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A Lifetime Of Cycling Keeps The Immune System Young

Leongsam

High Order Twit / Low SES subject
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A Lifetime Of Cycling Keeps The Immune System Young, Study Finds

Ed Cara
Mar 11, 2018, 8:00am
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Immortality may be a gift reserved only for the mole rats of the world. But staying highly active into your golden years might just offer the next best thing: a robust immune system that looks decades younger than expected. That's the finding of a new study published Thursday in the journal Ageing Cell.

A lifelong cycling habit, a new study in the UK finds, might give an 80-year-old the immune system of a 20-something.Photo: Spencer Platt (Getty Images)

Researchers in the UK examined the blood of 125 people over the age of 55 who have regularly cycled for most of their lives, looking for markers of T cell production. T cells are one of the major foot soldiers of the immune system, tasked with a variety of roles, such as recognising and killing foreign invaders.

They compared these fit senior citizens to 75 similarly aged, otherwise healthy people who didn't exercise, as well as 55 young adults who weren't all that active. The older cyclists, they found, overall had higher levels of young, freshly made T-cells than their sedentary counterparts. But even more surprising to the researchers, these levels were about the same as those found in the younger group.

The findings suggests that the gradual decline of our immune system as we age, also known as immunesenescence, might be not so inevitable. "We conclude that many features of immunesenescence may be driven by reduced physical activity with age," the authors wrote.

Of course, the study isn't the first to show clear differences between active people and everyone else. Other research has long found that a sedentary lifestyle can increase the risk of a variety of chronic conditions like cardiovascular disease, obesity and certain cancers, especially the older you get.

But this new research does further highlight the role of a robust immune system in keeping older people healthier.

"The immune system declines by about 2-3 per cent a year from our 20s, which is why older people are more susceptible to infections, conditions like rheumatoid arthritis and, potentially, cancer," co-author Janet Lord, professor and director of the Institute of Inflammation and Ageing, at the University of Birmingham in the UK, explained to the BBC. "Because the cyclists have the immune system of a 20-year-old rather than a 70 or 80-year-old, it means they have added protection against all these issues."

Not everything was the same between the youngsters and the aspiring Jack Lalannes though. The cyclists did have higher levels of memory T cells. And the levels of a certain population of immune cells, known as CD28−ve, CD57+ve T cells, were the same between the active and non-active elderly. The presence of both of these kinds of T cells are thought to increase the more foreign invaders we're exposed to over a lifetime, the researchers say.

That suggests that even the most active people will show some signs of wear and tear as they age.

Still, the researchers theorise that not only will staying active into your later years protect you from diseases like cancer, it could also make vaccines used on you that much more effective. They next plan to study the same group of cyclists to test their vaccine theory.

[Ageing Cell via BBC]

For those interested in the nitty gritty details the study is pubished in depth at https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/acel.12750
 

syed putra

Alfrescian
Loyal
Cycling in new zealand is ok. But in the tropics? Csn only do evening or early morning. Night time too dark cannot see road and drivers cannot see you. If see you also curse cyvlist blocking his road.maybe knock you down on purpose.
 

bic_cherry

Alfrescian
Loyal
A Lifetime Of Cycling Keeps The Immune System Young, Study Finds

Ed Cara
Mar 11, 2018, 8:00am
⋅ Filed to:

Share


Immortality may be a gift reserved only for the mole rats of the world. But staying highly active into your golden years might just offer the next best thing: a robust immune system that looks decades younger than expected. That's the finding of a new study published Thursday in the journal Ageing Cell.

A lifelong cycling habit, a new study in the UK finds, might give an 80-year-old the immune system of a 20-something.Photo: Spencer Platt (Getty Images)

Researchers in the UK examined the blood of 125 people over the age of 55 who have regularly cycled for most of their lives, looking for markers of T cell production. T cells are one of the major foot soldiers of the immune system, tasked with a variety of roles, such as recognising and killing foreign invaders.

They compared these fit senior citizens to 75 similarly aged, otherwise healthy people who didn't exercise, as well as 55 young adults who weren't all that active. The older cyclists, they found, overall had higher levels of young, freshly made T-cells than their sedentary counterparts. But even more surprising to the researchers, these levels were about the same as those found in the younger group.

The findings suggests that the gradual decline of our immune system as we age, also known as immunesenescence, might be not so inevitable. "We conclude that many features of immunesenescence may be driven by reduced physical activity with age," the authors wrote.

Of course, the study isn't the first to show clear differences between active people and everyone else. Other research has long found that a sedentary lifestyle can increase the risk of a variety of chronic conditions like cardiovascular disease, obesity and certain cancers, especially the older you get.

