this video was months in the making. was a lot of reading, much of which of course never gets mentioned, while i filter to find the more interesting content. thank you for the continued support!
@jaa9228
Ай бұрын
are there any 2024 updates to XPL?
@higreentj
Ай бұрын
"Cross-linking of proteins may also play a role in the hardening of collagen and cardiac enlargement, increasing the risk for cardiac arrest. Cross-linking is also associated with stiffening of blood vessel walls, delayed wound healing, reduced joint mobility, and changes in the lens of the eye. In addition to these potentially serious implications, many believe that cross-linking is responsible for age-related skin changes including wrinkles and reduced elasticity. It is believed that cross-linking within the body is enhanced when there is a high concentration of sugar in the bloodstream. Further bolstering this idea is the fact that diabetics often have two to three times more cross-linked proteins in their body in comparison to non-diabetics. If this theory is correct, then foods with a high glycemic index (those that release sugar into the body at a rapid pace) should be reduced as much as possible to retain one’s youthful appearance. By ditching the sugary sodas, simple carbohydrates, and processed foods, the onset of cross-linking molecules may be able to be slowed." Reducing glucose spikes will likely slow the aging process so a tablespoon of vinegar with a glass of water twenty to thirty minutes before a meal, and going for a walk after a meal will reduce these glucose spikes.
@chariots8x230
Ай бұрын
I would love to see some advances in skin technologies that will make “glass skin” possible for everyone to attain.
@chariots8x230
Ай бұрын
So, how can these discoveries contribute to anti-aging & skin repair? Can any of this be used to turn back the hands of time?
@WalkingMoments
Ай бұрын
Living here in Japan, I know some researchers at Shiseido are making some great advances. Ganbatte :)
@amandafrancis9168
Ай бұрын
Love your research. Thank you
@jujjuj7676
Ай бұрын
I personally believe skin will fix itself IF you maintain the hormonal levels as they are in youth. This would require fixing the core hormonal drop with aging in the pituitary gland and removing the inflammation that accumilated with age. So understsnding the decline in the pituitary gland is key and then removing the accumilation of damage so the hormones can do there job without cancer concerns any other solution is just a patch not a cure. 😊
@juliahello6673
Ай бұрын
Yay, a Sheekey video!
@antoniosmusic
Ай бұрын
Hi Eleanor, another amazing video! Have you come across the story with the C15 fatty acids recently being discovered to be a necessary fat much like omega 3 and that its lack leads to fatty liver disease and cell death by compromised integrity of the cell membranes? What is up with this compound is the research legitimate? If so it could be important for longevity as well?
@catboy_official
Ай бұрын
That thumbnail is HORRIFYING
@blainebowling3303
Ай бұрын
Well worth the wait!! Very exciting news. Of course it could very well be like the “stem cells” I read about almost 30 years ago. So much promise, so much disappointment… 🤞🏼🤞🏼🤞🏼
@thefruit
Ай бұрын
That's coool ur moving to Japan :o are u in Tokyo?
@IaN09876
Ай бұрын
Enjoy Japan. I studied my PhD and lived in Japan for 10 years. Never wanted to leave but somehow my job life moved me to the UK
@patriciawebb5579
Ай бұрын
I LOVE the intro!!! Thank you for your research.
@TekMoliGy
Ай бұрын
i liked the older videos better. i don't need a poem at the start and super long tv show intro for an 8 minute video.
@Julian-tf8nj
Ай бұрын
My thoughts exactly!
@emittfuller6348
Ай бұрын
I hear Dr. Vittorio Sebastiano's company is working on a topical treatment for skin aging he's also on the board of some big cosmetic company so I'm not surprised
@surfreadjumpsleep
Ай бұрын
love the theme song! Couldn't polymers attached to the skin cause some polymers to enter the body and possibly accumulate inside?
@HoangAnhNguyen-cr7to
Ай бұрын
tks u informative knowledge but until now can we reverse the aging process
@quantumfx2677
Ай бұрын
It goes beyond then what is told to the public! What is and has been done behind closed doors would shake the world! There a reasons it's behind closed doors!
