baxtr 10 hours ago

After looking a bit into the longevity stuff I’ve come to the conclusion that 80% of the benefits for health come from simple habits: sleep well, move daily, work-out regularly, eat fresh and moderately, and maintain social connections. That’s it.

  • const_cast 10 hours ago

    Oh, and of course genetics. Doesn't matter very much if you have a genetic pre-disposition to some bad disease and you don't know that. So, make sure you're getting screened per recommendations!

    • number6 10 hours ago

      Apparently, the less paperwork you deal with, the longer you live. Somewhere out there, a 132-year-old is thriving simply because no one ever processed their birth certificate — and correlational data suggests that weak administrative systems might just be the true secret to longevity, sparing people the existential stress of ever having to file anything at all

  • valianteffort 10 hours ago

    There are drugs like metformin which appear to have a drastic affect on lifespan in patients with or without diabetes.

    But yes generally, premature death seems to come from bad lifestyle choices over a lifetime, so being proactive is gonna yield the greatest return.

    • the__alchemist 9 hours ago

      I take Metformin and don't have diabetes, but don't think there's much of a chance of significant benefits. Would expect diabetics etc to have noticably higher healthapans offset by the diabetes symptoms. It's been a heavily-taken drug for decades...

      • giardini 7 hours ago

        Metformin is a prescribed drug, so how do you obtain a prescription if you're an otherwise healthy person (i.e., someone w/o diabetes)?

  • layer8 10 hours ago

    Yeah, and I don’t expect any new simple solutions to suddenly be discovered either.

  • the__alchemist 9 hours ago

    That's the gist of it, plus supplements +drugs. I think the bottom line is that people are becoming more accepting that extending lifespan is a good and possible thing, but we aren't close to knowing how to do it. So we grasp at whatever we can, even if it's ineffective.

  • selfselfgo 10 hours ago

    Its funny to me, because there’s many strong studies that basically show the life expectancy for vegetarians is about 10 years higher, but most people including myself wouldn’t become a vegetarian despite the clear health benefits.

    • mariusor 8 hours ago

      Couldn't this be, maybe, one of those "correlation is not causation" thingies?

robwwilliams 10 hours ago

The original taurine paper in Science was obviously a mess to some of us in the field. They did not even have plausible taurine concentrations. Poor review process.

There is no reason to supplement with taurine or with resveratrol. Resveratrol debunked firmly by both the Interventions Testing Program in mice (Miller et al 2011, a paper with Sinclair as a coauthor) and earlirr by Timothy Bass and Linda Partridge and colleagues in two widely used model organisms (C elegans anf Drisophila, 2007).

Yes David Sinclair is vocal and has a book: but look at the evidence and compare to rapamycin.

Rapamycin is a drug with strong prolongevity effects at almost any age in both sexes at an appropriate dose to inhibit only mTOR-C1 signaling (4 to 8 mg once per week).

There ARE side effects to almost any drug. And rapamycin will not be a good drug for a subset of humans in some environments. For example rapamycin is one if the last drugs I would take if I was caring for a room full of 5-6 year olds all day. But surprisingly it was a good drug to be taking during COVID-19 if you were older. perhaps by reducing the inflammatory hyper-vigilance that killed so many older humans. See Kaeberlein’s study of 333 biohackers in 2023.

  • lentoutcry 10 hours ago

    what about methylene blue? I saw an article around the other day saying basically that it’s mostly hype, but I’ve also heard good things about it.

    • giardini 7 hours ago

      Tough to handle though!8-)) It gets all over the place: stains skin, clothes, most everything else unless you handle it as if you were in a laboratory.

      Never thought about it before but handling MB in a chem lab might be a very good way to show beginning students how difficult it is to do good lab work and how easily traces of material (and organisms) may pass from one place to another (contact).

  • the__alchemist 9 hours ago

    The problem is RM as you know, is the negative effects from immunosuppression. Makes it tougher to justify than others.

    • robwwilliams 6 hours ago

      Yes, at higher doses that affect mTORC2 signaling. At a low intermittent dose it is an immune modulator, not an immune suppressor. Much work on parsing the two. But we do not know much about the role of genetic difference in responses ti this drug, so caution is appropriate.

mark_l_watson 11 hours ago

I understand that trying to take supplements to slow aging is a crap shoot. That said I take Taurine in the form of eating dark chicken meat, legs and thighs. I also take NAD+ with resveratrol as publicized by David Sinclair at Harvard.

I believe that the very best thing to do to maintain health and perhaps have higher quality of life, later in life, is to meditate, forgive other people and yourself, and generally balance spirituality, good sleep, good food, and walk outside a few times a day.

EDIT: left off two big things. As we age we need vitamin D supplements and I personally also believe in loading up on Omega 3 by eating walnuts, chia seeds, and salmon.

