Dr Jeffry Life.Testosterone :Can it make you live longer?(

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  • Dr Jeffry Life.Testosterone :Can it make you live longer?(

    Testosterone: Can it make you live longer?



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    Dr Jeffry Life shows Peter Bowes his fitness regime

    Continue reading the main story


    Bombarded with adverts promising a longer, healthier life, BBC News Los Angeles correspondent Peter Bowes goes in search of eternal youth.
    Dr Jeffry Life, a Las Vegas-based age management doctor, is 74. He has the body of a man half his age. In fact he has a level of muscular definition that many men never achieve.
    Genial, soft spoken, bald and lean, Life, who practised family medicine for much of his career, is a poster child for the longevity business.
    He was in his late 50s when he realised that as a paunchy middle-aged man, he could drop dead at any time.
    "I had really got out of shape, got a lot of body fat and was heading down a disastrous course of diabetes and heart disease," he says.
    Inspired by a muscle magazine that someone left in his examination room, Life decided to get in shape. He started an intensive regime of working out at the gym and within a year transformed his body.
    In 1998 he entered a competition, the Body for Life contest, for people who have made dramatic changes to their physique. To his surprise he won first prize in the section for 55-year-olds and older.
    "It changed my life and I felt great," he says.
    But as he got older he says he noticed that he was losing ground and finding it more difficult to maintain a lean body. While in his 60s, he visited Las Vegas for a medical conference and was introduced to Cenegenics, an age management company that aspired to make its patients "look and feel years younger". He went on to become a senior partner.
    Dr Life (real name) is seen as an inspiration
    Life believes that the right kind of exercise and nutrition are important - but correcting hormone deficiencies are the key to his success.
    "I got my blood checked and I found that I was profoundly deficient in testosterone," he says.
    He now has weekly injections of the hormone.
    Continue reading the main story The Life workout


    • Monday: Chest - including 85lbs (38kg) bench presses
    • Tuesday: Back - using gym machines
    • Wednesday: Shoulders - 65lb dumbbell presses
    • Thursday: Arms - 60lb barbell curls, seated 30lb dumbbell curls, 100lb dumbbell overhead extensions
    • Friday: Legs - including squats with free weights
    • Pilates three times per week
    • Exercise bike for 50 minutes five times a week - set to the hills programme
    • Taekwondo three times a week (he hopes to achieve black belt in two years, when he will be 76)


    "The problem is that when a man's testosterone gets low they lose their incentive to go to the gym.
    "Even if they want to, they dread going to the gym and exercising and it's a losing battle. Especially abdominal fat around their belly. They spiral out of control.
    "A lot of men come to me who are suffering from male-menopause, known as andropause, which creeps into their lives," he adds.
    Andropause, says Life, is characterised by a decline in a man's sexual function, cognitive ability, an inability to get rid of body fat and fatigue.
    He adds: "When I get their testosterone up to a healthy level, it changes everything. They get re-energised, they start seeing body fat disappear and muscle growing."
    Different laboratories vary in what they consider to be a normal testosterone level. According to the Facey Medical Group, a health provider California, the normal reference range is 250 to 1100ng/dl. The Mayo Clinic says testosterone levels drop, within this range, by about 1% a year after the age of 30.
    Andropause is not universally accepted by the medical profession as a definable condition for middle-aged and older men, although there has been a huge increase in the number of prescriptions for testosterone in recent years. As well as injections, gels are available and are widely advertised. Last year the British Medical Journal published a study which concluded that "many men in the UK are receiving unnecessary testosterone replacement".
    Life's before photo stays above his desk as inspiration
    It is an area of medicine that is subject to much debate and often focuses on the question of what is "normal" ageing.
    Life argues that the medical profession is too conservative.
    "Many doctors get the numbers and then they will tell their patient, 'Joe, your levels are normal', when in fact it is within the reference range, but it's at the bottom of the range. They don't tell you you're a D-student," he says.
    Sex hormones - oestrogen in woman and testosterone in men - fulfil many roles in the body. Studies have shown that they are involved in age-related changes, such as the development of dementia.
    Testosterone is fantastic," says Dr Christian Pike, a neurobiologist at the University of Southern California, who specialises in the brain and Alzheimer's disease.
    Continue reading the main story
    What if we could stay young forever? What if everyone had a car? What If? is a season across BBC News looking at visions of the future.
    What If (special report)

