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Today's Biohacking Pulse

Gut microbes may dictate cellular aging, new review suggests

A Frontiers in Aging review introduces the microbiome‑gerogene axis, proposing that gut microbes act as upstream regulators of cellular aging networks. Age‑related dysbiosis reduces key metabolites, leading to leaky gut, chronic inflammation and epigenetic drift that accelerate organ decline. The authors highlight precision interventions such as ellagitannin‑derived urolithin A and fermentable fibers to restore microbial balance.

Oura Ring’s Symptom Radar Flags Early‑Stage Lymphoma in Four Young Women
NewsMar 29, 2026

Oura Ring’s Symptom Radar Flags Early‑Stage Lymphoma in Four Young Women

Oura’s chief medical officer, Dr. Ricky Bloomfield, disclosed that the ring’s Symptom Radar feature nudged four young women to seek care, leading to early‑stage lymphoma diagnoses. The finding underscores a shift from fitness tracking to actionable health alerts.

By Pulse
System-Wide Algorithm Boosts Blood Pressure Control Across 90,000 Patients
NewsMar 29, 2026

System-Wide Algorithm Boosts Blood Pressure Control Across 90,000 Patients

A UC Health‑wide hypertension algorithm was embedded in electronic health records for roughly 90,000 patients, raising the proportion of controlled blood pressure from 68.5% to nearly 74% by mid‑2025. The stepwise, clinician‑guided tool, called the UC Way Hypertension Medication Algorithm,...

By Medical News Today
Are Gut-Friendly Foods Like Kimchi, Kombucha Affecting Your Heart Health?
NewsMar 29, 2026

Are Gut-Friendly Foods Like Kimchi, Kombucha Affecting Your Heart Health?

The British Heart Foundation warned that popular gut‑friendly foods such as kimchi, sauerkraut, kombucha and fruit smoothies can pose hidden cardiovascular risks due to added salt, sugar, and low fiber. Cardiology dietitian Michelle Routhenstein clarified that while probiotic strains may...

By Medical News Today
Senescent Immune Cells Guard Tissues, Delay Aging
SocialMar 29, 2026

Senescent Immune Cells Guard Tissues, Delay Aging

Senescent immune cells protect against damage, inflammation and disease 🤯 In mice, p16-expressing immune cells delay age-related organ deterioration and preserve tissue homeostasis. More evidence of the physiological roles of senescent cells? https://t.co/UtBKDF00P1

By João Pedro de Magalhães, PhD
Ex‑NFL Pro Bowler Julius Thomas Links Mindset Training to Longevity
NewsMar 29, 2026

Ex‑NFL Pro Bowler Julius Thomas Links Mindset Training to Longevity

In a recent interview, former two‑time NFL Pro Bowler Julius Thomas, Psy.D., outlined a new framework that ties mental‑training techniques to longer, healthier lives. He argues that chronic stress at the cellular level and low‑grade inflammation are the hidden culprits...

By Pulse
Biohackers World Sets 2026 Los Angeles Longevity Conference for 1,500 Attendees
NewsMar 29, 2026

Biohackers World Sets 2026 Los Angeles Longevity Conference for 1,500 Attendees

Biohackers World announced a two‑day conference in Los Angeles on March 28‑29, 2026, slated to draw about 1,500 researchers, founders and enthusiasts. The event will shift the biohacking conversation toward everyday habits, supportive technology and environmental design. Organizers say the...

By Pulse
Holistic Training Counters Aging’s Multi‑Faceted Decline
SocialMar 28, 2026

Holistic Training Counters Aging’s Multi‑Faceted Decline

Training for life means deliberately resisting the narrowing that accompanies aging without training. It means building and maintaining the full spectrum of physical capacity: aerobic base, strength, power, rotational core, lateral movement, balance, and landing mechanics. Not because any single...

By Howard Luks, MD
Progressive Overload and Volume Drive Muscle Hypertrophy
SocialMar 28, 2026

Progressive Overload and Volume Drive Muscle Hypertrophy

Want to build muscle effectively? 💪 Muscle hypertrophy happens when protein synthesis outpaces breakdown driven by smart training, nutrition, and recovery. 1. Resistance Training Gradually increase weight, reps, or difficulty over time. • Aim for 10–20+ weekly sets per muscle group (spread...

By Wendi Irlbeck, MS, RDN, CISSN
13 BEST Magnesium Supplements Review 2026: Ultimate Guide
BlogMar 28, 2026

13 BEST Magnesium Supplements Review 2026: Ultimate Guide

A comprehensive 2026 guide reviews 13 magnesium supplements, ranking them by bioavailability, purity, synergistic cofactors, and real‑world results. The methodology, based on four years of personal testing and biometric tracking, disqualifies low‑absorption oxide products. Top picks include RnA ReSet ReMag...