But this new research does further highlight the role of a robust immune system in keeping older people healthier.

"The immune system declines by about 2-3 per cent a year from our 20s, which is why older people are more susceptible to infections, conditions like rheumatoid arthritis and, potentially, cancer," co-author Janet Lord, professor and director of the Institute of Inflammation and Ageing, at the University of Birmingham in the UK, explained to the BBC. "Because the cyclists have the immune system of a 20-year-old rather than a 70 or 80-year-old, it means they have added protection against all these issues."

Not everything was the same between the youngsters and the aspiring Jack Lalannes though. The cyclists did have higher levels of memory T cells. And the levels of a certain population of immune cells, known as CD28−ve, CD57+ve T cells, were the same between the active and non-active elderly. The presence of both of these kinds of T cells are thought to increase the more foreign invaders we're exposed to over a lifetime, the researchers say.

That suggests that even the most active people will show some signs of wear and tear as they age.

Still, the researchers theorise that not only will staying active into your later years protect you from diseases like cancer, it could also make vaccines used on you that much more effective. They next plan to study the same group of cyclists to test their vaccine theory.

[Ageing Cell via BBC]

For those interested in the nitty gritty details the study is pubished in depth at https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/acel.12750
Some proper lifestyle improvements including a decent dose of regular exercise will very much place exercise as a good lifestyle habit in Singaporean's lives:


"As of 2010, more than half of Singapore's adult population between 18 and 69 years old have high cholesterol, four in 10 are overweight or obese, a quarter have prediabetes or diabetes and about one in five has hypertension."
PM Lee HL personally queuing up for his favourite comfort food of fried chicken wings (after a stressful day attending to personal family problems perhaps).
yan7.jpg
(alt pict view)
yan1.jpg
(alt img view)http://danielfooddiary.com/2014/06/14/yan/
KBW showing off his $8 urgent heart bypass due to life threatening levels of fat and cholesterol had been found clogging up his heart arteries due to poor lifestyle choices and lack of/ improper aerobic exercise.
Khaw+Boon+Wan.jpg
https://www.facebook.com/notes/theo...n-wan-pays-s8-for-bypass-surgery/446633433963
Minister Heng Swee Kiat who thinks he is Superman, sleeps much less than 4.5hrs/night, as if his brain and body needs no rest:
"Fellow Tampines MP Desmond Choo was also shocked at the news.
"We've never heard anything like this. To me, he's like Superman," said Mr Choo.
"The number of hours he works and the kind of attention span he has, it's amazing."
The 2012 Hougang by-election candidate recalled the days when he worked closely with Mr Heng, whom he sees as a fatherly figure and source of inspiration.
"During the by-election period, we would discuss issues until 2am and he would ask me to go home," said Mr Choo.
"'As a candidate, you need rest,' he would tell me while he continued working with activists. When I returned in the morning, at about 6.30am, he'd already be there."
http://www.tnp.sg/news/singapore/shanmugam-heng-was-carrying-incredible-load
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http://www.straitstimes.com/singapo...t-apologises-for-not-being-able-to-attend-ndp
PM LHL, too much fried wings/chendol (fatty food) or skipped sleep before presenting NDR2016/ a mini-stroke on stage?:
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https://edmwimg.wordpress.com/tag/lee-hsien-loong/page/5/
Foot ulcers which people with diabetes mellitus suffer (after eating too much with insufficient exercise):
Diabetic-Foot-Ulcers.jpg

slide_8.jpg

Charles Chong, ate too much, exercised way too little, developed severe fatty liver disease/ cancer which necessitated a liver transplant to save his life:
Lv5ToAs.jpg


1 in 10 stroke patients here aged under 50
PUBLISHED NOV 19, 2016, 5:00 AM SGT
Linette Lai
While older people are far more likely to suffer a stroke, one in 10 stroke patients in Singapore is under 50 years old.
Medical conditions such as high blood pressure or high cholesterol can make a person more likely to get a stroke, say doctors.
Smoking, too, puts you at risk.

