"This means that the biological characteristics of
animals that are on calorie-restricted diets seem to apply to longevity
in people."
George S. Roth,
National Institute on Aging
(AP) For the first time, researchers have found evidence suggesting
people may live longer by eating fewer calories each day, a dietary
restriction that already has shown in experiments to extend the lives of
laboratory animals by up to 40 percent.
Even if the evidence proves to be correct, it's unknown how much extra
time people might live.
Laboratory studies for decades have shown that reducing the calories fed
to lab mice and rats enabled the animals to live much longer, but the same
effect has not been positively demonstrated in monkeys or in humans.
Now, George S. Roth and his colleagues at the National Institute on Aging
say they have preliminary evidence that biological changes that help
create super-aged rodents may also work in humans.
The biological markers - lower temperature, lower insulin levels and a
steady level of a steroid hormone called DHEAS - all occur in
restricted-diet rodents that live about 40 percent longer than fellow
rodents on a normal diet, said Roth. The same biological markers have now
been found in men who are living longest in a continuing study in
Baltimore on aging.
"This means that the biological characteristics of animals that are on
calorie-restricted diets seem to apply to longevity in people," Roth said.
But Roth, co-author of a study appearing Friday in the journal Science,
said the results should be considered "preliminary" and he cautions that
nobody should start starving in hopes of living longer. Instead, he said,
the study gives only tantalizing hints that are worthy of further
investigation about helping people to extend life.
Other experts said the study offers new hope about science some day
finding ways to slow aging and extend life.
"The study doesn't absolutely prove anything, but it suggests that the
same mechanisms that operate in calorie-restricted animals can operate in
humans," said Stephen R. Spindler, a human lifespan researcher at the
University of California, Riverside. "It increases the likelihood that we
will find pharmaceuticals that will mimic this effect."
Roth and his co-authors drew their preliminary conclusions from the
combination of studies on aging rodents, a 15-year-old study on aging
monkeys, and the continuing project called the Baltimore Longitudinal
Study of Aging, which follows the lifespan of people.
The monkey study, conducted at the National Institute of Aging, is
designed to test the longevity effects of calories restriction. It started
in 1987, but Roth said that since Rhesus monkeys can live for 25 years, it
may take another four or five years before the results are final.
Statistically, at least half of the monkeys will have to complete their
normal lifespan before the data is considered significant, said Roth.
The same is true of the Baltimore study on aging people.
But Roth said he and his team gathered preliminary conclusions by looking
at early trends in the deaths of both the monkeys and the men. The
researchers also divided men in the Baltimore study into two groups based
on measurements of the key biomarkers - temperature, insulin and DHEAS
levels - that were characteristic of the super-aged lab rodents.
Roth said the men whose biomarkers were similar to those of the
calorie-restricted, long-lived rodents were dying at a much slower rate
than were men with other biomarker measurements. Roth said none of the
Baltimore study's men are known to be on restricted diets, but clearly
some are enjoying the same lifespan benefit that calorie restriction gave
the laboratory animals and researchers are not sure why.
"Whatever it is, they have those biological characteristics and they seem
to live longer," said Roth. "It looks like that if you have any one of
those markers, it is good for a couple of extra years."
In the monkeys, Roth said those on reduced feeding since the study started
are dying at a rate that is about half that of the monkeys receiving a
full food ration. He said all of the animals are fed the same
nutritionally balanced chow, but the longer-lived group gets 30 percent
less.
Although the findings suggested that a diet restriction of 30 percent or
40 percent could extend life, Roth said, "This is not practical for most
people" and could be unhealthy.
Instead, he said the aging studies may lead to finding drugs that could
mimic the effects and lifespan benefits of calorie restriction.
Spindler agreed, saying the study by Roth and his colleagues "gives us
reason to hope."
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