The brains of overweight middle -
aged people resemble brains that are a decade older in healthier people.
Not exact matches
Why have we made more progress on certain diseases while other mass - scale killers, like chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), are largely off of
people's radars and so difficult to treat in an
age of therapies which can
resemble magic?
While some are young
people in long - distance relation - ships because of schooling or careers, or couples who want to live together but can't for various reasons (such as military families), many include women like me — divorced, middle -
aged empty - nesters who want nothing that
resembles the married life we knew.
While some are young
people in long - distance relationships because of schooling or careers, or couples who want to live together but can't for various reasons (military families are a good example), many include women like me — divorced, middle -
aged empty - nesters who want nothing that
resembles the married life we knew.
While some are young
people in long - distance relation - ships because of schooling or careers, or couples who want to live together but can't for various reasons (such as military families), many include middle -
aged empty - nester divorcees who want nothing that
resembles the married life we knew.
The new technique, which yields cells
resembling those found in older
people's brains, will be a boon to scientists studying
age - related diseases like Alzheimer's and Parkinson's.
They tested cells from healthy
people of various
ages and also from children with Hutchinson - Guilford progeria, a rare hereditary disorder that
resembles an accelerated form of
aging.
The shape and size of the machine used in this technique, which typically
resembles an egg, makes it accommodating for
persons of almost any
age, shape and size.
The same can be said for
people who live together,
people of similar
ages, and even
people who live in specific geographic locations — portions of their microbiomes
resemble one another's, for better or worse.
Cognitive Dysfunction Syndrome (CDS) is an
age - related neurodegenerative disorder in dogs characterized by gradual and progressive cognitive decline,
resembling the early stages of Alzheimer's disease in
people.