By Outliyr — High Performance Longevity
Changing Biological Age Unlocks Future Lifespan Gains
SocialMar 28, 2026

Changing Biological Age Unlocks Future Lifespan Gains

A new paper says lifespan gains will be small due to our biology That’s true - if we don’t change. But if we can change our biological age, the equation changes In 1700, we couldn’t imagine moving faster than a horse. Biology...

By David Sinclair, PhD
13+ Amazing Magnesium Benefits You Must Know For Optimal Health
BlogMar 28, 2026

13+ Amazing Magnesium Benefits You Must Know For Optimal Health

Magnesium, an essential mineral involved in over 300 enzymatic processes, is increasingly recognized for its broad health benefits ranging from neuroplasticity to cardiovascular support. Recent analyses highlight that modern diets and lifestyle factors leave the majority of adults deficient, despite...

By Outliyr — High Performance Longevity
AI Therapist Dzeny Cuts Anxiety 43% in Eight‑Week Trial of 280 Adults
NewsMar 28, 2026

AI Therapist Dzeny Cuts Anxiety 43% in Eight‑Week Trial of 280 Adults

A clinical trial of Dzeny’s AI‑assisted therapist showed participants’ anxiety scores fell 43% in eight weeks, a result comparable to conventional cognitive‑behavioral therapy. The study, led by psychologist Valentina Lipskaya, also reported gains in burnout, mood and quality of life,...

By Pulse
Study Finds Repetitive Meals and Stable Calories Boost Weight‑Loss by Up to 6%
NewsMar 28, 2026

Study Finds Repetitive Meals and Stable Calories Boost Weight‑Loss by Up to 6%

Researchers analyzing daily food logs from 112 overweight adults in a 12‑week behavioral program found that participants who ate the same foods repeatedly and kept daily calories steady lost 5.9% of body weight, versus 4.3% for those with varied diets....

By Pulse
Study Reveals Brain Mechanisms Behind Sustained Focus Amid Digital Distractions
NewsMar 28, 2026

Study Reveals Brain Mechanisms Behind Sustained Focus Amid Digital Distractions

Neuroscientists from the University of Lübeck, together with mental coach Thomas Baschab, released a documentary that tracks a swimmer, an air‑traffic‑controller trainee and an e‑sports professional to map how the brain sustains concentration. The study identifies neural signatures of the...

By Pulse
UT San Antonio Starts Precision Rapamycin Trial for Healthy Aging
NewsMar 28, 2026

UT San Antonio Starts Precision Rapamycin Trial for Healthy Aging

The University of Texas at San Antonio has opened a precision clinical trial to evaluate rapamycin in non‑smoking, independently living seniors. Researchers hope the study will provide hard data on dosing and safety, moving the longevity drug from hype to...

By Pulse
Strides: Keep Heart Rate Low, Prioritize Cadence
SocialMar 28, 2026

Strides: Keep Heart Rate Low, Prioritize Cadence

Strides, when done correctly, shouldn't be long enough (or fast enough) to significantly elevate your heart rate. Shoot for... - Set cadence first - Progressively lengthen stride over ~10-15s - Gradually build to ~5k pace or a little quicker - Once you hit that pace,...

By Alan Couzens
Listening to Music for 24 Minutes May Ease Anxiety, Study Finds
NewsMar 28, 2026

Listening to Music for 24 Minutes May Ease Anxiety, Study Finds

Researchers at Toronto Metropolitan University discovered that a 24‑minute session of music combined with auditory beat stimulation (ABS) significantly reduces anxiety symptoms in adults already taking medication. In a randomized trial of 144 participants, the 24‑minute condition outperformed a 12‑minute...

By Medical Xpress
10 Silent Killers of Youth: What's Aging You Without You Knowing
PodcastMar 28, 20260 min

10 Silent Killers of Youth: What's Aging You Without You Knowing

The episode outlines the top ten hidden factors that speed up aging, ranging from smoking and UV exposure to sugar, chronic stress, poor sleep, chronic inflammation, sedentary behavior, excessive alcohol, ultra‑processed foods, and social isolation. Each factor is explained in...

By Natural Remedies X
Longevity Is Roughly Half Genetics, Half Lifestyle
SocialMar 28, 2026

Longevity Is Roughly Half Genetics, Half Lifestyle

You’ve probably heard that longevity is 20% genetics and 80% lifestyle But that would make it an outlier because almost every other human trait is closer to 50% genetic Dr. Uri Alon is a physicist and systems biologist whose recent research suggests...

