Accelerated aging linked to cancer risk in younger adults, research shows
46 Articles
46 Articles
Researchers blame explosion of of cancer cases among younger people on 'accelerated aging'
Americans are increasingly suffering cancer at younger ages. The journal Nature noted last month that the number of early-onset cancer cases will increase by roughly 30% between 2019 and 2030. Additionally, colorectal cancer, which historically has affected geriatric men, is now the leading cause of cancer death among men under 50 and is now the second-leading cause of cancer death among young women. Uterine cancer has increase by 2% every year…
Scientists at University College London, the University of Sydney and the Federal Polytechnic School of Lausanne have shown that urban growth is similar to the growth of cancers. This was reported in an article published in the Journal of the Royal Society Interface. The researchers used a range of mathematical models to show how cities are growing and why they are growing the way they do, using London as an example. They found that the UK capit…
Researchers have found a possible explanation for the growing number of cancer cases in young people. Old age is a major risk factor for many cancers. But the researchers found that the disease does not take into account chronological old age, that is, the years in the bulletin, but the biological one. This could, in fact, be the cause of the increasing incidence of cancer in young people.
Scientists have uncovered that pregnancy can speed up the process of aging in women, confirming women's doubts that during pregnancy, stress makes them feel older than their age, according to the Washington Post. Two new studies have revealed important questions about aging in women, and whether it can actually be speeded up, slowed down or reversed through pregnancy. The paper reports that Colin Powell, a Columbia Center for Aging Research asso…
Prostate Cancer Cases to Double over 20 Years
PARIS (AFP-Jiji) — The number of new prostate cancer cases around the world will more than double over the next two decades as poorer countries catch up with the aging of richer nations, according to a Lancet report published on April 5.
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