"I hear a rumour...Jack
Sparrow's in London, hell-bent to find the Fountain of Youth." ―Joshamee
Gibbs. Pirates of the Caribbean IV ‘On Stranger Tides’.
Was he coming to see me?
Maybe. Although had he crossed paths with Ponce De Leon on his voyage,
he would’ve been pointed in the opposite direction.
Legend has it that
(Juan) Ponce De Leon thought that the Fountain of Youth was in Florida,
and that drinking from its waters would restore ones youth.
Had Jack stayed in the
Caribbean and spoken to the locals, they may have saved Jackie the
trouble of an arduous voyage. The indigenous people had a legend of a
mythical land called Bimini flowing with waters that had similar
curative properties.
In Ancient Hebrew and
Arabic writings there is reference to what is commonly known as the
Philosophers Stone but was given many alternate names throughout
history. It was thought that ingestion of the Philosophers Stone would
regenerate the body to its optimal state. Long after these stories, the
16th Century became quite a hotbed of research into the
Philososphers Stone, in fact, Sir Issac Newton seemed from all accounts
more driven by this search than any other.
So, throughout Human
history there are numerous stories of eternal youth, advanced age and
even immortality. As a species, it seems, we’ve always been fascinated
by longevity. But what is the real story of Human longevity?
If you were born in the
UK back in the middle-ages, your average life expectancy would have been
35 years. This is an average, so the large numbers of childhood deaths
would skew the figure to the left. But you would have been quite a
rare individual to have made it to our version of ‘middle age’ in the
middle-ages.
Fast forward 300 years to the 1900’s. For numerous reasons 20th
Century living endowed ‘older age’ on a larger percentage of the
population. At this point the average life expectancy was 47 for
gentlemen and 50 for ladies. So in a third of a Millennium, a literal
blink of an eye in Human evolution, UK residents had ‘gained’ an
additional 15 years. Still, 50, is not really ‘aged’, as we would
consider it.
Skipping another century and a bit, where are we at in the UK in the 21st
century? The latest figures I have at hand are for the period 2007-09
which shows that life expectancy is 77.85 for us men, and 82.01 for the
women. So in the last century, again due to many reasons, our life
expectancy has risen once more by about 30 years.
Not bad.
However…
Life Expectancy is quite
an ambiguous term. For example, we can keep people alive using machines
for a substantial amount of time even with multiple organ failure. This
would obviously increase lifespan, but I think you can see the
glaringly obvious problem with that statistic. So, what to do?
Well, we do have a
better measure called, surprisingly, Healthy Life Expectancy (HLE).
There is also another similar measure called Disability Free Life
Expectancy (DFLE), that has a slightly different criteria within its
remit. We will stick to the HLE statistic here.
The HLE is a bit more telling. Especially when we look at the ‘at birth’ figures.
Although as we’ve seen,
the LE figures have risen, the HLE figures haven’t quite kept pace, not
by a long shot. The 2007 figure of HLE is 62.7 years for males and 64.4
years for females. This means that at around 60 years of age, our health
has deteriorated so much that we are now considered unhealthy enough to
be considered as having a disability or living in a diseased state. And
this is for the last 15 years of your life.
To get to the stage
where a condition is deemed a disability or disease state, doesn’t
happen overnight. That’s not the way disease works. For many diseases
the incubation period is not measured in days, weeks, months and usually
not in years either. For disease to take hold, your body would have
been in a sub-disease state probably for 5-10 years or more. How often
have you heard ‘I don’t understand it, he/ she was so healthy, then all
of a sudden, they went downhill’. That’s what happens at the end stage,
the progression of the disease is exponential. But the beginning stages
are usually very slow and subtle, which is why they do not show up as
symptoms or even in most regular medical checks.
It seems for all our
advances in modern life in the last century, we’ve only seemed to have
gained and extra 5-10 years of healthy life, and that’s probably due the
fact that we haven’t had to contend with a World War (1, 2 and the 7
Year War) that our recent ancestors did.
So what to do?
Well, that’s the
question isn’t it. What to do? As I’ve said in many of my HPC-UK articles, the
general public’s source of scientific information is usually via today’s
popular media. Unfortunately they are not very good at representing the
state of our knowledge. If you rely on the TV or the newspapers,
especially the red tops, to provide your information, you may want to
seriously reconsider what you actually know.
The current state of
science, if adopted, could see a 30 year old body opening a lovely
letter by the Queen (or King?) wishing them well in celebrating a
century. That is, a Chronologically old person who is Biologically
young.
But that situation is
the capstone on the pyramid. For the capstone to be set in place, the
foundations need to be strong, very strong.
How do we achieve this?
First you need to identify the major risk factors for the most prevalent
diseases. Once identified, you need to take steps to stop or reverse
their progression, much easier to do when they are in the birthing
stages. So the time to begin an anti ageing lifestyle is now.
Sounds difficult? Not
really. The biggest killer is still Circulatory disease, this
combination accounts for about 33% of all deaths. The second biggest
cause of death is Cancer which comes in at 29%. Next is Respiratory
disease which has a slightly lower percentage of 14%. All three of these
disease states have very similar causes, so by addressing one aspect,
you’ve reduced your chance of dying by 76% Not bad, huh?
What we need to do now
is know how good, or bad, shape we are in and take steps to remedy the
situation. What I’ll do in this series is give you a brief
overview of some of the most important measures for health. These are
taken from the HPC-UK anti-ageing program, where we measure different indices known as biomarkers of ageing and put together an individual protocol based on this and many other variables.
Once you know your score, you can work out your Biological age for that
measure and compare it to your Chronological age. The further it is
above your own age, the more important it is to focus on bringing down
that measure.
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