By Siim Land
GLP‑1 Drugs Could Help Prevent Cancer, Study Shows
SocialMar 28, 2026

GLP‑1 Drugs Could Help Prevent Cancer, Study Shows

As a medical school professor, I've watched GLP-1 drugs transform diabetes and obesity treatment. Now a Nature Cancer review reveals they may suppress cancer too. GLP-1 drugs reduce insulin resistance, lower inflammation, and cut body weight -- three of the biggest...

By Robert Lufkin, MD
What Houses, Garbage, and Trucks Teach Us About Aging with Dr. Uri Alon
NewsMar 28, 2026

What Houses, Garbage, and Trucks Teach Us About Aging with Dr. Uri Alon

In a recent episode of Longevity by Design, Dr. Uri Alon presents a systems‑biology model that likens the body to a village where houses generate garbage, trucks clean it up, and a threshold determines collapse. The framework links the balance of...

By InsideTracker Blog (Longevity/Performance)
Mindbodygreen Urges Short Breaks and Mentally Active Sitting to Cut Dementia Risk
NewsMar 28, 2026

Mindbodygreen Urges Short Breaks and Mentally Active Sitting to Cut Dementia Risk

Mindbodygreen is recommending brief movement and mentally engaging breaks during long periods of sitting after a Karolinska Institute study of 20,000 adults showed a 14‑23% lower dementia risk for active sitting versus a 24% higher risk for TV watching. The...

By Pulse
Six Months at 75% MHR Boosts Fitness and Speed
SocialMar 28, 2026

Six Months at 75% MHR Boosts Fitness and Speed

Related to another post from yesterday... Most athletes could afford to spend at least 6 months of every year capped at 75% MHR. You won't do that, because you'll get bored and distracted (probably by something you read here) But you'd be a...

By Alan Couzens
Night Shifts Worsen Type 2 Diabetes Management, Study Finds
NewsMar 28, 2026

Night Shifts Worsen Type 2 Diabetes Management, Study Finds

A new study by King’s College London tracked healthcare workers with type 2 diabetes across night, day and rest shifts, revealing that night‑shift schedules impair diet quality and increase blood‑glucose variability. Participants relied on vending‑machine snacks and faced up to 22‑hour...

By Medical Xpress
15‑Minute Walks Cut Heart Risk for Sedentary Adults
SocialMar 28, 2026

15‑Minute Walks Cut Heart Risk for Sedentary Adults

Instead of only short bursts of movement, add walks that last 15+ minutes. Among people averaging <8,000 steps/day, those who got most of their daily steps from walks lasting 15+ minutes had the lowest cardiovascular risk and among the lowest mortality...

By Siim Land
Protect the Eyes, Protect the Brain—A Potentially Simple Lever for Dementia Risk
BlogMar 28, 2026

Protect the Eyes, Protect the Brain—A Potentially Simple Lever for Dementia Risk

Neurodegeneration leading to dementia could affect up to 152 million people worldwide by 2050. A recent meta‑analysis of more than 540,000 older adults found cataract surgery reduces the risk of cognitive impairment or dementia by roughly 25 % compared with untreated cataracts,...

By The Peter Attia Drive / Articles
Your 70‑year‑old Self Depends on Today's Activity
SocialMar 28, 2026

Your 70‑year‑old Self Depends on Today's Activity

A patient asked me yesterday why so many orthopedic surgeons seem to be in good shape. I told her... Because we know what happens to the human body when we're not. We see it every day. The loss of muscle that...

By Howard Luks, MD
Study Finds Brain Shifts From Alarm to Reflection in 60 Minutes
NewsMar 28, 2026

Study Finds Brain Shifts From Alarm to Reflection in 60 Minutes

Researchers at Kochi University of Technology and the Shizuoka Institute of Science and Technology reported that, after an acute stressor, the human brain takes roughly 60 minutes to transition from a salience‑network‑driven alarm state to a default‑mode‑network‑driven reflective state. The...

By Pulse
FDA Fast-Tracks Novo Nordisk’s 7.2 Mg Wegovy HD, Shaking Up Biohacking Market
NewsMar 28, 2026

FDA Fast-Tracks Novo Nordisk’s 7.2 Mg Wegovy HD, Shaking Up Biohacking Market

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved Novo Nordisk’s 7.2 mg semaglutide injection, branded Wegovy HD, just 54 days after filing. The fast-track decision, the fourth under the National Priority Voucher program, expands dosing options for weight‑loss and metabolic biohackers.

