Who's Who in Anti-Aging and Regenerative Medicine

Posted on 2009-04-13 12:16:35 in Dietary Supplementation | Healthcare and Information | Longevity | Nutrition |

Week of April 6, 2009

Paul Clayton, PhD

Dr. Clayton graduated Summa cum Laude at Edinburgh University, and subsequently earned a PhD in medical pharmacology at the MRS Brain Metabolism Unit, Edinburgh. He then served as a senior advisor to Committee on Safety of Medicines. For last 30 years, PC has specialised in the pharmacology of food and food derivates. He consults to Coca Cola, Proctor & Gamble, Arla Foods, Danisco, HFL and many other companies in the food and beverage sector. He is the author of Health Defence, the first textbook of pharmaconutrition (now going to 3rd edition), and PharmacoNutrition (to be published by the Royal Society of Medicine Press in Spring of '09). PC is currently developing clinical trials of pharmaconutritional interventions in Hungary, where he is Scientific Director of the new Szent-Gyorgyi Institute.

At the upcoming 17th World Congress on Anti-Aging and Regenerative Medicine in Orlando (April 23-25, 2009), Dr. Clayton will present, Demographic Analysis Shows that Mid-Victorians Lived Longer and Better than We Do Today, on Friday, April 24th, 2009.

This discussion will present a detailed analysis of the mid-Victorian period that has revealed that their patterns of physical activity and diet were very much better than ours, and met or surpassed current government high-end recommendations.

For more information, call 1-888-997-0112


Health Headlines

In a lab animal model, booming gut flora spawned by the Western diet is linked to obesity.
International study reaffirms importance of resolving the income gap between the richest and poorest people in developed countries.
Switzerland-based research team assesses the metabolic effects of dark chocolate consumption on energy, gut microbiota, and stress hormones.
UCLA researchers find disability rates in Americans entering their 60s are on the rise, potentially fueled by the overweight/obesity epidemic.
Genetic clues to longevity discovered among a homogenous ethnic population.
Rush Alzheimer's Disease Center (USA) researchers find that a loss of muscle strength raises risk of Alzheimer’s Disease and mild cognitive impairment.
Stroke risk may rise in those with common infectious pathogens such as Chlamydia pneumoniae, Helicobacter pylori, and herpes simplex viruses.
First study in humans links bisphenol A (BPA) exposure to male sexual function problems.
Simple steps in the community can promote walking among residents.
Study finds that people who are dissatisfied with their workplace bosses not only take more sick leave, but are at increased risk of suffering a heart attack.
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VIDEO: Brain Age Workshop
Dr. Eric Braverman, Director of The Place for Achieving Total Health (PATH Medical), Chairs the Brain Age Workshop taking place Dec. 9, 2009. Held in conjunction with the Winter Session of the 17th Annual World Congress on Anti-Aging Medicine & Regenerative Biomedical Technologies. The Brain Age Workshop features presentations on Brain Mind Assessment via Neuropsychological Analysis, Movement Deficiency Syndrome, Hormones and the Brain, Nootropic Drug Mechanisms, and Traumatic Brain Injury. View this video to learn about Dr. Braverman’s brain-based model of aging and age modulation.

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