When I am sick or have a headache, I feel old and look older. I have seen this time and time again, that there is a drastic and immediate aging effect as a function of acute illness. The mechanism to make the body break down is inflammation. But, what about chronic inflammation, I also notice that when I eat alot of meat , pasta or wheat products that the same effect of aging is taking place. The inflammation is the cause. When I flip back into raw fruits and vegetables diets, I begin to look younger significantly younger. But, what about low-grade chronic inflammation? Our immune system is constantly fighting off latent diseases that are still embedded in our genetics. The effects are chronic sub-clinical inflammation that accelerates or is the main cause of aging.
Simply taking anti-inflammatories are not the answer, since the diseases are still embedded on the genetic code. The play is still going on, even though we are not aware of it. Then use of high energy technologies such as bio-resonance, tachyon and Orgone help assist in the removal of the negative imprints on the genetic code. It is these songs that need to be deleted from the genetic record. Bio-resonance removes negative memory patterns gradually. The loss of negativity triggers a reduction in immune system responses and a repairing of the genetic code. The immune system does respond to negative emotional states in addition to highly acidic foods and toxins. The reduction of inflammatory responses whether due to emotional, mental stresses, viruses, pathogens or food is one of the primary keys to reversing your AGE.

Can We Cure Aging?
Controlling inflammation could be the key to a healthy old age.

by Kathleen McGowan

Hammond is an elite athlete. He works out two hours a day with a trainer, pushing himself through sprints, runs, and strength-building exercises. His resting heart rate is below 50. He’s won three gold medals and one silver in amateur competitions this year alone, running races from 100 to 800 meters. In his division, he’s broken four national racing records. But perhaps the most elite thing about Hammond is his age.

He is 93. And really, there’s nothing much wrong with him, aside from the fact that he doesn’t see very well. He takes no drugs and has no complaints, although his hair long ago turned white and his skin is no longer taut.

His secret? He doesn’t have one. Hammond never took exceptional measures during his long life to preserve his health. He did not exercise regularly until his fifties and didn’t get serious about it until his eighties, when he began training for the Georgia Golden Olympics. “I love nothing better than winning,” he says. “It’s been a wonderful thing for me.” Hammond is aging, certainly, but somehow he isn’t getting old—at least, not in the way we usually think about it.
Health & Medicine / Aging Can We Cure Aging?
Controlling inflammation could be the key to a healthy old age.

by Kathleen McGowan
From the December 2007 issue; published online December 4, 2007

Jim Hammond is an elite athlete. He works out two hours a day with a trainer, pushing himself through sprints, runs, and strength-building exercises. His resting heart rate is below 50. He’s won three gold medals and one silver in amateur competitions this year alone, running races from 100 to 800 meters. In his division, he’s broken four national racing records. But perhaps the most elite thing about Hammond is his age.

He is 93. And really, there’s nothing much wrong with him, aside from the fact that he doesn’t see very well. He takes no drugs and has no complaints, although his hair long ago turned white and his skin is no longer taut.

His secret? He doesn’t have one. Hammond never took exceptional measures during his long life to preserve his health. He did not exercise regularly until his fifties and didn’t get serious about it until his eighties, when he began training for the Georgia Golden Olympics. “I love nothing better than winning,” he says. “It’s been a wonderful thing for me.” Hammond is aging, certainly, but somehow he isn’t getting old—at least, not in the way we usually think about it.

They say aging is one of the only certain things in life. But it turns out they were wrong. In recent years, gerontologists have overturned much of the conventional wisdom about getting old. Aging is not the simple result of the passage of time. According to a provocative new view, it is actually something our own bodies create, a side effect of the essential inflammatory system that protects us against infectious disease. As we fight off invaders, we inflict massive collateral damage on ourselves, poisoning our own organs and breaking down our own tissues. We are our own worst enemy.

This paradox is transforming the way we understand aging. It is also changing our understanding of what diseases are and where they come from. Inflammation seems to underlie not just senescence but all the chronic illnesses that often come along with it: diabetes, atherosclerosis, Alzheimer’s, heart attack. “Inflammatory factors predict virtually all bad outcomes in humans,” says Russell Tracy, a professor of pathology and biochemistry at the University of Vermont College of Medicine, whose pioneering research helped demonstrate the role of inflammation in heart disease. “It predicts having heart attacks, having heart failure, becoming diabetic; predicts becoming fragile in old age; predicts cognitive function decline, even cancer to a certain extent.”

The idea that chronic diseases might be caused by persistent inflammation has been kicking around since the 19th century. Only in the past few years, though, have modern biochemistry and the emerging field of systems biology made it possible to grasp the convoluted chemical interactions involved in bodywide responses like inflammation. Over a lifetime, this essential set of defensive mechanisms runs out of bounds and gradually damages organs throughout the body
Continued At Source