A new study published in the journal Aging suggests that regular exercise and reduced sedentary behavior may reverse epigenetic aging. The study was a perspective review focused on previous research ...
Timing exercise to match body clock chronotype—the natural predisposition to morning or evening alertness—may lower cardiovascular disease risk among those who are already vulnerable, suggests ...
A new study shows that the timing of the different clocks in our body depends on multiple stimuli. This was investigated in the liver- and muscle clock of rats, where only a combination of eating and ...
What if the best time to exercise isn’t early or late—but simply your time? Matching workouts to your body clock, or chronotype, could play a powerful role in reducing heart disease risk, especially ...
New research suggests that exercise may not just make us feel younger—it could actually slow or even reverse the body’s molecular clock. By looking at DNA markers of aging, scientists found that ...