Saturday, February 3, 2007

Time in a Bottle Anti-Aging Boosters Claim Their Products Can Turn Back the Clock.

Time in a Bottle Anti-Aging Boosters Claim Their Products Can Turn Back the Clock. Independent Scientists Aren't Buying It.
Would you like to grow younger, to turn back the clock 10 or 20 years and double your life span? Thanks to recent scientific advances, your chances are pretty good . . . if you're a parasitic worm or a fruit fly. Humans, who for the most part are more complicated than these creatures, can reap no such benefits from the continuing flood of anti-aging potions and precepts, which are at best naively optimistic and at worst fraudulent and harmful. Yes, credible and independent
Professor sued over opinion, He blasted anti-aging group Now he's accused of "ruthless campaign"
CHICAGO — Over the years that S. Jay Olshansky has blasted the Chicago-based American Academy of Anti-Aging Medicine as a peddler of baseless ideas about how to reverse the aging process, he said he always saw their dust-up as a scientific dispute like many others.But in an unusual $120 million lawsuit winding through Cook County Circuit Court, leaders of the anti-aging group contend the University of Illinois, Chicago, professor and a colleague were aiming at much more: a...
NEW ELIXIRS, NEW WRINKLES
Beauty may be only skin-deep, but that's quite far enough for the cosmetics industry. The hottest new wrinkle in the billion-dollar appearance business: anti-aging preparations. Manufacturers assert these treatments not only cover up the marks of age, but actually are revolutionary new ways of rejuvenating skin.Some dermatologists, however, are doubtful about these claimed new advances in technology. They say they have seen no proof, and find the statements in the ads difficult...



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