Home
Age-Defying Therapies
Aging America Preparation
Aging Brains Develop
Aging Disease Hotspots
Aging Factors
Aging in Place
Aging in Place Challenge
Aging in Place Benefits
Aging in US
Aging Perspectives
Aging Perspectives Survey
Aging Research Shortfall
Aging with GRACE
American, English Life Span
Amish Aging
Anti-Aging Acceptance
Anti-Aging Hormones
Anti-Oxidant Role Questioned
As Old As You Feel
Aspirin Beneft Questioned
Aspirin Benefit Test
Avoid Heat Stroke
Barefoot Fall Risk
Belief in God
Beauty and Aging Perspective
Beneficial Health Care Program
Benfits of Oils for Skin
Benefits Checkup Urged
Better Health Struggle
Better Spaces for Elderly
Bile Fountain of Youth
Birth Order Impact
Body Satisfaction Differences
Boost Aging Skin Cells
Bus Pass Health Benefit
Caffine Helps Memory
Caffine Reverses Memory Loss
Childhood Events' Impact
Cleaner Air Cuts Mortality
Clincal Trial Exclusion
Clues to Aging
Congregate Living Benefit
Cognitive Skills
Creative Link Benefit
DC Senior Needs Study
Decision-Making Influence
Defining Successful Aging
Defying Expectations
Easter Seals Project
Education, Status, Longevity
Elderly Advice to Grads
Elderly Happiness Secrets
Elderly Hospital Admissions
Elderly Housing Program
Elderly Med Tests Questioned
Elderly Thyroid Patient Risk
Elderly Want Own Home
Emotion Impact on Aging
Emotional Intelligence
Environment and aging
Extend Life Expectancy
Facial Bones Age
Falling Among Elderly
Fat Cells Impact
Fat-Loss, Longevity
Fewer Hot Flashes
Fighting Muscle Loss
Fountain of Youth from Tap
Fountain of Youth Quest
Four Death Risks
Frailty, Surgery Results
Friends Boost Longevity
Functional Training Benefit
Gardening Add Zest to Life
Gardening Benefits
Gene Life Span Impact
Gene Responsible for Aging
Gene Variants, Lifespan
Genetic Signatures
Get Shingles Vaccination
Getting Seniors Moving
Glimpse of Aging Future
Glucose Death Links
Growing Older at Home
Grow Old, Grow Happier
Habits to Resolutions
Hair Care for Seniors
Happiness Improves Life
Healthier Aging
Healthier Aging Impact
Health Reform Impact
Health vs. Fitness
Healthy Monday Tips
Helping Elderly Independence
Hot Flushes Linger
Housing for Aging
Housing Grant
Hunger in America
Hungering for Longevity
Illness, Injury Disability Link
Impaired Immune Response
Impending Aging Crisis
Improve Aging Skin
Injuries Killing Elderly
Is Aging Inevitable?
Israel Life Span Exeeds U.S.
Keeping Seniors Mobile
Key to Prayer Success
Less Pain Medication
Lifelong Health Gap
Lifting Aging Faces
Life Span Regulator
Lifestyle Impact Longevity
Living Fast Life
Longevity Molecule
Longevity Preparation
Longevity Secrets
Longevity Study
Looking Older
Lower Disablity Risk
Maintaining Mobility
Maintain Thinking Skills
Making Muscle Mass
Making Old Muscles Young
Male Menopause
Male Menopause Common
Managing Menopause Study
Mapping Aging Process
Massage Health Benefits
Mature Market Institute
Men and Doctors
Men, Medical Appointments
Men on Fire
Menopause Map
Men Urged Protect Health
Minoritiy Participants Needed
Mobility Issues
Molecular Aging Mechanisms
More Sick Time
Moving Aids Fitness
Music for All Ages
Muscles Fountain of Youth
Music Offsets Aging
National Mobility Awareness
NCOA BenefitsCheckup
New Theory on Aging
Noisy Aging Theory
Normal Body Temperature
Obesity, Aging
Older Father, Longer Life
Older Men Health Concerns
Overactive Thyroid Life Threat
Older Adults' Struggles
Older Americans Act
Over 50 Attitudes
Oxidants and Aging
PA Aging in Place Legislation
Paradox of Aging
Personality Genes Aid Aging
Physical Decline Older Adults
Planning, Education Keys
Positive Aging
Positive Social Skills Impact
Postponing Surgery
Post-Treatment Mortality
Primate Aging Similarities
Protein Fights Aging
Reaching 100 Years
Rebranding Exercise Message
Rediscovering Pragmatism
Resting Brain Stem Cells
Reverse Stem Cell Aging
Road Map to Life
Saving Brain White Matter
Seniors in Public Housing
Sepsis Awareness
Sleep and Aging
Slow Down Aging Process
Space Age Enzyme
Spiritual Lift Benefits
Stress Leads to Aging
Stress Leads to Mortalitiy
Successful Aging Secret
Summer Heat Safety
Side Effect Prevention
Stop Strength Loss
Studying Aging in Dish
SuperAgers Study
Testosterone Decline
Testosterone Older Men
Testosterone Slows Muscle Loss
Testosterone Study
Time in Nature
Tips to Live to 100
Training for Aphasia
Turn Back the Clock
Two Perspectives on Aging
Use Holidays for Family Check
Using Own Stem Cells
US Life Expectancy Lags
Vaccines for Adults Important
Value of Laughter
Vitality Project
Walking Aids Recovery
Walking Speed Aids Life
Walgreens Wellness Tour
Web Clues to Aging
Wellness Products
Why Muscles Weaken
Women and Aging
Women's Biiological Clock
50 Aging America Facts
50+ Lack Resources
65 is New 45
2011 Healthy Aging Tips
2011 Older Americans' Month
2012 Older Americans Month
Music Improves Health
Manage Holiday Stress
Holiday Party Traps
New Page 3

