I second that, no full access, and the abstract does not say anything about
accumulation of AGEs in that young group.
None of the papers posted here so far showed
accumulation of whatever 'damage' that was measured
in a young cohort. So for those who still do not understand, here it comes again: in the papers that have been linked here, the young groups 16+ and <30 were compared to groups well over 30. Such comparisons are irrelevant here because
no one claims that damage does not accumulate in people over 25-35 -- only that it does not accumulate in people under 25.
Is this so difficult to understand? I'll show what I mean on an example of a paper linked by corb above, where 3 age groups were compared, <30, 30-60, and >60. I found it peculiar that the abstract only spoke about the under 30 and the over 60 groups, omitting the middle group of 30-60. The abstract did say that, compared to the under-30 group, the over-60 group accumulated more.. ..whatever they measured.
This sort of comparison is irrelevant for this discussion. And why did not they mention the 30-60 group? I did not see the full text, but let me guess: 'cause the data that compared 30-60 group with others were not statistically significant?
Another irrelevant paper on which niner still insists (-?!) took a huge cohort spanning 16-90 and showed a correlation of damage with age. Funny that when I brought this up, for the nth time in this thread alone (and it stared in another), 2 people clicked on "disagree" button, which shows that at least 2 people here have hard time comprehending reading material. If this post does not help them, they should not stress themselves coming back to this thread.
And I was also surprised to see that some moron clicked on "need references" button on my post about my cat. This is my direct experience, which I share here on the forum, the real value of which is, first of all, in sharing such personal experiences and observations, and, only secondly, discussing whatever. ..and, Mr moron, why didn't you clicked on the same button when seivtcho brought up his grandma?
In any rate, I see this discussion is deteriorating rapidly. There were 5 ad hominems in this thread already. This does not bode well for the accumulation of damage theory proponents.
But I am infinitely patient. I'll spell it for the last time:
Show
accumulation of damage in a young cohort -- as opposed to simply presence, like in the latest paper linked by corb. I sincerely hope you understand the difference, and if you don't please don't post here. It's getting tiring.
Edited by xEva, 21 January 2015 - 12:03 AM.