62 studies

Research Library

Peer-reviewed papers from top journals, summarized and graded by evidence strength. Updated Mon, Wed & Fri.

9/62

Apr 12–18, 2026

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Healthy Lifestyle Didn't Change Brain Scans, But Still Helped At-Risk Seniors

In older adults at risk for cognitive decline, a two-year program of exercise, better diet, and social engagement didn't visibly change brain biomarkers like amyloid or shrinkage. But people who started with smaller hippocampi (the brain's memory hub) got more cognitive benefit from the structured version. So the lifestyle changes may help thinking even without obviously reshaping the brain.

JAMA neurology·Strong·Apr 19, 2026

Your Blood Is Both a Mirror and a Driver of How Fast You Age

Scientists are finding that the stuff floating in your blood, proteins, metabolites, and tiny vesicles, doesn't just reflect your age. It actively sets the pace of aging across organs. In animal studies, swapping old blood for young blood or filtering out pro-aging factors restored tissue function and even extended lifespan. Human trials using plasma exchange are now showing early promise for age-related decline.

Experimental & molecular medicine·Moderate·Apr 16, 2026

Tracking Your 'Biological Age' Over Time May Predict Death Risk Better Than a Single Snapshot

In over 90,000 Dutch adults followed for nearly 14 years, people whose biological age ran ahead of their calendar age had a higher risk of dying. More importantly, among 25,000 people measured twice, those whose biological age sped up over time faced even greater risk. People stuck in a pattern of accelerated aging had a 39% higher mortality risk compared to those aging at a normal pace. The results suggest that checking biological age once might not be enough.

GeroScience·Moderate·Apr 13, 2026

Mar 8–14, 2026

3

Frailty Markers Predict 20-Year Death Risk in Older Chinese Adults

In about 4,000 older Hong Kong adults tracked for nearly two decades, frailty measures strongly predicted who would die and from what cause. Being frail was linked to a 66% higher risk of death compared to being fit. Adding blood-based markers like inflammation and kidney function to frailty scores slightly improved predictions. One surprise: none of the biological aging markers predicted cancer deaths specifically.

The journals of gerontology. Series A, Biological sciences and medical sciences·Strong·Mar 12, 2026

Fish That Age Fast Reveal Predictable 'Life Stages' in Aging

Scientists tracked African killifish behavior continuously from adolescence to death. Long-lived fish behaved differently from short-lived ones surprisingly early in life. Machine learning could actually predict how long an individual fish would live based on its young-adult behavior alone. Aging didn't happen as a smooth decline. Instead, fish moved through distinct, stable behavioral stages separated by abrupt transitions.

Science (New York, N.Y.)·Preliminary·Mar 11, 2026

New Aging Clocks Built From Histone Marks Work Across Species

Researchers built 36 new biological aging clocks using histone modifications (chemical tags on the proteins that package DNA) instead of the usual DNA methylation approach. These clocks worked well across six tissue types and could detect accelerated aging in leukemia samples and age reversal after treatments. One surprising finding: many aging-related changes peak at midlife rather than climbing steadily. The approach even worked in fruit flies, which lack DNA methylation entirely.

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America·Preliminary·Mar 9, 2026

Disclaimer: Research summaries are provided for informational purposes only and do not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional before making changes to your health routine.

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