    "It increases aspects of cognition, it protects the brain from dying, it reduces Alzheimer's disease, I mean, it's wonderful," he says.
    But Dr Pike has reservations about the recent trend towards an increased use of sex hormones to reverse the effects of ageing. He says further long-term research is needed to fully understand the way testosterone affects the body.
    "It makes me a tad nervous," he says.
    "We know that prostate tumours respond to testosterone with incredible growth."
    Pike says there is promising research focusing on what can be done to turn on the brain's own testosterone-making system. He says relatively higher levels of testosterone are associated with greater longevity and that people who live longer have better levels of the hormone.
    The challenge, he says, is balancing the benefits and the risks.
    "So many of the factors that we are looking at are double-edged swords."
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    DIVIDE ET IMPERA

  • #2
    Morgen lezen.
    "Straight outta gym"

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    • #3
      DIVIDE ET IMPERA

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      • #4
        Het is niet nieuw hoor,maar ik kwam ineens weer een interview met Dr Life tegen en ik moet eerlijk zeggen dat ik het wel erg fascinerend vind.
        DIVIDE ET IMPERA

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        • #5
          Weet je ook wat hij gebruikt rainman?
          Want ik gok iets meer dan trt eerlijk gezegd

          Comment


          • #6
            Op trt kan je op die leeftijd lijkt mij onmogelijk zoveel groeien, maarja...
            Hard work, beats talent.

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            • #7
              Originally posted by quibus View Post
              Weet je ook wat hij gebruikt rainman?
              Want ik gok iets meer dan trt eerlijk gezegd
              Klopt,ik had ook ergens gelezen hgh en ander lekkers.
              Dat zoek ik nog even op.

              Maar buiten dat,het lijkt me niet eens zo verkeerd om op oudere leeftijd wekelijks een kleine hoeveelheid testosteron te injecteren.
              Als je de voordelen afweegt tegen de nadelen.

              Die dokter is inmiddels achter in de zeventig en kan alles weer,ik zie het probleem niet.
              Stel in het ergste geval dat hij daardoor een jaar eerder overlijdt,so what?

              Het is wel wat anders als hij het zijn patienten op veel jongere leeftijd adviseert,alles voor de dollars!
              Je hoeft geen sixpack meer te hebben dan,maar als je weer vitaal wordt is toch super?

              Jij was het toch ook van plan Q als je ouder wordt?
              Last edited by rain; 24-11-2013, 12:30.
              DIVIDE ET IMPERA

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              • #8
                Ja 100% zeker zou nu al wilen beginnen haha..
                Volgende maand naar de dokter voor check up en dan ga ik haar visie eens aanhoren.

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                • #9
                  Maar het idee erachter is een kleine, wekelijkse onderhouds dosis en jou kennende ga je je dokter voorstellen om 500 mg p.w te injecteren.Of niet?

                  Eigenlijk is het een soort van levenslang bridgen wat ze doen.
                  Maar dan niet echt als overbrugging,maar wel qua hoeveelheden testosteron.
                  DIVIDE ET IMPERA

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                  • #10
                    Nee lees veel dat ze 200 test c zetten en dsn bv 1x per week tot 2 weken.
                    Wil niet de nadelen wel de voordelen.
                    Zou dus echt op normale dosis blijven..wil je dan perse groeien dan kan je alsnog kuren maar das niet de insteek.

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                    • #11
                      Maar q heb jij dan van je zelf al lage test levels? Want anders sturen ze je toch niet zo snel naar een endocrinoloog? Ik zou zelf nooit op trt ofzo gaan, alleen via een doktor. Je weet nooit hoe het met de test aanbod etc is over 10 jaar enzo,
                      Hard work, beats talent.

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                      • #12
                        Ga het ook niet nu doen hoor ik heb ook geen lage testlevels..naja nu zakt het hard hehr.
                        Maar over een jaar of tieb lijkt mij nice.

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                        • #13
                          Las laatst dit artikel, daarin staat dat mannen met hoge testosteron niet lang leven, dus wat dat betreft lult die gozer ook nog eens uit z´n nek.

                          Excessive testosterone raises mortality risk in older men

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                          • #14
                            Tsja,het zijn altijd uitersten die ze onderzoeken.
                            Er staat'te hoog'testosteron ipv hoog testosteron en er staat niet dat ze niet lang leven zoals jij suggereert,maar dat ze kans hebben om eerder dood te gaan.
                            Dat vind ik nogal een verschil.

                            Maar als je vanaf bv je 70e een veel actiever leven kan hebben,maar daardoor 2 jaar eerder zou(kunnen) overlijden,
                            teken ik er voor.
                            Last edited by rain; 24-11-2013, 20:17.
                            DIVIDE ET IMPERA

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                            • #15
                              Dat is inderdaad een belangrijke nuance. Neemt niet weg dat het verhaal van dr jeffry ontkracht wordt door wat er in het artikel staat.

                              Overigens ben ik het met je eens, wanneer ik 70 ben en nog steeds zo van sporten houd, dan lijkt het me prachtig om te injecteren.

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