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Scientists found a surprising problem with sugar-free diets

2 weeks ago
A surprising new study suggests that completely eliminating sugar may backfire. Mice on a sucrose-free low-fat diet showed worse blood sugar control, increased inflammation, disrupted gut bacteria, and signs of fatty liver compared with mice that consumed some sucrose. Researchers say the results highlight the importance of a balanced diet and a healthy gut microbiome rather than focusing solely on cutting out sugar.

People taking GLP-1 weight loss drugs like Ozempic started moving less

2 weeks ago
People taking popular weight-loss drugs such as Ozempic, Wegovy, Mounjaro, and Zepbound may be losing pounds, but they could also be moving less. Researchers analyzing Fitbit data found that daily step counts and exercise levels dropped after people started these medications, despite successful weight loss. Because the drugs can reduce muscle mass along with fat, the decline in physical activity raises concerns about preserving strength and long-term health.

Why middle age is becoming a breaking point in the U.S.

2 weeks ago
A new international study finds that middle-aged Americans are lonelier, more depressed, and experiencing worse memory and health than earlier generations. Researchers say growing financial strain, weaker social supports, and chronic stress may explain why the U.S. is falling behind other wealthy nations.

Your brain can keep improving into your 90s, study finds

2 weeks ago
A three-year study of nearly 4,000 adults ranging from age 19 to 94 found that brain health can improve at any age, challenging the common belief that mental sharpness must decline as we get older. Participants spent just a few minutes a day on brain-training activities, and researchers found measurable gains across multiple aspects of brain health, including thinking clarity, emotional well-being, and sense of purpose.

Learning a musical instrument in your 70s could help protect memory

2 weeks ago
Learning a musical instrument later in life may help keep the brain younger for longer. In a four-year study, older adults who continued practicing maintained their memory performance and showed less age-related brain shrinkage than those who quit. The benefits were especially noticeable in brain regions tied to memory and learning.

Current status and challenges in targeting circulating amyloid-beta carriers for Alzheimer's disease therapy

2 weeks 1 day ago
Amyloid-β (Aβ) accumulation in the brain is a defining pathological feature of Alzheimer's disease (AD). Cerebral Aβ burden is regulated not only by central production and degradation but also by its transport and clearance in the peripheral circulation. Blood-borne Aβ carriers provide a potential peripheral route for reducing brain Aβ levels by strengthening the brain-to-blood concentration gradient, representing a therapeutic strategy that does not require direct penetration of the blood-brain...
Li Ren

Maternal sleep deprivation and developmental programming of brain aging trajectories in offspring

2 weeks 1 day ago
Maternal sleep deprivation (MSD) is a common but usually unnoticed issue during pregnancy, and in recent years, it has been increasingly recognised as an important prenatal stressor that may adversely influence maternal physiology, placental function, and fetal neurodevelopment. Sleep disturbances during pregnancy, including reduced sleep duration, fragmented sleep, poor sleep quality, circadian disruption, and rapid eye movement sleep restriction, have been associated with altered...
Shubham Sontakke

Muscle Ageing and Sarcopenia Study (MASS) Lifecourse: a valuable resource for understanding skeletal muscle ageing

2 weeks 1 day ago
Advances in our understanding of the biology of skeletal muscle ageing are being made at pace, with great potential for these findings to inform the identification of novel treatments for sarcopenia. However, translation of findings from animal models to humans has been hampered by limitations of existing human muscle biopsy studies. Devised to directly address this challenge, the Muscle Ageing and Sarcopenia Study (MASS) Lifecourse is a novel resource for the study of human muscle ageing. This...
Rachel Cooper

Stressful life event exposure is associated with combined physical and cognitive decline in older adults

2 weeks 1 day ago
Introduction Physical and cognitive impairment constitute large burdens of disease in older adults, but may be preventable through reduction of modifiable risk factors. While chronic stress has been linked to cognitive and physical function separately, few studies have accounted for combined decline. This study assessed associations between exposure to stressful life events (SLEs) and cognitive decline, physical decline, and combined physical and cognitive decline. Methods Data were taken from...
Jasper Holleman