By Pulse
What Houses, Garbage, and Trucks Teach Us About Aging with Dr. Uri Alon
PodcastMar 28, 20261h 4m

What Houses, Garbage, and Trucks Teach Us About Aging with Dr. Uri Alon

In this episode, Dr. Uri Alon explains his systems‑biology view of aging using a vivid village metaphor: houses (cells) generate garbage (damage) while a fixed fleet of trucks (the immune system) removes it, leading to overload and a robustness threshold...

By Longevity by Design
Aging Cells Self‑Destruct via ER‑phagy Early
SocialMar 28, 2026

Aging Cells Self‑Destruct via ER‑phagy Early

As a medical school professor, I used to teach that aging is gradual wear and tear. But a Vanderbilt study in Nature Cell Biology reveals something far more disturbing. Your cells are actively dismantling themselves through a process called ER-phagy. Starting early...

By Robert Lufkin, MD
Intense Training Costs My Heart, Fuels Scientific Insight
SocialMar 28, 2026

Intense Training Costs My Heart, Fuels Scientific Insight

For nearly 40 years I've used my body to test ideas about training intensity, HIIT, monitoring, etc. I seem to be paying for those sins now with big atrial fibrillation challenges. This distracts me a bit, but hey,...

By Stephen Seiler, PhD
Metformin Found to Act in Brain, Opening Low‑Cost Path to Cognitive Health
NewsMar 28, 2026

Metformin Found to Act in Brain, Opening Low‑Cost Path to Cognitive Health

Scientists have identified a direct brain pathway—via the ventromedial hypothalamus and the Rap1 protein—through which metformin improves glucose regulation. The discovery reframes the 60‑year‑old diabetes drug as a potential low‑cost biohack for brain health and lifespan extension.

By Pulse
From Weight Loss to Longevity: Medicine Shifts Toward Prevention
SocialMar 28, 2026

From Weight Loss to Longevity: Medicine Shifts Toward Prevention

It’s interesting how quickly the conversation has shifted. Not long ago, people were hesitant about weight loss injections. Now the question is whether GLP-1s should be used… for longevity. That shift alone is worth paying attention to. Because it reflects something deeper — we’re...

By Marissa Dinar, MD
Psilocybin Emerges as Promising Longevity Therapy
SocialMar 28, 2026

Psilocybin Emerges as Promising Longevity Therapy

When I started Don't Die in 2021, we evaluated all the scientific evidence for the most powerful anti-aging therapies. Psychedelics were no where to be found. A wild turn of events that they're now front and center for us....

By Bryan Johnson
Study Finds One Simple Habit Can Amplify Sleep, Mood and Focus
NewsMar 28, 2026

Study Finds One Simple Habit Can Amplify Sleep, Mood and Focus

LMNT highlighted recent behavioral research indicating that changing a single habit can trigger measurable gains across sleep quality, memory and mood. The post cites a randomized trial on phone‑free bedtime, a massive daylight exposure study, and timing‑of‑meals findings, underscoring a...

By Pulse
Microbial Phenolics Mediate Oats' Cholesterol‑lowering Power
SocialMar 28, 2026

Microbial Phenolics Mediate Oats' Cholesterol‑lowering Power

Cholesterol-lowering effects of oats induced by microbially produced phenolic metabolites in metabolic syndrome: a randomized controlled trial "Here we show that microbial phenolic metabolites are driving factors for the cholesterol-lowering effect of oats.." https://t.co/Y6fmNYStmZ

By David Barzilai, MD PhD
Low‑caffeine Green Tea Boosts Seniors' Sleep by Reducing Stress
SocialMar 28, 2026

Low‑caffeine Green Tea Boosts Seniors' Sleep by Reducing Stress

Ingestion of green tea with lowered caffeine improves sleep quality of the elderly via suppression of stress https://t.co/kkkrKHlwv2

By Michael Lustgarten, PhD
TCU Nutrition Professor Becomes First Woman to Win Cowtown Ultra Marathon
NewsMar 28, 2026

TCU Nutrition Professor Becomes First Woman to Win Cowtown Ultra Marathon

Assistant professor McKale Montgomery of TCU’s Burnett School of Medicine crossed the finish line first in the 31.1‑mile Cowtown Ultra Marathon, posting a 3:33:11 time and becoming the first woman to win the race outright. Her victory underscores the growing...

