Tag Archives: longevity

Is Brain Age the New Longevity Marker?

Recent advances in longevity science are shifting attention away from chronological age toward more precise biological indicators. Among the most promising is the biological age of the brain. Unlike traditional biomarkers, brain age provides a nuanced snapshot of cognitive health, neurological resilience, and future disease risk. For physicians practicing longevity and precision medicine, this shift opens new pathways for proactive care.

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The Lifestyle Prescription: How 2025’s Top Wellness Trends Are Reshaping Longevity

As the practice of longevity medicine evolves, so too does our understanding of what drives healthspan, not just lifespan. In 2025, lifestyle medicine is emerging as a foundational component of clinical longevity care. Recent findings from the Global Wellness Institute reinforce a notable shift: a move away from reactive, disease-focused interventions toward proactive, patient-centered strategies that integrate behavioral, environmental, and social determinants of health.

This year’s trends offer timely insight for clinicians looking to expand their practice beyond traditional diagnostics and therapeutics. They also reflect growing patient demand for evidence-based approaches that support prevention, performance, and long-term physiological resilience.

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Pausing Necrosis: A Clinician’s Perspective on a New Anti-Aging Frontier

Emerging research on necrosis as a therapeutic target marks a pivotal shift in the field of longevity medicine. Historically considered a passive byproduct of tissue injury, necrosis is now being recharacterized as a proactive driver of systemic aging and chronic disease.

This paradigm shift holds clinical implications across specialties, from nephrology and neurology to cardiovascular and regenerative medicine, suggesting that early intervention at the cellular death cascade could preserve organ function, limit fibrosis, and potentially delay biologic aging.

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