X-Message-Number: 15623
From: "Mark Plus" <>
Subject: More about the "Built-to-Last" human body.
Date: Tue, 13 Feb 2001 08:27:30 -0800

[Perhaps this could serve as an alternative to "Primo 3M+" -- MP]

From:

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2001/02/010213071023.htm

Source:   University Of Illinois At Chicago (http://www.uic.edu/)


Date:   Posted 2/13/2001

University Of Illinois At Chicago Expert Tinkers With Evolution To Create 
Human "Built-To-Last"

If humans were designed to live beyond age 100 and remain free of many of 
the diseases and disorders associated with aging, we might have looked like 
short, stout elves.
This conclusion may be drawn from illustrations that accompany the article, 
 If Humans Were Built to Last,  by UIC Professor S. Jay Olshansky and his 
colleagues in the March 2001 issue of the magazine Scientific American.

Our bodies evolved to survive long enough to reproduce and raise our young, 
says Olshansky, professor of biostatistics in the UIC School of Public 
Health and noted demographer of aging. Human ingenuity has made it possible 
for us to extend our lives well past our reproductive years.

 Had our bodies been crafted for extended operation, we would have fewer 
flaws capable of making us miserable in our later days,  he writes. 
 Evolution does not work that way. Instead, it cobbles together new features 
by tinkering with existing ones in a way that would have made Rube Goldberg 
proud. 

The article, written with Bruce Carnes, senior research scientist at the 
National Opinion Research Center at the University of Chicago, and Dr. 
Robert Butler, president of the International Longevity Center in New York 
City, outlines design  flaws  that lead to bodily malfunctions as we age, 
and the hypothetical, evolutionary design  fixes  that would allow us to 
enjoy good health well into our postreproductive years.

 Humans can live for a long period of time in good health because the harsh 
environments of our ancestors forged a human-body design that is robust,  
said Carnes.  But the seeds of self-destruction sown at conception become 
more obvious with the passage of time. 

The article includes illustrations of what humans might look like if we were 
designed for health and longevity. For example, some of the extended-use 
features might include rewired eyes, bigger ears that are mobile, a curved 
neck, forward-tilting upper torso, extra-padded joints, larger bones and 
muscles, shorter limbs and stature and backward-bending knees.

Walking upright probably contributed to human intelligence and an expanded 
foraging range, the authors note, but at the price of aging-related 
disorders, including slipped disks, lower back pain, varicose veins and 
worn-out joints.

Where our heads are concerned, the authors cite the weak link between the 
optic nerve and retina, which is prone to detaching after decades of use, 
fragile hair cells in our ears leading to hearing loss, and a common 
passageway for food and air, raising the risk of inhaling food or drink as 
muscle tone decreases with age.

Then, there are what the authors refer to as  plumbing problems.  In males, 
these problems include a urethra prone to constriction by an enlarged 
prostate that may obstruct the flow of urine, and in females, bladder and 
pelvic-floor muscles and ligaments that weaken with time and multiple 
pregnancies, which may lead to incontinence.

Emphasizing the positive message of the article, Butler observes,  Despite 
the limitations and flaws about which we write, there is so much power we as 
individuals have to maintain our health. Through good health habits and 
modern medical interventions, we have an opportunity to, as the Greek lyric 
poet Pindar said, exhaust the limits of the possible. 

Olshansky and his colleagues contributed to the development of a paradigm 
for understanding mortality known as biodemography. This approach to human 
aging and longevity, as well as age patterns of death across species draws 
on the disciplines of demography, epidemiology, evolutionary biology, 
molecular biology and anthropology.

Olshansky is the author with Carnes of the new book,  The Quest for 
Immortality: Science at the Frontiers of Aging,  published by Norton.






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Note: This story has been adapted from a news release issued by University 
Of Illinois At Chicago for journalists and other members of the public. If 
you wish to quote from any part of this story, please credit University Of 
Illinois At Chicago as the original source. You may also wish to include the 
following link in any citation:

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2001/02/010213071023.htm



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