Home
Aging and Arthritis
Aging and Cancer
Aging Avoid Entrepreneurship
Aging, Cancer Deterrent
Aging Causes Diseases
Aging Consumer Launches
Aging, Depression
Boomers' News
Confronting Mental Decline
Elderly Driving Stories
End of Life
Seniors' Concerns
Part D Confusion
Health Care Concerns
Environments for Aging
Extra Day Personal Care
Texas Takes Aging Lead
Kohl Heads  Committee
Senior Dogs Deserve Care
What Concerns Seniors
2009 Aging in America Facts
 

 

 

 

Google
 

 

Web TodaysSeniorsNetwork.com

 

NIH-Funded study seeks long-lived families to help discover secrets of long and healthy life

 
 

Long, healthy life tends to run in some families, and researchers on a project su pported by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) want to learn more about the factors that contribute to it. The Long Life Family Study (LLFS), developed by the NIH's National Institute on Aging (NIA), is now recruiting families to participate in this study.

This study will be conducted by researchers at three sites in the United States and one in Denmark. Potential U.S. participants will be recruited from areas close to the LLFS study centers at Columbia University in New York City, the University of Pittsburgh and Boston University.

Potential Danish participants will be recruited by researchers at the University of Southern Denmark, using information from the Danish National Population Registry. Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis will act as the Data Management and Coordinating Center.

LLFS researchers are seeking a large number of families with several long-lived members for this study and are particularly interested in hearing from families with at least two living members aged 80 years or older and their living children who reside near the study site locations of Pittsburgh, Boston or New York.

Trained clinical staff members will meet with study participants to ask questions about their family and health history and conduct some performance and physical assessments. Study participants will also be asked for a small blood sample to obtain genetic information to help determine the role that genes might play in long healthy survival, in addition to many other factors.

“Other studies have indicated that longevity tends to run in families. The planned LLFS is designed to determine the genetic and environmental factors that contribute to longevity and to the ability to escape diseases normally associated with aging such as Alzheimer’s disease, cancer, stroke and heart disease,” said Richard J. Hodes, M.D., NIA director.

Winifred K. Rossi, deputy director of NIA’s Geriatrics and Clinical Gerontology Program and the NIA program official for the five-year, $18 million project said, “Families are often very proud of their long-lived relatives. This study will provide the opportunity for long-lived families to share information about their lives that contributes to their long and healthy survival. The knowledge gained from these families can help us understand what makes them unique and can lead to scientific insights to help other people improve the length of time they spend in good health.” The scientific results of the study will be made public once the information obtained is analyzed, said Rossi. The privacy of study participants and their information will be carefully protected, she emphasized.

The study’s lead investigators, prominent in longevity and genetic research, are:

  • Thomas Perls, M.D., Ph.D., director of the New England Centenarian Study and Associate Professor of Medicine, Geriatrics Section, Department of Medicine, Boston University, Boston;
  • Richard Mayeux, M.D., Gertrude H. Sergievsky Professor of Neurology, Psychiatry and Epidemiology at Columbia University and director of the Gertrude H. Sergievsky Center and the co-director of the Taub Institute for Research on Alzheimer's Disease and the Aging Brain, New York;
  • Anne B. Newman, M.D., M.P.H., Professor of Epidemiology and Medicine in the Department of Epidemiology at the University of Pittsburgh;
  • James W. Vaupel, Ph.D., Executive Director of the Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research in Rostock, Germany, and director of the Program on Population, Policy and Aging at the Terry Sanford Institute of Public Policy at Duke University, Durham, N. C.;
  • Kaare Christensen, M.D., Ph.D, Professor of Epidemiology, Institute of Public Health at the University of Southern Denmark and senior research scientist at the Terry Sanford Institute of Public Policy at Duke University, Durham, N. C. and,
  • Michael A. Province, Ph.D., Professor of Genetics and Biostatistics, and Director of the Division of Statistical Genomics in the Genome Sciences Center of Washington University in St. Louis, Mo.

Interested parties should call the local LLFS recruitment offices at the following numbers:

  • Boston University: 1-888-333-6327
  • University of Pittsburgh: 1-800-872-3653
  • Columbia University: 1-800-304-4317

For more information on the Long Life Family Study, visit the website at www.longlifefamilystudy.org.

NIA, part of the National Institutes of Health, leads the federal effort supporting and conducting research on aging and the health and well-being of older people. For more information on health and aging, visit the NIA website, www.nia.nih.gov or call the NIA Information Center at 1-800-222-2225.

The National Institutes of Health (NIH) - the nation's medical research agency - includes 27 institutes and centers and is a component of the U. S. Department of Health and Human Services. It is the primary federal agency for conducting and supporting basic, clinical and translational medical research, and it investigates the causes, treatments, and cures for both common and rare diseases. For more information about NIH and its programs, visit www.nih.gov.

 

 

 

 



 

 

Home
Up
Aging News
Seniors Commentary
California Report
Caregiving_News.htm
Community/Workplace
Election 2012
'Smart Bombing' Diseases
Fitness,Health
Grandparents
HealthCare Policy
Hispanic Seniors
Medicare News
Prescription Drug News
Resources, Links
Rural Seniors
Resources, links to seniors agencies, groups
Safety & Security
Seniors' Entertainment
Seniors' Finances
Seniors Relationships
Social Security News
The Virtual Family
Travel News
Veterans Tribute
Privacy Statement
Join Our Mailing List
Aging Resources Store
TSN Video News
Rx for American Health
New Page 12

 

 

Copyright 2000-2013 TodaysSeniorsNetwork

 

Contact Us