Edited by osris, 18 December 2022 - 06:40 PM.
Article: "Why Antioxidants Don’t Slow Down Aging"
#1
Posted 18 December 2022 - 06:21 PM
#2
Posted 20 December 2022 - 01:58 AM
Well, I read that article recently.
The thing you have to remember is Novos is trying to sell their product. They have a bunch of ingredients, none of which (other than vitamin C?) is an anti-oxidant. So of course they're going to say "these things don't work!" because it's not what they're selling. With that in mind, I'm not sure if their stuff works or not, and there is at least one review on reddit of it giving people headaches and them not being able to return it (no return guarantee on an expensive product like that is odd). They have a lot of specifics on their site about myriad products and what they do. So... I don't know. But I figure, if anti-oxidants DID slow down aging, we'd probably know about it by now.
The founder of the company has an account here, btw.
#3
Posted 21 December 2022 - 10:19 AM
Yes, I initially thought that too... that they were dissing antioxidants so as to sell their own products. But they cite the research of Siegfried Hekimi of the Department of Biology at McGill, as their "evidence". Here is an article about his research on this:
https://www.medicaln...articles/276589
He might be wrong, though, as I can find no other studies that repeat what he says.
#4
Posted 21 December 2022 - 03:46 PM
#5
Posted 22 December 2022 - 02:02 AM
#6
Posted 22 December 2022 - 05:13 PM
I don't know what to make of the study. It is just one study. If other studies come along saying the same thing, then it might have a grain of truth.
#7
Posted 22 December 2022 - 05:20 PM
Are you saying the author of that study is wrong? Are there studies saying antioxidants slow aging?
I can't find any other studies that back him up.
His thesis that antioxidants don't slow down aging is unique. Everything I've read about antioxidants says that they do help in slowing aging down - to some extent.
Maybe his research is funded by Big Pharma?
Edited by osris, 22 December 2022 - 05:22 PM.
#8
Posted 22 December 2022 - 08:48 PM
It has been the opinion of most people that hang out here, that large amounts of anti-oxidants are probably not good for health. Here is an old thread tracking some of the studies that showed increased mortality.
When LongeCity members crowd-sourced and produced Vimmortal, it was intentionally a low-dose multi-vitamin, because all the research showed large doses were not good.
It makes sense from a metabolic standpoint. Our bodies continually produce pro-oxidant and anti-oxidant molecules for different reason. Jamming your body full of anti-oxidants could create imbalances.
#9
Posted 23 December 2022 - 04:51 AM
I agree that too many antioxidants can be bad, but the article seems to be saying that in principle antioxidants don't affect longevity.
#10
Posted 23 December 2022 - 10:16 PM
#11
Posted 24 December 2022 - 06:54 PM
Edited by osris, 24 December 2022 - 07:05 PM.
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