Not exact matches
For female crickets, those
fed a robust
diet lived longer than did their protein - starved
counterparts.
At a Society of Toxicology meeting last week in Reston, Virginia, three groups presented data showing that rhesus monkeys
fed severely calorie - restricted
diets show fewer signs of diseases associated with advancing age, including diabetes, heart disease, and cancer, than their comfortably full — and in some cases comparably lean —
counterparts.
The mice that were
fed a calorie - restricted
diet, mainly by a reduction in their carbohydrate intake, over a period of six months, had fewer disease symptoms than their normal -
diet counterparts.
In work that confirmed earlier research by others, Ross presented compelling evidence showing that rats
fed restricted
diets not only lived longer than their fully nourished
counterparts but also suffered from fewer diseases.