Longevity Chronometry is the quantitative assessment and management of biological aging markers relative to chronological time, often focusing on hormonal profiles that decline with age. This involves establishing a biological age metric based on specific biomarkers, such as telomere length or epigenetic clocks, particularly those influenced by endocrine status. We aim to compress morbidity by optimizing the functional lifespan, not merely extending it passively. This discipline seeks to align biological function with desired longevity goals.
Origin
The term merges “longevity” (the length of life) with “chronometry” (the science of accurate time measurement). Its genesis reflects a shift in aging research towards precision timing of biological decline, heavily influenced by the study of age-related hormonal shifts. It quantifies the rate at which the body ages relative to external timekeeping.
Mechanism
Chronometry functions by establishing reference ranges for hormones and metabolic markers known to correlate with lifespan, such as DHEA-S or IGF-1 levels. Interventions designed to restore these markers to younger reference ranges are hypothesized to slow the pace of cellular aging. The mechanism relies on the principle that modulating key endocrine drivers can influence the rate of accumulated cellular damage and epigenetic drift over time.
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