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Reversing Aging: What If Aging Is a Disease We Can Treat?
#1
A new study has found something surprising — aging might actually be transmitted through the blood by a protein called HMGB1.
   

Researchers discovered that when they blocked this protein in animals, damaged tissues began to heal and some signs of aging started to reverse. Muscles got stronger, organs repaired faster, and cells acted younger again.

So, what does that mean? It suggests aging isn’t just about cells wearing out — it’s also controlled by certain signals in the body. And if those signals can be controlled, aging itself might be slowed down or even partly reversed.

Scientists were able to block HMGB1 using neutralizing antibodies — special molecules that stop it from sending its “aging messages” through the blood. When they did this, the animals became healthier and more energetic.

This discovery gives hope that one day, we could treat aging like a disease — not just something that happens to everyone. It could lead to new ways to fight Alzheimer’s, arthritis, and organ failure — all problems linked to getting older.

Human trials haven’t started yet, but the future looks bright. If researchers can safely block HMGB1 in people, we may finally be able to slow down aging from the inside out.
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#2
If this is true, we’re closer than ever to slowing down old age. Imagine blocking one protein and your body starts healing again ?
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#3
I love this kind of research. It gives people hope.
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#4
Blocking HMGB1 sounds simple in theory, but I bet it’s super complicated in humans. If they succeed, in humans, this will be the biggest medical breakthrough in our lifetime.
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#5
I wonder if lifestyle affects that protein too. Like diet or stress.
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#6
@Farmlady, Yes, lifestyle does seem to affect HMGB1 levels.

Research shows that HMGB1 isn’t just linked to aging — it’s also released more during stress, inflammation, poor diet, infections, and tissue damage. So things that cause chronic inflammation or oxidative stress (like smoking, junk food, alcohol, and lack of sleep) can increase HMGB1 activity.

On the other hand, healthy habits — like exercise, antioxidants (fruits, veggies, herbs like turmeric and ginger), good sleep, and stress control — help reduce HMGB1 release or keep it in its “normal” form that doesn’t spread damage.
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#7
If they can make a supplement that blocks HMGB1 naturally, I’m buying. This is good. Even if it doesn’t stop aging completely, slowing it down is enough for me.
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#8
If they test this on humans, I’m volunteering first ?
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#9
Human trials might take years though. We’ll all be old by then ?
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#10
Hope it doesn’t end up like those stem cell promises that disappeared.
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#11
I bet it’ll be expensive when it comes out though.
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#12
This kind of research really changes how we think about aging. For years, people believed it’s just about cells wearing out, but now it looks like our body actually “signals” itself to age. If HMGB1 can carry that message through the blood, then blocking it could be a game changer. Imagine being 70 but feeling 40 again.
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#13
Neutralizing antibodies sound like a powerful tool, but we have to remember that proteins like HMGB1 also play roles in healing wounds and fighting infection. So blocking it completely might have side effects. What they need is a way to balance it — stop the aging signal without harming other body processes.
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#14
This is one of those discoveries that could rewrite medical books. Instead of treating aging symptoms like arthritis or dementia, doctors could target the root cause — the molecular signals that make our body “feel old.” I just hope pharmaceutical companies don’t bury it because it threatens the profit from anti-aging products.
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#15
I’m really impressed by how fast aging research is moving. Just a few years ago, people were talking about telomeres and senescent cells. Now it’s blood proteins like HMGB1. It shows aging isn’t just one thing — it’s a network of signals. Understanding those signals might finally help humans live longer and healthier.
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#16
Some people might doubt this, but remember: almost every big medical discovery sounded impossible at first. Organ transplants, gene therapy, artificial hearts — all once seemed like science fiction. Blocking a blood protein to reverse aging might sound crazy now, but it could be normal in 20 years.
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#17
Can we do anything to lower HMGB1 naturally for now?
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#18
(10-07-2025, 04:00 AM)Blam Wrote: Can we do anything to lower HMGB1 naturally for now?

Chatgpt have this to say:

Natural Ways to Lower the “Aging Protein” (HMGB1)
Scientists recently discovered that a blood protein called HMGB1 may help spread aging through the body. When they blocked it in animals, damaged tissues started healing, and some age-related decline reversed.

But here’s the good news — lifestyle also affects this protein. You don’t need injections to start protecting yourself. These foods and habits can help lower HMGB1 naturally and keep your body younger for longer ?

? Foods That Help
Turmeric (Curcumin): Strong natural HMGB1 blocker. Add to soups or tea.
Ginger: Calms inflammation and stress in cells.
Garlic: Boosts immunity and reduces toxic buildup.
Leafy greens: Ugu, moringa, spinach, bitter leaf — all rich in antioxidants.
Berries: Blueberry, strawberry, blackberry — fight aging at the cell level.
Green tea: Contains EGCG, which helps quiet HMGB1 signals.
Fish & flaxseed: Omega-3 fats that fight inflammation.
Tomatoes & carrots: Lycopene and beta-carotene keep tissues young.
Onions: Quercetin helps reduce HMGB1 activity.
Fermented foods: Yogurt, kefir, ogiri, iru — heal your gut and reduce body-wide inflammation.

? Helpful Herbs & Natural Remedies
Black seed (Nigella sativa): Fights inflammation caused by HMGB1.
Resveratrol (in grapes, peanuts): Proven to calm aging signals in lab studies.
Moringa & bitter leaf: Natural detox and antioxidant herbs.
Aloe vera: Soothes inflammation and supports tissue repair.

? Healthy Habits That Protect You
Exercise moderately — it lowers HMGB1 and boosts repair.
Sleep well — poor sleep raises aging proteins.
Manage stress — peace of mind keeps inflammation down.
Quit smoking & reduce alcohol — both increase HMGB1 sharply.
Eat less processed food and sugar — they make aging signals worse.
Try intermittent fasting — it helps the body recycle damaged cells.
Stay hydrated and rest properly.

? Tip: You don’t need all of these at once. Just pick a few and stay consistent.
The goal is to reduce body inflammation — because once inflammation goes down, HMGB1 also goes down.
That’s how you start aging slower — from the inside out.
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#19
More:

There’s actually scientific evidence that both fasting and detoxing (the real kind, not fad juice cleanses) can help reduce HMGB1 levels and its harmful effects.

1. Fasting:
When you fast — even short-term — your body activates a process called autophagy, meaning “self-cleaning.”

During autophagy, old and damaged cells (and the harmful proteins they release, including HMGB1) get broken down and recycled.

Studies show that intermittent fasting and calorie restriction can lower inflammation markers and suppress HMGB1 release. It’s one reason fasting often improves energy, skin clarity, and healing — your body isn’t constantly fighting internal “noise.”


2. Detoxing (Natural Way):
When people say “detox,” it should mean supporting the liver, kidneys, and lymph system, not starving yourself.

HMGB1 levels go up when the body is under toxic stress — from junk food, pollution, smoking, or alcohol.

So detoxing through:

Plenty of water

Herbs like moringa, bitter leaf, turmeric, and ginger

High-fiber foods (to flush waste)

More fruits and leafy greens

…helps your liver clear inflammatory molecules like HMGB1 faster.

Balance is Key
Fasting too long or too harshly can stress the body — which might raise HMGB1 instead of lowering it. So mild, consistent fasting (like 16:8 or skipping one meal occasionally) works best.
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#20
Thanks a lot Henlus.
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