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Re: When Your Body Start Aging by Praising200: 12:55pm On Aug 24, 2014
This Is Absolutely True, Skin Start Ageing At Mid 20....Am Curently Experiencing This.
Re: When Your Body Start Aging by Nobody: 1:02pm On Aug 24, 2014
ok
Re: When Your Body Start Aging by nekede11(m): 2:04pm On Aug 24, 2014
Informative
Re: When Your Body Start Aging by daveP(m): 2:13pm On Aug 24, 2014
PrettySpicey: Thank you OP for helping to clarify why I feel so damn old these days....

I need a time travel clock please
i hope we @ e-family didnt contribute. I didnt see d need. smiley happy sunday.
Re: When Your Body Start Aging by mikron(m): 2:18pm On Aug 24, 2014
I be metusellah i no go old on time. Btw the thought of me getting old and the thought of me dieing one day scares the shi.t outta me. God dey
Re: When Your Body Start Aging by UjSizzle(f): 3:28pm On Aug 24, 2014
I can feel my skin ageing and this loss of breathe surprises me a lot.

I wonder what it would feel like to watch my boobsie sag undecided I actually like that I don't need a bra to keep them upright ya know sad

Grey hairs really look good....regal actually. And it's way better on men cheesy
Re: When Your Body Start Aging by cardoso111(m): 3:32pm On Aug 24, 2014
Can someone start new thread on how to correct the ageing symptoms so listed pls!
Re: When Your Body Start Aging by emmabest2000(m): 4:52pm On Aug 24, 2014
fubbyy: When your body really starts aging

BRAIN
Starts ageing at 20,As we get older,the number of nerve cells or neurons in the brain decrease, We start with around 100 billion, but in our 20s this number starts to decline.
By 40, we could be losing up to 10,000 per
day, affecting memory, co-ordination and
brain function.
In fact, while the neurons are important, it's
actually the deterioration of the gaps between
the brain cells that has the biggest impact, says
Dr Wojtek Rakowicz, a consultant neurologist
at Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust in
London.
These tiny gaps between the end of one brain
nerve cell and another are called synapses.
Their job is to ensure the flow of information
from one cell to another, and as we age we
make fewer.


• BREASTS
Start ageing at 35
BY their mid-30s, women's breasts start losing
tissue and fat, reducing size and fullness.
Sagging starts properly at 40 and the areola
(the area surrounding the nipple) can shrink
considerably.
Although breast cancer risk increases with age,
it's not related to physical changes in the
breast.
More likely, says Gareth Evans, breast cancer
specialist at St Mary's Hospital, Manchester,
our cells become damaged with age - as a
result, the genes which control cell growth can
mutate, causing cancer.

• BLADDER
Starts ageing at 65
Loss of bladder control is more likely when
you hit 65.
The bladder starts to contract suddenly, even
when it's not full.
Women are more vulnerable to bladder
problems as, after the menopause, declining
oestrogen levels make tissues in the urethra -
the tube through which urine passes -
thinner and weaker, reducing bladder support.
Bladder capacity in an older adult generally is
about half that of a younger person - about
two cups in a 30-year-old and one cup in a 70-
year-old.
This causes more frequent trips to the loo,
particularly as poor muscle tone means the
bladder may not fully empty. This in turn can
lead to urinary tract infections.

• LUNGS
Start ageing at 20
Lung capacity slowly starts to decrease from
the age of 20.
By the age of 40, some people are already
experiencing breathlessness. This is partly
because the muscles and the rib cage which
control breathing stiffen up.
It's then harder to work the lungs and also
means some air remains in the lungs after
breathing out - causing breathlessness.
Aged 30, the average man can inhale two pints
of air in one breath. By 70, it's down to one.

• VOICE
Starts ageing at 65
Our voices become quieter and hoarser with
age. The soft tissues in the voice box (larynx)
weaken, affecting the pitch, loudness and
quality of the voice.
A woman's voice may become huskier and
lower in pitch, whereas a man's might become
thinner and higher.

• EYES
Start ageing at 40
Glasses are the norm for many over-40s as
failing eyesight kicks in - usually long-
sightedness, affecting our ability to see objects
up close.
As we age, the eye's ability to focus
deteriorates because the eyes' muscles
become weaker, says Andrew Lotery,
professor of ophthalmology at the University
of Southampton.

