Aging
377 sourcesRay Peat viewed aging not as an inevitable genetic program but as an accumulation of metabolic damage — primarily from the interaction of polyunsaturated fats, iron, estrogen, and stress. Central to his theory of aging is the age pigment lipofuscin, which accumulates in cells as a product of lipid peroxidation and cross-links proteins, impairing cellular function. He saw aging as essentially the same process as the diseases commonly associated with it: cancer, heart disease, dementia, and metabolic decline.
Peat emphasized that aging is accelerated by the same factors that suppress metabolism and promote stress: PUFA consumption, estrogen dominance, hypothyroidism, inadequate nutrition, and exposure to environmental toxins. Conversely, maintaining high metabolic rate, adequate thyroid function, protective hormones (progesterone, DHEA, pregnenolone), and avoiding stored PUFAs can slow or partially reverse the aging process.
Key Positions
- Lipofuscin (age pigment) accumulates from PUFA peroxidation and is a primary marker and cause of aging
- Aging is accelerated by the same factors that promote cancer and inflammation
- Estrogen rises with age in both sexes, driving many age-related pathologies
- Thyroid function declines with age, creating a self-reinforcing cycle of metabolic decline
- Progesterone, pregnenolone, and DHEA decline with age and can be supplemented
- Reducing stored PUFAs is one of the most impactful anti-aging interventions
- Carbon dioxide production and body temperature decline with age, reflecting metabolic deterioration
Sources
377 items-
Stem cells, cell culture, and culture: Issues in regeneration
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Sugar issues
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Suitable Fats, Unsuitable Fats: Issues in Nutrition
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TSH, temperature, pulse rate, and other indicators in hypothyroidism
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The Cancer Matrix
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The Great Fish Oil Experiment
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The Nutrition Whisperer - Dodie Anderson
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The Ray Peat Dietary Survival Guide - Joey Lott
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The dark side of stress (learned helplesness)
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The transparency of life: Cataracts as a model of age-related disease.
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Thyroid, insomnia, and the insanities: Commonalities in disease
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Thyroid: Therapies, Confusion, and Fraud.
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Tissue-bound estrogen in aging
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To Your Health - Lita Lee
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Tryptophan, serotonin, and aging.
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Unsaturated Vegetable Oils: Toxic.
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Unsaturated fatty acids: Nutritionally essential, or toxic?
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Using Sunlight to Sustain Life
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VV Fitness Blog - Vahdaneh Vahid
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Vashinvetala (formerly Pranarupa)
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Vitamin E: Estrogen antagonist, energy promoter, and anti-inflammatory
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Water: swelling, tension, pain, fatigue, aging
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When energy fails: Edema, heart failure, hypertension, sarcopenia, etc.
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William Blake as biological visionary. Can art instruct science?
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age pigment cause and effect of aging and stress