Sleep and aging: The role of DNA methylation

2 weeks 1 day ago
Although its evolutionary origins remain poorly understood, sleep is a highly conserved physiological process crucial to animal life and widely recognized as a major determinant of human healthspan. Sleep disturbances are a major public health concern, particularly among older adults, contributing to impaired cognitive function, chronic disease risk, and reduced quality of life. Age-related sleep disturbances are associated with epigenetic changes, especially altered DNA methylation patterns...
Sergio Davinelli

Spatial cellular order underlies locally-confined mechanisms of immune resistance in oropharyngeal cancer

2 weeks 1 day ago
Oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinomas (OPSCCs) frequently result from oncogenic human papilloma virus (HPV) infections (HPV-OPSCC). The mechanisms underlying effective immune escape, despite abundant viral antigens, are incompletely understood. Here, we performed single-cell spatial gene expression profiling of HPV-OPSCC to characterize cellular organization and mechanisms of immune resistance. We describe distinct tumor-parenchymal immune foci that differ in cytokine expression, spatial...
Cem Sievers

Molecular evidence for early deuterostome origins of ovarian cell types and neuroendocrine control of reproduction

2 weeks 1 day ago
Oogenesis requires complex interactions between germline and somatic cell types in the ovary. How did these cell types and their signaling interactions evolve? Here we use the sea star Patiria miniata as a non-chordate deuterostome representative to define the ovarian cell type toolkit in echinoderms. Sea stars continuously produce millions of new oocytes throughout their lifespan, making them a practical system to understand the mechanisms that drive oogenesis from a biomedical and evolutionary...
Periklis Paganos

Recurrence or persistence of atrial fibrillation is associated with frailty and adverse outcomes: the SAGE-AF cohort study

2 weeks 1 day ago
CONCLUSION: Frailty or pre-frailty increases odds of AF recurrence or persistence at two years, underscoring the potential role of biological aging in influencing the course of AF over time. AF recurrence or persistence was associated with greater hazards of major bleeding, even after adjustment for key clinical factors, suggesting residual risk not captured by measured covariates.
Bahjat Z Ghazzal

Management and coping with care for older adults: family caregivers' experiences in Enugu state, Nigeria

2 weeks 1 day ago
CONCLUSION: An increase in age comes with an increase in care management demands, with concerns affecting the management and strategies adopted in coping with care for older adults. Since the Nigerian society does not support institutionalized homes for older adults, we recommend the utilization of social workers' services in family settings, through providing appropriate care management strategies and services for older adults and their family caregivers.
Jacinta Chibuzor Ene

Home- and community-based services, informal support networks, and life satisfaction among older adults in China: moving beyond filial support

2 weeks 1 day ago
CONCLUSION: Aging policies must move beyond traditional assumptions of filial support, as empirical evidence uncovers that broader informal ties-particularly instrumental networks-now exert a stronger relative impact on well-being than traditional family care. Furthermore, HCBS is not a one-size-fits-all solution; its benefits are geographically masked, primarily accruing to rural and functionally capable elders. The interplay between formal and informal care features emotional synergy and...
Jinfu Xu

The association between smart elderly care and subjective well-being among older adults in China: the mediating roles of health status and social activities

2 weeks 1 day ago
CONCLUSIONS: This study challenges the prevailing assumption that the "digital divide inevitably isolates the older adults from participating in a digitized society." By integrating digital technologies into older adults care services, we demonstrate that smart elderly care is positively associated with bridging technological barriers and addressing the unmet needs of aging populations. These findings further propose a synergistic mechanism-policy innovation, technological adaptation, and...
Keyi Huang

Multidomain prediction of education-stratified MoCA-defined mild cognitive impairment in community-dwelling older adults in urban China

2 weeks 1 day ago
CONCLUSIONS: Multidomain predictors spanning objective movement behaviours, body-composition indicators, and built-environment measures showed value for identifying education-stratified MoCA-defined MCI in community-dwelling older adults. LightGBM achieved the best overall performance among the candidate models. These findings support the potential utility of integrating behavioural, biological, and environmental information for community-based cognitive-risk stratification, although external...
Zhijian Wu