@ChessMasterNate
Ай бұрын
Aging is not one process, it is many. Some of those we can address. Others it appears we are close to addressing. But a few, are pure science fiction. And then there are processes which we haven't even discovered are happening, some of which may be perfectly capable of killing people like clockwork, even if everything else is addressed. Every year or two, we discover one more way we age. We are not even close to solving one each few years. The latest one I heard of was the cellular accumulation of glycerol and glyceraldehyde. Though, it looks like this will be readily solvable. I am not trying to say it is hopeless. There is every reason to think we can extend human life substantially, but meaningful broad spectrum reversal of aging, we just are not likely to see in the next 20-30 years in humans. Part of that is that we have no method of repairing autosomal DNA. There will be many different patterns of damage in every person. Finding your original undamaged DNA and multiplying an appropriate set of these chromosomes for each cell, and then replacing this in every cell? That sounds fantastically difficult. Alternatively, a nanite that inspects a cell's DNA, identifies each error and repairs them? Also, fantastically difficult. Growing all new organs from good DNA and replacing your aged organs with those? Very expensive and exclusive, and unlikely to include many systems that don't have fairly simple and few attachments. That also sounds very painful and unending. Continual renewal from stem cells at the correct stage with your undamaged DNA to replace things? Not far-fetched. And we can either multiply your stem cells you have or give you stem cells that are less mature, but are not yours. Each appears to do things. I doubt any of these can do what is theoretically necessary to substantially roll back DNA damage. DNA damage is not the only difficult puzzle. Another is the loss of order. Things can get pushed and pulled out of order. Structures can become more chaotic, dysfunctional, and obstructive. Elastin, for example, coexists with other proteins, making a 3-D lattice structure holding the skin and other tissues together. Trying to get this all put back together after many decades of destruction...when we never had a system to repair it? How?
@eugeniebreida1583
Ай бұрын
Loved the short poem, pop music must Go! Aargh.
@KingKikikoi
Ай бұрын
Thoughts on Sunekos? It’s an injectable that’s said to actually build elastin
@SlamminGraham
Ай бұрын
Sheekey, you probably remember seeing a few much more realistic-looking robotic faces in the news over the past couple of years, such as Amica (search on KZitem if you don't remember). To me, this is getting pretty close to mimicking at least the look of human skin on an applied robotic body already, even without needing to use actual human skin. So I guess the question I would ask is what are the advantages and disadvantages of using human skin for such applications? Perhaps synthetic skin could go beyond human skin function in certain care-abouts and applications. Maybe if we want to touch a robot, we want it to look and feel as much like a human as possible, to be sure, but if we're just trying to get along with a robot friend, it may not be necessary. Of course, using new skin on ourselves is a completely different ballpark.
@rg-cb2wd
Ай бұрын
Best channel on KZitem
@whatthefunction9140
Ай бұрын
That intro is so exciting 🎉
@alexgrafe
Ай бұрын
Amazing title song
@chris-lk4ml
Ай бұрын
Wow, now we have the technology to get rid of lether. I see a human skin sofa in the near future. LOL Very interesting btw, thx!
@dianamariewells1437
Ай бұрын
You are very appreciated. Sorry on the entitled attacking ungrateful egoist post. There's a special place in Hell for judgemental attackers, don't worry your awesomeness on it.
@palana8870
Ай бұрын
Love your content. That intro music is god awful.
@leighnash6140
Ай бұрын
Is that an AI created jiggle for your channel?
@Julian-tf8nj
Ай бұрын
please go back to the old video format - more in-depth, less flashy... and covering NEW developments, not papers from 2016 (8 years ago). We're here primarily here for knowledge, and deciphering complex new papers; for entertainment, we have Netflix
@lazarus8453
Ай бұрын
Your accent and very long intros making your videos little bit hard to watch.
Пікірлер: 35