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		<title>السبلة العمانية - الموقع العُماني الأول - مدونة - uIdese nIndId ffesyu sId بواسطة angesthat</title>
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		<description>سبلة عمان,سبلة,السبلة,السبلة العمانية,سبلة العرب,عمان,سلطنة عمان,سوق,سوق عمان,سياسة عمان</description>
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			<title>السبلة العمانية - الموقع العُماني الأول - مدونة - uIdese nIndId ffesyu sId بواسطة angesthat</title>
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			<title>The calorie-cut monkeys</title>
			<link>https://www.omaniaa.co/entry.php?b=98674</link>
			<pubDate>Thu, 11 Jul 2019 07:25:55 GMT</pubDate>
			<description><![CDATA[Death wasn't the only change. The calorie-cut monkeys had less than half the incidence of cancerous tumors or heart disease as the monkeys who ate...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<blockquote class="blogcontent restore">Death wasn't the only change. The calorie-cut monkeys had less than half the incidence of cancerous tumors or heart disease as the monkeys who ate normally. Brain scans showed less age-related shrinkage in the dieting monkeys. They also retained more muscle, something else that tends to waste with age.<br />
Compare two cage-by-cage photos of the monkeys and the difference is obvious: A 29-year-old monkey happens to be the oldest non-dieting monkey still alive, and a 27-year-old the oldest still-living dieter. Yet the dieting monkey looks many more years younger than his fatter, frumpier neighbor, not just a mere two.<br />
&quot;All these pieces put together provide rather convincing evidence in our view that caloric restriction can slow the aging process in a primate species,&quot; said lead researcher Dr. Richard Weindruch, a University of Wisconsin professor heading the NIA-funded study.<br />
He contends that somehow the diet change is reprogramming metabolism in a way that slows aging.<br />
The federal government is funding a small study to see if some healthy normal-weight people could sustain a 25 percent calorie cut for two years and if doing so signals some changes that might, over a long enough time, reduce some age-related disease.<br />
But NIA's Finkelstein cautions that people shouldn't just try this on their own; cutting out the wrong nutrients could cause more harm than good. Just follow commonsense healthy lifestyle advice, he said.<br />
&quot;Everyone's obviously looking for the magic pill,&quot; and there's not one, Finkelstein said. &quot;Watch what you eat, keep your mind active, exercise and don't get run over by a car.&quot;<br />
Wal-Mart is throwing its weight behind health care legislation that increases its own responsibility to provide coverage. It comes as quite a shock to Wal-Mart haters and supporters alike. What's behind the move?</blockquote>

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