• RAF391: Aging Reversed Part 4 - Longevity Genes
    Feb 19 2025

    Welcome to Running: A FEVER, a podcast about fitness, diet, and medicine. My name is Michael Davis. My goal is to live a long, healthy, happy, active life by loving my life enough to make it last as long as possible.

    And long life is what this series, called Aging Reversed is all about. What if aging were really just a disease? A disease that could be treated? What if the Fountain of Youth consisted of behaviors and medication? What if you could live 150 years, or even forever? You won't find the answers to those questions in this series, but we will talk about how this could all come about, some of the research going into it, and what resources are available right now to lengthen your life scientifically.

    Read the full post at http://RunningAFEVER.com/391

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    10 mins
  • RAF390: Aging Reversed! Part 3 - The Information Theory
    Feb 12 2025

    We're getting deeper into our series on Aging Reversed. As I say at the beginning of every episode, my goal is to live a long, healthy, happy, active life right up to the end. This year I want to focus more on these simple topics and this series is about the "long" part. I take my inspiration from the book "Lifespan" by David Sinclair, which, if you have the stomach for some deep technical stuff, I recommend you read. The theory is that aging can be halted, or even turned in reverse, if we devote enough resources to the effort. That's what this series is trying to decode for you.

    Read the full post at http://RunningAFEVER.com/390

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    6 mins
  • RAF389: Aging Reversed Part 2 - Aging as a Disease
    Feb 5 2025


    Last episode we talked about the topics we're going to be covering in this series about the possibility of stopping or even reversing the aging process, how that can happen, and the ethics and implications to society this revolution might bring. This time we're going to go in depth on the first of these topics, reclassifying aging as a disease: the idea of aging as a treatable disease and its implications for medical research and funding.

    Read the full post at http://RunningAFEVER.com/389

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    6 mins
  • RAF388: Aging Reversed! Part 1 - Introduction
    Jan 29 2025


    I am very excited about the series we are starting today. In every episode, I state my goal: to live a long, healthy, happy, active life right up to the end. I want to focus more on these simple topics this year, and we're starting with the "long" part. Living a long life has been a common desire as long as humans have inhabited Earth. Though its origins are much earlier, since the 16th century and the travels of Juan Ponce de Leon, the legend of the Fountain of Youth has been a symbol of this longing for immortality. And though no one we know of has found the legendary waters, modern medicine is still looking for its metaphorical equivalent. Many questions need to be asked when considering this topic, such as:

    - How do we define life?
    - Why do I want a longer life?
    - What is the price I will pay, financially, physically, or physically?
    - What are the moral effects?
    - What is the procedure? Will it hurt?
    - What would I do with all the extra time I would have?

    Read the full post at http://RunningAFEVER.com/388

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    6 mins
  • RAF387: Living to 100 - Maria Branyas
    Jan 22 2025

    Last episode, you got the list of the 10 longest-lived people, and a new person was on the list. Unfortunately, she died in August of 2024, so there are no living people on the list for now. But she made it, nonetheless. What did she do that got her to the ripe age of 117? Are there any clues that might help some of us get there? This episode aims to determine that by looking at the life of Maria Branyas, the 8th oldest-lived person ever.

    Read the full post at http://RunningAFEVER.com/387

    Photo byy Arxiu de la família Branyas Morera - Own work, Public Domain:
    https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=146061719

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    5 mins
  • RAF386: Living to 100 2025
    Jan 15 2025

    And now it's time for the perennial favorite top 10 list of the oldest people ever. I'm a little surprised to realize that I didn't actually do one of these in 2024. So I'm sure anticipation for this episode is running high. Living to be 100 is still very rare, but according to a 2024 estimate by the United Nations, there are 722,000 centenarians around the world (a centenarian is a person who lives to be 100 years ole), and that number is growing fast. It is a huge 22% increase from 2023.

    Read the full post at http://RunningAFEVER.com/386

    Photo by shy sol:
    https://www.pexels.com/photo/100-road-sigange-102094/

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    8 mins
  • RAF385: Intro to Pulse Oximetry
    Jan 8 2025

    First of all, I want to say to all you podcast listeners that an unboxing video is included in the video version of this episode. You can see it on the blog page at http://RunningAFEVER.com/385 if you want to watch it.

    Well, since there was an unboxing, I guess you can figure out that I got my own pulse oximeter. It's pretty simple to use; you turn it on and clamp it on your finger, and the display shows a percentage number. But what does it mean, and why is it important? It must be important in some way because every time I get my vitals taken at a medical provider's office, they use it on me. I had no idea until I started researching this episode, so now I can share that info with you, and you'll know, too.

    Read the full post at: http://RunningAFEVER.com/385

    Image by ai subarasiki:
    https://pixabay.com/users/subarasikiai-21956773/?utm_source=link-attribution&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=image&utm_content=6582524

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    7 mins
  • RAF384: Back Knack
    Jan 1 2025

    First of all, back problems are not new to me. I've had my share for sure. I know that going back to episode 53, that was when I started having pain in my arm and pain in my back. I went to a neurosurgeon, and that was when my Forestier's was diagnosed. Recently, in the past few months, I guess, when I have gone out on the Lake Fayetteville trail, where I have been hundreds of times, I would go out, and before I was halfway through, my back would start hurting, and I would have to rest, sometimes making it all the way through. I was in some back pain there. And it was soreness, and I thought it was all muscular because I was overweight and out of shape. I thought I should keep on exercising and I would work through it.

    Read the full post at http://RunningAFEVER.com/384

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    18 mins