Former pro bodybuilder and nutritionist Neil Hill cut straight to the most uncomfortable topic of bodybuilding in his latest ...
Columnist Michael Le Page delves into a catalogue of hundreds of potentially beneficial gene mutations and variants that is ...
The COVID-19 pandemic gave us tremendous perspective on how wildly symptoms and outcomes can vary between patients ...
A new study suggests that those with long-lived families probably have the best prospects of making it to a very old age.
A person’s genes play a far greater role in likely lifespan than previously thought, according to a major new study published Thursday in the journal Science. Using data from human twin studies, an ...
About 55% of the human lifespan is heritable, meaning that more than half of the observed variation in longevity across a ...
In the ongoing effort to determine just how much of who we are is preordained by our genetic code, heritability, a statistical measurement of how much variation in a trait can be attributed to genetic ...
How big of a role do our genes play in our lifespan? Quite a bit more than previously thought, a new study suggests.
Many factors influence how long you live, such as diet, exercise, smoking, drinking, environment and other variables. It also ...
A reanalysis of twin data from Denmark and Sweden suggests that how long we live now depends roughly equally on the genes we ...
Scientists have long believed that longevity is shaped by lifestyle choices; however, a new study reveals that genes may play a larger role in determining how long people live.
Multiple Myeloma (MM) research is at the forefront of personalized medicine, driven by rapid advancements in laboratory genomics and molecular diagnostics.