard of treatment – deep brain stimulation.

The leader of Auckland District Health Board’s movement disorder clinic, Barry Snow, will oversee the trial.

‘This represents an exciting new potential option for patients,’ Dr Snow said.

Pre-clinical studies had shown improvement in movement and neurological defects and a rise in dopamine-producing neurons within two weeks of treatment.

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Pig cell Parkinson's treatment okayed

Source:
http://www.longevitymedicine.tv/pig-cell-parkinsons-treatment-okayed/

RBCC: NASA Bioreactor Could Speed Parkinson’s Research

NOKOMIS, Fla.–(BUSINESS WIRE)–

Stem cell research may hold the key to a cure for Parkinsons disease. The only problem is, stem cell research hasnt advanced as quickly as patients need it to. Rainbow BioSciences, the biotech subsidiary of Rainbow Coral Corp. (RBCC) is working to market an advanced stem cell growth solution that could potentially energize the worldwide search for a cure.

Currently, government restrictions and ethical dilemmas serve as roadblocks to fast-paced stem cell research, but even when these roadblocks are absent, controlling the behavior of stem cells in a laboratory isnt easy. One way to help speed research projects up and make them more efficient is to raise the number of high-quality adult stem cells available for that research.

RBCC is working to do just that. The company has engaged Regenetech in discussions regarding the potential acquisition of a license to perform cell expansion using that companys Rotary Cell Culture SystemTM.

Originally developed by NASA, the Rotary Cell Culture SystemTM is a rotating-wall bioreactor designed to facilitate the growth of human cells in simulated weightlessness. Cell cultures, including stem cells, grown inside the bioreactor look and function much closer to human cells grown within the body than the flat cell cultures grown in Petri dishes.

By bringing the bioreactor to emerging research markets where stem cell research faces fewer roadblocks, RBCC hopes to help kickstart billions of dollars worth of research into possible cures for Parkinsons and other neurological disorders.

RBCC plans to offer new technology to compete in the stem-cell research industry alongside Amgen, Inc. (AMGN), Celgene Corporation (CELG), Genzyme Corp. (NASDAQ:GENZ) and Gilead Sciences Inc. (GILD).

For more information on Rainbow BioSciences, please visit http://www.rainbowbiosciences.com/investors.html.

About Rainbow BioSciences

Rainbow BioSciences, LLC, is a wholly owned subsidiary of Rainbow Coral Corp. (OTCBB:RBCC). The company continually seeks out new partnerships with biotechnology developers to deliver profitable new medical technologies and innovations. For more information on our growth-oriented business initiatives, please visit our website at [http://www.RainbowBioSciences.com]. For investment information and performance data on the company, please visit http://www.RainbowBioSciences.com/investors.html.

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RBCC: NASA Bioreactor Could Speed Parkinson’s Research

Source:
http://www.longevitymedicine.tv/rbcc-nasa-bioreactor-could-speed-parkinsons-research/

Chinese flock to see centenarians, help drive tourism

Beijing, Oct 8 (IANS) More than 180,000 tourists have visited a remote mountainous county in China famous for having the most centenarians in the country. Officials hope to cash in on the phenomenon to drive up tourism and help reduce poverty in the area.

The people visited the Bama county in Hechi city of Guangxi Zhuang region to experience its "local longevity culture", Xinhua news agency reported.

Bama, predominately inhabited by the ethnic Yao group, is recognised by the International Natural Medicine Society as the "hometown of longevity".

The county now boasts 73 centenarians and 252 people over 90 years of age. The ratio of centenarians is 30.8 per 100,000, which exceeds the international standard of 25 per 100,000.

Li Meixiao, director of a tourism group, attributed the county's growing popularity to tourists' changing tastes.

Many people come "with a wish to see the centenarians in person, taste what these centenarians have every day and breath in the fresh air we have", he said.

Wang Jun, a 60-year-old tourist, said: "The germ-killing negative oxygen ions in the air here are much more than that in scenic spots where it is jam-packed with people. Staying here is much healthier."

With the influx of tourists, rural inns are providing a new source of income to the Bama people, who previously depended on farmland for food.

Official statistics showed that in 2011, the Pona village received 273,000 tourists and took an aggregate tourism revenue of 64.3 million yuan. According to the city's blueprint, by 2015, rural tourism will create 200,000 jobs, and more than five million tourists will visit annually.

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Chinese flock to see centenarians, help drive tourism