Article Details

Oct. 1, 2009 - Dr. Christian Sell Discusses Research on Maximizing Healthy Lifespans

What makes our bodies more susceptible to diseases as we age? And how can we extend our lifespan so we can life long, healthy lives? Those are the questions addressed in the October edition of the Drexel Medcast®, a monthly medical podcast with leading academic physicians and scientists from the Drexel University College of Medicine faculty.

This month features an interview with Christian Sell, Ph.D., associate professor in the Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine at Drexel University College of Medicine. Sell is a noted aging and longevity research scientist who studies how the mechanisms of certain hormones and proteins contribute to cellular damage and degeneration, which leads to disease and death.

“We know we are susceptible to a multitude of diseases as we age,” said Sell. “What our research is trying to sort out is how hormones affect certain proteins which we believe are problematic and lead to cellular damage. In other words, what are the processes that increase our vulnerability to diseases as we age?”

During the interview, Sell addresses the impact of both genetics and environment on a person’s lifespan. “One of the more powerful interventions to extend lifespan is reducing food intake in many species, so there is this ‘eat less, live longer’ theory.”

As for living longer, he adds: “I think it’s probably conceivable within the next 50 years that people will live comfortably into their 90’s.”

Listen to the Drexel Medcast®.



Return

You are leaving the Drexel University College of Medicine website

By clicking on this link, you will be leaving the Drexel University College of Medicine–maintained website and entering another website that is not owned, operated, or controlled by Drexel University College of Medicine.

By linking to this external website, Drexel University College of Medicine does not endorse or verify the external website’s content, opinions, products, services, or privacy or security policies.