Skip to main content icon/video/no-internet

What is an anti-aging intervention? This is a particularly important question today given the presence of a large and growing industry of entrepreneurs who are selling to the public the age-old idea that anti-aging interventions already exist and that much longer lives can be achieved by people who are currently alive. The idea that the aging of people is subject to modification, dramatic life extension is possible, and physical immortality is within our grasp dates back thousands of years. The ancient Hindus sought immortality, Alexander the Great roamed the world searching for it, the Greek physician Galen (2nd century AD) and the Arabic philosopher/physician Avicenna (11th century AD) believed in it, alchemists achieved positions of prominence pursuing it, Ponce de Leon discovered Florida in his quest for the “fountain of youth,” and countless stories of immortality have permeated the literature. Is there truth to any of the claims that anti-aging interventions exist today? It all depends on how one defines an anti-aging intervention.

Anti-Aging: The Practitioner's View

For trained physicians, aging is often defined by the age-related diseases and disorders people experience as they grow older. In fact, aging is often portrayed as a disease that is amenable to treatment, just like any other disease that physicians are trained to diagnose and treat. This is not an unexpected view of aging given the Western disease-oriented model of medical education. Examples of the conditions that anti-aging practitioners endeavor to treat or postpone include cardiovascular disease, cancer, sensory impairments, muscle and bone loss, loss of skin elasticity, and decline in sexual function. By postponing or reducing the onset, risk, or severity of these diseases and disorders through a combination of diet, exercise, nutritional supplements, and hormone replacement, some clinicians in the anti-aging industry claim that they have stopped and even reversed aging in their patients. The treatments for these conditions, which are often preceded by a battery of tests intended to measure biological age, are then referred to as anti-aging medicine.

At one level, it is difficult to argue with the belief that aging has been modulated through this combination of tests and interventions given that many of the patients who make these changes in their lives often claim that they feel better. Indeed, reducing the risk of death—through early detection, careful monitoring through annual physicals, and behavior modification—has been possible for centuries. Ironically, science in a way supports the view that aging is a disease and that anti-aging interventions exist by suggesting that because an aging or death program cannot be built into our genes as a product of evolution, a biological loophole allows what we see and feel as “aging” to be inherently modifiable by our own actions. Thus, by lowering the risk of cardiovascular disease through preventive maintenance or by using pharmaceuticals, it may seem like aging has been delayed; the use of facial creams that reduce the appearance of wrinkled skin would appear to reverse aging; and interventions that increase muscle mass, reduce body fat, improve or restore sexual function, and increase bone density might appear to some as if the proverbial fountain of youth had been discovered.

...

  • Loading...
locked icon

Sign in to access this content

Get a 30 day FREE TRIAL

  • Watch videos from a variety of sources bringing classroom topics to life
  • Read modern, diverse business cases
  • Explore hundreds of books and reference titles

Sage Recommends

We found other relevant content for you on other Sage platforms.

Loading