  • jgilias 11 hours ago

    Don’t forget some type of strength training. There’s plenty of research that it reduces all cause mortality. Likely by pushing back the time you become frail.

    • Spooky23 11 hours ago

      Absolutely. I saw this with aging loved ones. The most “durable” ones fared better as they aged and had health issues.

      As you age, each acute medical event has a real impact and recovery is slow and limited. You have to be at an high baseline to crawl back up.

      My dad had a stroke that really affected him badly, but he recovered a lot and worked hard. It was all set back by a cold and a uti that resulted in a hospitalization. That basically did him in. Everything you can do to make sure that you can stand up and get around as long as possible means that you’ll be able to live a longer fulfilling life.

      • fny 10 hours ago

        My grandfather was hit by a car at 80 and only recovered because he has the constitution of a tank.

        Even afterwards he fights daily to do everything himself.

    • snapplebobapple 9 hours ago

      This might get turned on its head in a couple years. Some new research just came out on combining incretin based therapies (ie semaglutide) with myostatin blockers (in this case trevogrumab and garetosmab) and the monkey lost a crap load of fat while also putting on muscle mass. It's a hell of a time to be a monkey, hopefully it translates into a hell of a time to be a human in a few years. Also, I would like some samples of whatever substance the guys naming these drugs are consuming. Whatever it is, they are wasting it on naming drugs when they should be using it to write science fiction.

    • mark_l_watson 11 hours ago

      I should, but I don't. I do hike four hours a week and swim for a half hour every day very early in the morning. Thanks for the reminder, you are 100% correct. I am in my mid 70s, so I think I only need resistance training about twice a week.

      • lagniappe 11 hours ago

        You need it every day at that age to preserve bone density.

        • giardini 6 hours ago

          Here's an exercise anyone can do almost everyday that will increase bone density. I do it in the shower or wherever there's a solid safe tile floor:

          Start with both knees and hips bent (like a football linebacker just before the snap), legs apart and arms bent at the side to maintain balance. Set one foot slightly ahead of the other. Now, using primarily the heels of your feet, jump up slightly(preferably only a few inches) and slam both heels back down, while switching which foot is forward. [Don't jump so much that you straighten your legs; instead keep knees bent at all times]. You're hopping in place and striking your heels on the ground, with the right foot forward first and then with the left foot forward, back and forth. Make sure the heel hits the tile and bears the brunt of the force (rather than the toes). Do 20 of these hops each time you're in the shower.

          Slamming the heel of the foot into the floor vibrates the large bones of the legs. These vibrations will strengthen (all of) your bone over time.

          • fivestones 6 hours ago

            Is there a name for this particular exercise?

            • giardini 4 hours ago

              Well, I call it the "longer balls" exercise b/c, each time your heels hit the floor, unless you grab your nut sack, you will feel the impact!8-))

              So, to correct the instructions:

              ...stand legs apart and arms bent at the side to maintain balance, nutsack in one hand if male, ..

        • dakiol 10 hours ago

          Need what exactly? Resistance training or strength training? Or both?

        • apwell23 10 hours ago

          actually you need it 3 times a day

  • kace91 11 hours ago

    No anaerobic training? You’ll really want that bone density and general mobility down the line, and it also helps greatly aligning the others (pushes you to sleep, eat ealthier, helps with stress etc)

  • the__alchemist 11 hours ago

    I've been doing a similar routine + intermittent fasting (Late breakfast/early dinner) + NMN and metformin. Probably isn't doing anything useful.

    Re vitamin D: I supplement with that as well, but for a tangential reason: Avoiding sun exposure (esp mid-day) without sunblock avoids photoaging and reduces skin cancer risk. But this leaves you at a Vitamin D deficit, hence the supplement.

    I have a tub of taurine, but haven't been taking it; seemed like the evidence was thin, and this article supports that conclusion.

    • mark_l_watson 11 hours ago

      Yes, intermittent fasting seems to have good effects. I used to restrict eating to the period 11am to about 5pm, and I felt better. Now all I do is to avoid eating any food within three hours of going to bed. I don't know how reliable my Apple Watch really is, but my deep sleep ratings are much better when I stop eating after a light early dinner, and this makes some sense: if you are actively digesting food your heart rate is probably increased and generally your body can settle down. As you know, digesting food is a major activity.

      • eitally 11 hours ago

        Science has shown that the best quality sleep is achieved when core temperature drops about 3 degrees, and this is almost impossible when one has eaten a meal within an hour or two of going to bed.

        • esperent 10 hours ago

          Or if you live in a hot country. But that makes me suspicious of this finding - it should mean that everyone (without AC) in hot countries sleeps badly. I doubt that to be true though.

