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First person who
will live till 150 already born |
Stem Cell & Gene
Therapies To ‘Cure’ Aging Will Ensure Humans Reach 1000
Yrs |
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London: If Aubrey de Grey’s predictions are right, the first person who
will live to see their 150th birthday has already been born.
And the first person to live for 1,000 years could be less than 20
years younger. A biomedical gerontologist and chief scientist of a
foundation dedicated to longevity research, de Grey reckons that within
his lifetime doctors could have all the tools they need to “cure” aging
banishing diseases that come with it and extending life indefinitely.
“I’d say we have a 50/50 chance of bringing aging under what I’d
call a decisive level of medical control within the next 25 years or
so,” de Grey said in an interview before delivering a lecture at
Britain’s Royal Institution academy of science.
“And what I mean by decisive is the same sort of medical control
that we have over most infectious diseases today.” De Grey sees a time
when people will go to their doctors for regular “maintenance”, which by
then will include gene therapies, stem cell therapies, immune
stimulation and a range of other advanced medical techniques to keep
them in good shape.
De Grey lives near Cambridge University where he won his doctorate
in 2000 and is chief scientific officer of the non-profit
California-based SENS (Strategies for Engineered Negligible Senescence)
Foundation, which he cofounded in 2009. He describes aging as the
lifelong accumulation of various types of molecular and cellular damage
throughout the body.
“The idea is to engage in what you might call preventative
geriatrics, where you go in to periodically repair that molecular and
cellular damage before it gets to the level of abundance that is
pathogenic,” he explained.
Exactly how far and how fast life expectancy will increase in the
future is a subject of some debate, but the trend is clear. An average
of three months is being added to life expectancy every year and experts
estimate there could be a million centenarians across world by 2030. To
date, world’s longest-living person on record lived to 122 and in Japan
alone there were more than 44,000 centenarians in 2010. Some researchers
say, however, that the trend towards longer lifespan may falter due to
an epidemic of obesity now spilling over from rich nations into the
developing world.
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