Carina MacInnes
Antioxidants have been widely praised in the media. Many know
they are linked with anti-aging properties. However this is not
new, it all began with one man’s theory a half a century
ago about how free radicals were associated with aging, and science
has been trying to catch up with it ever since
As Dr. Nicholas Perricone, M.D., states in his 2001 book, “The
Wrinkle Cure”: “When it comes to aging, it’s
not Father Time that’s public enemy number 1. It’s
the very busy, very nasty little molecule called the free radical.”
The Free Radical Theory of Aging was published by Denman Harman
in 1956. He theorized that aging is a result of free radical damage
of the cells of the body. This is also called oxidative stress.
Today, a great deal of experimental evidence supports the premise
that length of life is determined by the crucial balance of antioxidants
with free radicals in the body. Oxidative stress is being shown
to be at the root of disease and aging.
One example is that the life of the fruit fly was up to 30% longer
when it was genetically altered with an addition of enzymatic
antioxidants. Not only that, but the altered fruit flies also
showed a reduced amount of age-related oxidative damage.
Studies of humans have also shown evidence of free radical damage
playing a large part in human aging. One 1996 study compared markers
of free radical damage in the blood and found evidence of the
highest oxidative damage associated with the disabled elderly,
an intermediate amount with the healthy elderly, and the lowest
levels with the healthy adults.
The study also found that higher blood levels of antioxidant
Vitamins C and E were associated with less disability, and signs
of free radical damage were associated with more disability.
We need to rethink our concept of aging. We accept disease, disability,
senility, wrinkles, and all the other many signs of aging as natural.
Instead, we should view this as ‘unsuccessful aging’
– ie., aging associated with deterioration, disease and
disability.
Successful aging is what happens when the human body is able
to fight off oxidative stress, and continue to regenerate and
repair itself. Successful aging is getting older healthily, without
significant pathological conditions.
What the evidence is telling us is that it is crucial we take
antioxidants and free radicals very seriously if we want to ‘age
gracefully’ and avoid the many pitfalls of ‘unsuccessful
aging’.
Even young people can be victims of unsuccessful aging, if they
are not providing their bodies with the necessary balance of having
have enough dietary antioxidants to fight off the free radicals.
In our modern culture, many of us are guilty of not getting adequate
nutrition. It’s ironic, when we are the richest we have
ever been that we should be feeding our bodies so poorly.
An interesting example of how a person can seriously damage their
body with the wrong diet was seen in the Documentary ‘Super
Size Me’ by Morgan Spurlock who ate only McDonald’s
for a month. In just 30 days of having a junk food diet as his
sole source of nutrition, his health was spiraling downwards and
out of control.
The fact that he gained 25 pounds in a month was the least of
his worries. He experienced a toxic liver, a significant increase
in cholesterol, headaches, depression, a lower sex drive and poor
skin. He returned to normal after his experiment ended.
Unfortunately a great many of us continue to do damage to our
bodies, by smoking cigarettes, drinking coffee, eating junk food,
and not eating our vegetables. When the media began warning us
of free radicals, many of us did not understand the massive damage
we were causing our bodies or how to prevent it, especially as
most of the signs of damage are invisible until it is too late.
Free radical damage is accumulative and spreads like wildfire
over time. Do your body a favor. Feed it a diet rich in antioxidant
nutrition. Make it a habit, eat your fruits and vegetables, take
your vitamins, and try to stop or cut down on damaging bad habits.
You will thank yourself in 20 years.
Use antioxidants wisely to age successfully. Maybe like the fruit
fly, you too can live 30% longer.
About The Author
Carina MacInnes is a writer who offers a free e-course on how
free radicals affect our health, using antioxidants for healing
and anti-aging, and the latest in superfood nutrition. For her
health she uses an antioxidant-packed superfood liquid nutrient.
Get all the info now: http://acai-4life.com.