Dr. Giacinto Libertini
Giacinto
Libertini, M.D. is an
Independent Researcher working for ASL Napoli 2 Nord and is author
of
Evolutionary Interpretations of Aging, Disease
Phenomenon, and Sex
and of
Evolutionary Arguments on Aging, Disease, and Other Topics.
There are two main aging concepts as applied to humans and most other
mammals. The programmed aging theories, also known as adaptive or active
aging theories, propose that mammals
and some other species
purposely deteriorate with age
because a limited life span provides evolutionary benefits.
Non-programmed theories, also known as passive or non-adaptive theories,
contend that a limited life span is entirely adverse and that aging is
not genetically programmed for the purpose of causing deterioration or
death.
Programmed theories provide a better match to observations, but are
based on newer concepts regarding evolution mechanisms. Non-programmed
theories have difficulty explaining many observations but are compatible
with older evolutionary mechanics concepts.
This issue is important because most people in developed countries now
die of age-related diseases. Understanding, preventing, and treating
these diseases requires that we understand the aging
process.
However, the main goal is the complete control of aging mechanisms, a
task that is utopian for non-programmed aging theories while it is
realistic for the programmed aging theories. Aging is, in short, a
progressive slowing down of cell turnover restrained and regulated in
particular by telomere-telomerase system and by apoptotic mechanisms,
which are in principle modifiable as some recent experiments on
telomerase activation show.
Giacinto authored
Phenoptosis, Another Specialized Neologism,
or the Mark of a Widespread Revolution?,
Classification of Phenoptotic Phenomena,
Prospects of a Longer
Life Span beyond the Beneficial
Effects of a Healthy Lifestyle,
The Role of Telomere-Telomerase System in Age-Related
Fitness Decline, a Tameable Process,
Evolutionary Explanations of the “Actuarial Senescence in the Wild”
and of the “State of Senility”,
Empirical Evidence for Various
Evolutionary Hypotheses on Species
Demonstrating Increasing Mortality with
Increasing Chronological Age in the Wild,
An Adaptive Theory of the Increasing Mortality with Increasing
Chronological Age in Populations in the Wild,
and
Libertini — An Adaptive Theory of Aging Based on Kin
Selection.
View his
Facebook page.
Read his
LinkedIn profile.
Visit
Programmed Aging Theory Info
(in particular
Aging Theories — Historical
Chronology of Theories and Discoveries)
and r-site.org.