Anti-Aging Therapy: Separating the Wheat from the Chaff
Few terms in contemporary medicine carry more weight and less precision than " anti-aging ." It appears on laboratory publications and lipstick packaging with equal confidence. It is invoked by Nobel Prize winners and infomercial hosts within the same news cycle. It promises everything and, when examined carefully, has so far delivered far less than its advocates claim. The source of this confusion is not difficult to locate. Anti-aging means genuinely different things to three genuinely different communities — science, medicine, and commerce — and these three communities have been talking past each other, and at the public, for more than two decades. Before any honest evaluation of anti-aging therapy is possible, the definitions must be separated, their evidence bases assessed independently, and their boundaries mapped with precision. What Medicine Already Had The oldest, most established, and most clinically practiced definition belongs to the medical community. In medic...