79 studies
Research Library
Peer-reviewed papers from top journals, summarized and graded by evidence strength. Updated Mon, Wed & Fri.
May 3–9, 2026
2New Aging Clocks Reveal Blood Clotting Factors May Drive Organ Decline
Researchers built a multi-layered aging clock using clinical, physiological, and molecular data from over 2,000 Chinese adults. They found that plasma proteins can predict both your age and how well your body is holding up. The standout discovery: clotting factors pile up with age and may fuel organ-wide aging and inflammation.
Why Alzheimer's May Look Like a Viral Infection That Isn't There
This review proposes that Alzheimer's behaves like the brain fighting a fake viral infection. Old retrotransposons and leaked mitochondrial DNA trick immune cells into thinking there's a virus, triggering chronic inflammation and turning brain support cells into zombie-like senescent cells. The authors suggest that HIV drugs (NRTIs) and senolytics could one day target this hidden cascade. It's a fresh angle after years of failed amyloid-focused drugs.
Apr 19–25, 2026
3Cardio vs. Weights for Type 2 Diabetes: Different Wins for Each
In adults with Type 2 diabetes, cardio and resistance training help in different ways. Aerobic exercise was best for boosting adiponectin and lowering leptin, two hormones tied to fat regulation. Resistance training showed bigger drops in inflammatory markers like TNF-alpha and IL-6, especially in younger or overweight people. The authors caution these results are hypothesis-generating, not firm exercise prescriptions.
What Centenarians' Immune Systems Reveal About Escaping Age-Related Disease
People who live past 100 tend to have immune systems that look surprisingly young. This review found they have less chronic inflammation, better cellular cleanup (autophagy), and gut bacteria patterns linked to healthy aging. Those living past 110 often have immune profiles resembling much younger adults.
Inflammation in the Blood Shows Up as Damage in Brain Wiring
In late middle-aged and older adults, higher levels of inflammatory markers in blood were tied to subtle changes in white matter, the brain's wiring. People with more pro-inflammatory cytokines and CRP showed signs of disrupted neural fibers. The link held even after accounting for Alzheimer's biomarkers. This supports the idea that chronic inflammation quietly chips away at brain health.
Mar 22–28, 2026
2Why Your Skin Never Forgets Inflammation, Even Years Later
In mice, skin stem cells can hold lifelong "memories" of past inflammation like psoriasis flares. These memories are stored as epigenetic changes. Specific DNA sequences rich in CpG patterns keep the memory accessible through cell divisions. This means once skin has been inflamed, its stem cells stay primed to react faster and stronger to future triggers.
Anti-Inflammatory Foods May Lower Frailty Risk as You Age
Certain blood metabolites tied to fruits, vegetables, nuts, and legumes were linked to lower frailty risk in nearly 10,000 Canadian adults aged 45-85. The protective effect worked partly by reducing inflammation markers. On the flip side, a high omega-6 to omega-3 ratio and processed meat metabolites were tied to higher frailty risk through increased inflammation. The study tracked participants over three years, connecting dietary patterns to measurable metabolic changes.
Mar 15–21, 2026
2How Excess Fructose May Damage Far More Than Just Your Liver
This review pulls together evidence showing fructose does more than add calories. It triggers a chain reaction: uric acid buildup, mitochondrial stress, and fat storage signals that affect the liver, kidneys, pancreas, gut, heart, lungs, and brain. The damage traces back to how fructose is processed differently than glucose, depleting cellular energy and driving inflammation. Animal and human studies both point to fructose overload as a metabolic disruptor across nearly every organ system.
How Mutant Blood Stem Cells May Quietly Fuel Heart Disease as You Age
As people age, blood stem cells accumulate mutations that cause certain cell lines to expand. This process, called clonal hematopoiesis, is now strongly linked to increased cardiovascular risk in older adults. The mutant blood cells appear to ramp up inflammation, accelerating atherosclerosis and heart failure. This review covers how these rogue clones interact with age-related inflammation and what future therapies might look like.
Disclaimer: Research summaries are provided for informational purposes only and do not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional before making changes to your health routine.
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