No subject has inspired more hype and wishful
thinking through the ages than life extension. Not
surprisingly, our inner sceptics tend to counsel extreme
caution when the talk turns to anti-aging elixirs. For
many of us after a certain age, the scepticism is
reinforced each morning with that first grimacing glance
in the bathroom mirror, showing once again that no
matter how many vitamins we've popped, cups of ginkgo
tea we've downed, or miles we've jogged, aging and the
wrinkles that come with it are inevitable.
But
our mirrors are no longer sound counsellors. Scientists
have firmly established that the rate of aging is
malleable and now a well-founded quest for drugs that
brake aging is rapidly unfolding. While this drugs won't
confer immortality they do promise to usher in a new era
of preventive medicine, one in which novel medicines
arrive that can delay or avert just about everything
that goes wrong with us as we age: dementia, cancer,
osteoporosis, and, yes, jowls too, in the same way that
medicines that lower blood pressure and cholesterol fend
off heart disease today. THE YOUTH PILL explores these
developments and the scientists behind them in an
engaging account of the science that is changing the
face of medicine and of our lives.
|
|