Last Saturday, Singaporean businesswoman Linda Koh was found unconscious in her Hong Kong hotel room. The 36-year-old was rushed to hospital, where she died soon after.
Doctors subsequently found that she had suffered a stroke.
Her father, Mr Alan Koh, told Chinese newspaper Shin Min Daily News that his daughter had a history of high blood pressure and was taking medication for it.
Strokes occur when part of the blood supply to the brain is cut off.
The latest figures from the National Registry of Disease Office show that there were 6,943 cases of strokes in 2014, up from 6,642 the previous year.
They are the fourth most common cause of death in Singapore, and tend to occur among men.
The incidence rate for men aged between 35 and 44 who were admitted to public hospitals for stroke in 2014 was 58 per 100,000 people, compared with 24 per 100,000 for women in the same age group.
Doctors who spoke to The Straits Times said there are rarely any warning signs before a stroke happens.
"Some strokes may be preceded by severe headaches or neck pain," said Dr Carol Tham, a consultant from the National Neuroscience Institute's neurology department. "Unfortunately, most patients do not have any warning symptoms before the stroke occurs."
During a stroke, people often experience difficulty speaking and walking, weakness on one side of their bodies, and even temporary blindness.
Dr Ho King Hee, a neurologist at Gleneagles Hospital Singapore, said strokes that result in sudden death are likely to be due to bleeding in the brain from a ruptured blood vessel, rather than a blockage.
"If you are older, it means that there is more time for damage (to the blood vessels) to accumulate," he said. "But a stroke can happen at any age."
He advises people who have conditions such as high blood pressure, high cholesterol and diabetes to keep them in check.
Dr Tham added that doctors may also prescribe blood-thinning medication for people whose blood tends to clot.
"If a person has any symptoms of stroke... he should seek treatment at the emergency department immediately as early treatment can help to reduce the disability caused by strokes," she said.
A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Straits Times on November 19, 2016, with the headline '1 in 10 stroke patients here aged under 50'.
http://www.straitstimes.com/singapore/1-in-10-stroke-patients-here-aged-under-50
 

Leongsam

High Order Twit / Low SES subject
Admin
Asset
RideLondon organiser confirms death of 69-year-old man during 100-mile event
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Nigel Buchan-Swanson's wife says "he died doing something he loved"
ridelondon100_2013_Leith_Hill_231-630x421.jpg

TAGS:RideLondon
A 69-year-old man has died following a cardiac arrest during the RideLondon-Surrey 100 sportive.
Nigel Buchan-Swanson suffered a cardiac arrest at around the 56 mile mark, on Ockley Road, near Dorking. He received immediate treatment from fellow riders and medical personnel at the scene.
The father of three and grandfather of six was taking part in the sportive to raise money for Macmillan Cancer Support, stating on his JustGiving Page that he chose the charity “because continuing research will minimise the impact.”
Bunchan-Swanson lived in Chichester, West Sussex. His wife, Deborah, said: “Nigel was a much loved husband, father and grandfather.”
“He was a very experienced cyclist and died doing something he loved,” she added.

In a press release circulated on Monday July 30, the organisers passed on their sympathy, commenting: “Everyone involved in Prudential RideLondon would like to express our sincere condolences to Nigel’s family and friends.”
“No further details will be released and the family has asked for privacy. The exact cause of death will be established by later medical examination.”
In 2017, 67-year-old Maris Ozols died whilst taking on the 46 mile route – also after a cardiac arrest, on Cromwell Road at the 13 mile mark. A donation page set up in his memory raised over £5,000 for the British Heart Foundation.

The previous year, Richard Chard, 48, suffered a cardiac arrest at the 25 mile mark at Kingston Bridge, passing away later at Kingston Hospital.
The 100-mile sportive, which starts at London’s Lee Valley VeloPark and travels into Surrey, via Newlands Corner, Leith Hill and Box Hill, attracted thousands of riders this year, with 26,720 cyclists reaching the finish at The Mall despite almost wet and blustery conditions throughout the day
 

halsey02

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Some questions I would like to ask? Constant rubbing on the bicycle seat, especially furiously peddling produces a lot of heat, will this cause the (1) The cyclist to get impotent? (2) Risk of getting cancer of the testicles or prostate? For the women, the hymen definitely gets torn a thousand times & will over rigorous makes the labia muscular..like big?
 

halsey02

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
It is miracle of Stinkeprore doctors that Heng Swee Kiat is alive, still making money out of the taxayers & still screwing them, God must have a reason. So, is that mee siam mai hum, Cow$8 & the lesser mortal Charlie..
 

glockman

Old Fart
Asset
Some questions I would like to ask? Constant rubbing on the bicycle seat, especially furiously peddling produces a lot of heat, will this cause the (1) The cyclist to get impotent? (2) Risk of getting cancer of the testicles or prostate? For the women, the hymen definitely gets torn a thousand times & will over rigorous makes the labia muscular..like big?
The labia will get callused, and will provide a more pleasurable experience for the lucky guy.
 

halsey02

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
The labia will get callused, and will provide a more pleasurable experience for the lucky guy.

Callused as looking like those dried abalone...yucks!, hard for the 'kong long' to rise to the occasion & you can 'puff the magic dragon'..till its dead...nothing is working!. I prefer wet, smooth abalone..not callused one!
 
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