This article by Dana Gloger originally appeared on express.co.uk, November 10, 2011
It sounds out of this world but Nasa scientists have created a pill that has been proven to improve health, make people look younger – and help them live longer.
The AmeriSciences AS10 range of vitamins and supplements, which took six years to develop, can help protect against ailments including cataracts and tumours.
Unveiled at the Royal Society of Medicine yesterday, the pills contain the most powerful combination of anti-oxidants and vitamins ever devised.
The range works by protecting against external toxins such as everyday radiation and pollution.
According to findings published in the Radiation Research Journal, the supplements can prolong life. Continue reading →
This article by Celia Brayfield originally appeared in The Times on January 14, 2003
Unlike women, when some men hit 50 they fall apart spectacularly. Our correspondent charts the fall.
FOR THE FIRST TIME in a literary career of eight novels, I have written a book about men. Why? Because men, at the time of life I wanted to write about, are much more fascinating than women. Fascinating in the way that a mushroom cloud is fascinating, or an erupting volcano, or one of those films of a tower block being demolished. Continue reading →
This article originally appeared on the BBC website Health section on March 25, 2000.
Men entering middle-age suffer physical symptoms that could be treated with similar techniques used to tackle the female menopause, it has been argued in the British Medical Journal.
A group of doctors from a private men’s health clinic say teststerone levels in men reduce from middle-age and that hormone therapies could combat the resulting symptoms.
The existence, or otherwise, of the ‘male menopause’, has long split the medical profession. Continue reading →