Cigarette smoke accelerates eye aging by causing epigenetic changes that block the eye's natural repair genes.
New research links PFAS exposure to accelerated biological aging in men, with the damage beginning to accumulate in their ...
The "forever chemicals" known as PFAS appear to be aging men faster in their 50s and early 60s, a new study found.
Researchers used single-nucleus RNA sequencing and chromatin accessibility profiling to map human hippocampal neurogenesis ...
For more than six decades, the food industry has prioritized palatability and product shelf life at the expense of nutrient density, leading to the global ...
Exposure to pervasive and toxic forever chemicals called “PFAS” appears to be aging men in their 50s and early 60s faster than other male age groups, according to a new analysis.
A single exposure to a toxic fungicide during pregnancy can increase epigenetic disease risk for 20 subsequent generations.
Through a series of experiments supported by the National Institutes of Health, Johns Hopkins Medicine (JHM) researchers say ...
Worrying about getting older—especially fearing future health problems—may actually speed up aging at the cellular level, ...
To find these differences, the researchers compared immune cells and proteins from blood samples derived from 19 infants hospitalized with RSV infections, 30 infants hospitalized with SARS-CoV-2 ...
Scientists say the findings are a warning about the kinds of chemical that people are exposed to in the environment.