    • dwedge 10 hours ago

      It may well be the sun exposure and not the vitamin D that's good for you https://www.outsideonline.com/podcast/inside-rowan-jacobsen-...

      • the__alchemist 9 hours ago

        Wouldn't surprise me. This is a tough nut to crack because it is likely true, but photo aging and skin cancer are unquestionably true and negative effects of UV exposure.

      • xhkkffbf 9 hours ago

        Certainly vitamin D can't be the one and only molecule that's produced in the human body by a photocatalytic pathway.

    • todotask2 10 hours ago

      Does intermittent fasting apply to those that is underweight?

      • robwwilliams 10 hours ago

        Will depend on age and the definition of underweight. Intermittent fasting is probably generally beneficial to maintain the health of already healthy humans up to 75 years of age. But at that age exercise and weights (gently) probably more helpful.

  • dwedge 11 hours ago

    As far as I know there is little if any proven benefit to vitamin D supplementation, but a lot of links between high vitamin D and good health markers. Just a reminder that you should try to get some sun exposure as well for natural vitamin D, as that may well be where the health benefits really come from

    • const_cast 10 hours ago

      As an aside when it comes to sun and vitamin D: your body will still produce vitamin D from the sun if you wear sunscreen. You also get all the mental health benefits like serotonin and whatnot with sunscreen.

      So, if you're a partial sun plant (white person), you should get sun but you should use sunscreen, and you'll be fine and that will work.

    • epgui 11 hours ago

      Vit D is actually one of the few vitamin supplements that have proven benefits, if you live far from the equator.

      • kuratkull 10 hours ago

        Anything you want to share that raises it above all else? Especially as you agree that all other supplements are basically snake oil.

        • layer8 10 hours ago

          They are talking about vitamin supplements specifically.

  • eitally 11 hours ago

    These are all good life practices but you've forgotten one key component of mental aging: many individuals' growing lack of curiosity as they age. Lifelong learning, and generally also contact with others, is very important to keeping the mind sharp as one gets older.

    • mark_l_watson 10 hours ago

      I do still write books on AI and tech https://leanpub.com/u/markwatson

      My Dad lived to almost 102 and he was learning new things right up to the end of his life. He was a physics professor and Berkeley but in retirement he got into model trains, organized social activities, and taught himself 3D animation and started writing scripts and got into digital story telling.

      So, I agree with you, always learning new things makes life interesting and probably has health benefits.

  • 34679 11 hours ago

    >crap shoot

    Funny you say that:

    "It is a major constituent of bile and can be found in the large intestine. It is named after Latin taurus (cognate to Ancient Greek ταῦρος, taûros) meaning bull or ox, as it was first isolated from ox bile in 1827 by German scientists Friedrich Tiedemann and Leopold Gmelin."

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taurine

  • apwell23 10 hours ago

    none of that stuff is going to prolong your life

meindnoch 11 hours ago

A Downside of Taurine: It Drives Leukemia Growth

https://www.urmc.rochester.edu/news/story/a-downside-of-taur...

  • john-h-k 10 hours ago

    This has to be taken as one of many data points. Many things that are good for your body will also drive increased cancer growth

_xerces_ 9 hours ago

I was taking taurine 1000 mg per day but stopped when I heard a plausible link to colon cancer. Having a strong family history, it wasn't worth the risk.

Eagerly awaiting the results of this trial: https://ascopubs.org/doi/10.1200/JCO.2024.42.16_suppl.TPS363...

Uncertain though how they will separate the effects of the taurine from all the other stuff including sugar that is contained in energy drinks.

I think this is a hard theory to pin down as it might depend on how much taurine producing bacteria an individual has in their gut B. wadsworthia, so two people could have very different outcomes while taking the same amount of taurine.

amelius 11 hours ago

Answer from TFA: no

> But taken together, all of this new information makes me glad that I have not been loading up on the taurine for purposes of graceful aging, I can tell you that for sure.

lentoutcry 11 hours ago

this is the first time I’m hearing taurine had been linked in any way to aging (while also finding out that’s no longer supported by evidence). all I knew was that it’s something energy drinks have. but I’m curious, did this take off as a popular supplement?

jbentley1 10 hours ago

Read the first couple lines, closed the page, and concluded that I should drink more Red Bull.

OutOfHere 8 hours ago

I can't speak for aging, but my strong personal experience with taurine tells me that it does help, a lot. It is excellent for anyone with dry eyes, which is a lot of people. It is also good for anyone who relies on caffeine a fair bit, which is why it's in energy drinks.

paulcole 11 hours ago

> Taurine and Aging: Is There Anything to It?

Remember that you should only smugly refer to Betteridge’s Law of Headlines when you disagree with the article.