By Pulse
Biological Age Outperforms Chronological Age in Outcome Prediction
SocialMar 28, 2026

Biological Age Outperforms Chronological Age in Outcome Prediction

In the era of molecular and organ clocks and marked inter- and infra-individual variability of the aging process, we need to move beyond chronological age. "biologic measures predict outcomes more robustly than chronologic age" @NEJM https://t.co/DKmIfdJJUF https://t.co/d5Gc6xGKqn

By Eric Topol
Alternate-Day Fasting Worsens Lung Disease in Schistosomiasis
SocialMar 28, 2026

Alternate-Day Fasting Worsens Lung Disease in Schistosomiasis

Alternate-Day Fasting Exacerbates Lung Inflammatory Disease Compared to High-Sucrose Diet in Experimental Schistosomiasis Mansoni 🤔"These findings suggest that caloric restriction through ADF aggravates pulmonary disease in schistosomiasis, possibly by enhancing ectopic egg dissemination." https://t.co/FwPjvxC9CI

By David Barzilai, MD PhD
Stanford Maps Gut‑Brain ‘Remote Control’ Linking Microbes to Memory Loss
NewsMar 28, 2026

Stanford Maps Gut‑Brain ‘Remote Control’ Linking Microbes to Memory Loss

Stanford University scientists have mapped a neural‑immune pathway by which the age‑associated bacterium Parabacteroides goldsteinii provokes gut inflammation, disrupts vagus‑nerve signaling and degrades hippocampal memory function in mice. The finding suggests dietary or microbiome‑based interventions could become a lever for...

By Pulse
Science-Backed Training Week Explained: Methodology Revealed
SocialMar 28, 2026

Science-Backed Training Week Explained: Methodology Revealed

Long post. What my training week looks like… and why it looks like this. Sometimes understanding the science and theory helps anchor the methodology. Link for there 👇 https://t.co/2Xzne078WC

By Howard Luks, MD
Traditional Periodization Remains Core to Modern Sports
SocialMar 28, 2026

Traditional Periodization Remains Core to Modern Sports

Ever since I travelled to Moscow in 1986 as a 20y old student in search of secrets, "periodization models" have spun in my head. This review helped slow the spin. Revisiting Tradition: Why the Traditional Periodization Still Shapes Modern Sport...

By Stephen Seiler, PhD
The Role and Application Prospects of Plant-Derived Bioactive Peptides in Exercise Fatigue Recovery
NewsMar 27, 2026

The Role and Application Prospects of Plant-Derived Bioactive Peptides in Exercise Fatigue Recovery

Plant-derived bioactive peptides (PBPs) are emerging as natural, sustainable supplements that mitigate exercise‑induced fatigue. They act on multiple fronts—scavenging reactive oxygen species, suppressing pro‑inflammatory cytokines, and activating AMPK pathways to accelerate glycogen replenishment. These mechanisms collectively improve muscle recovery and...

By Frontiers in Nutrition
SIRT6 Loss Triggers Nucleolar Dysfunction and Proteostasis Collapse
SocialMar 28, 2026

SIRT6 Loss Triggers Nucleolar Dysfunction and Proteostasis Collapse

SIRT6 Regulates Protein Synthesis and Folding Through Nucleolar Remodeling "Our data suggest that SIRT6 deficiency results in proteostasis loss through nucleolar dysfunction." https://t.co/w1SfUiUxg4 https://t.co/5bqVFfS0lg

By David Barzilai, MD PhD
Anatomical Variant Anconeus Epitrochlearis Linked to Thrower Elbow Pain
SocialMar 28, 2026

Anatomical Variant Anconeus Epitrochlearis Linked to Thrower Elbow Pain

New podcast: I outline what an anconeus epitrochlearis is and how it can contribute to medial elbow pain, in throwing athletes. It’s important to consider anatomical variants in addition to medical and movement diagnoses. https://t.co/VY4K0Q0a2G https://t.co/mIa4FfK0bK

By Eric Cressey
Nutritional Considerations for Athletes with Diabetes: Optimizing Performance and Glycemic Control
NewsMar 27, 2026

Nutritional Considerations for Athletes with Diabetes: Optimizing Performance and Glycemic Control

The review consolidates recent evidence on nutrition strategies that enable athletes with Type 1 and Type 2 diabetes to balance peak performance with tight glycemic control. It grades recommendations from strong (meta‑analyses) to expert consensus, emphasizing carbohydrate timing, protein intake, and targeted...

By Frontiers in Nutrition
How To Master Hydration with the Water Cures Protocol
BlogMar 27, 2026

How To Master Hydration with the Water Cures Protocol

The Water Cures protocol proposes that true hydration requires an osmotic pull created by a precise salt‑to‑water ratio rather than sheer water volume. It recommends 1/8 tsp of unrefined sea salt per 16 oz of water and a “10 % rule” –...

By Sources of Insight