• HEART
- Starts ageing at 40
The heart pumps blood less effectively around
the body as we get older.
This is because blood vessels become less
elastic, while arteries can harden or become
blocked because of fatty deposits forming on
the coronary arteries - caused by eating too
much saturated fat.
The blood supply to the heart is then reduced,
resulting in painful angina.
Men over 45 and women over 55 are at
greater risk of a heart attack.
A recent study by Lloyds Pharmacy found the
average person in the UK has a 'heart age' five
years older than their chronological age,
probably due to obesity and lack of exercise.

• LIVER
Starts ageing at 70
This is the only organ in the body which seems
to defy the ag ing process.
'Its cells have an extraordinary capacity to
regenerate,' explain David Lloyd, a consultant
liver surgeon at Leicester Royal Infir mary.
He says he can remove ha a liver during
surgery and it will grow to the size of a
complete liver within three months.
If a donor doesn't drink, use drug or suffer
from infection, then it is possible to transplant
a 70-year-old liver into a 20-year-old.

• KIDNEYS
Starts ageing at 50
With kidneys, the number of filtering units
(nephrons) that remove waste from the
bloodstream starts to reduce in middle age.
One effect of this is their inability to turn off
urine production at night, causing frequent
trips to the bathroom.
The kidneys of a 75-year-old person will filter
only half the amount of blood that a 30-year-
old's will.

• PROSTATE
Starts ageing at 50
The prostate often becomes enlarged with age,
leading to problems such as increased need to
urinate, says Professor Roger Kirby, director of
the Prostate Centre in London. This is known
as benign prostatic hyperplasia and affects half
of men over 50, but rarely those under 40.
It occurs when the prostate absorbs large
amounts of the male sex hormone
testosterone, which increases the growth of
cells in the prostate.
A normal prostate is the size of a walnut, but
the condition can increase this to the size of a
tangerine.

• BONES
Start ageing at 35
'Throughout our life, old bone is broken down
by cells called osteoclasts and replaced by
bone-building cells called osteoblasts - a
process called bone turnover,' explains Robert
Moots, professor of rheumatology at Aintree
University Hospital in Liverpool.
Children's bone growth is rapid - the skeleton
takes just two years to renew itself
completely. In adults, this can take ten years.
Until our mid-20s, bone density is still
increasing. But at 35 bone loss begins as part
of the natural ageing process.
This becomes more rapid in post-menopausal
women and can cause the bone-thinning
condition osteoporosis.
The shrinking in size and density of bones can
lead to loss of height. Bones in the back shrivel
up or crumble between the vertebrae. We lose
two inches in height by the time we're 80.

• TEETH
Start ageing at 40
As we age, we produce less saliva, which
washes away bacteria, so teeth and gums are
more vulnerable to decay.
Receding gums - when tissue is lost from
gums around the teeth - is common in adults
over 40.

• MUSCLES
Start ageing at 30
Muscle is constantly being built up and broken
down, a process which is well balanced in
young adults.
However, by the time we're 30, breakdown is
greater than buildup, explains Professor
Robert Moots.
Once adults reach 40, they start to lose
between 0.5 and 2 per cent of their muscle
each year. Regular exercise can help prevent
this.

• HEARING
Starts ageing mid-50s
More than half of people over 60 lose hearing
because of their age, according to the Royal
National Institute for the Deaf.
The condition, known as presbycusis, happens
due to a loss of 'hair cells' - tiny sensory cells
in the inner ear which pick up sound vibrations
and send them to the brain.

• SKIN
Starts ageing mid-20s
The skin starts to age naturally in your
mid-20s.
According to Dr Andrew Wright, a consultant
dermatologist with Bradford NHS Trust, as we
get older production of collagen - the protein
which acts as scaffolding to the skin - slows,
and elastin, the substance that enables skin to
snap back into place, has less spring and can
even break.
Dead skin cells don't shed as quickly and
turnover of new skin cells may decrease
slightly.
This causes fine wrinkles and thin, transparent
skin - even if the first signs may not appear
until our mid-30s (unless accelerated by
smoking or sun damage).

• TASTE AND SMELL
Start ageing at 60
We start out in life with about 10,000 taste
buds scattered on the tongue. This number can
halve later in life.
After we turn 60, taste and smell gradually
decline, partly as a result of the normal ageing
process.
This can be accelerated by problems such as
polyps in the nasal or sinus cavities. It can also
be the cumulative effect of years of smoking.

• FERTILITY
Starts ageing at 35
Female fertility begins to decline after 35, as
the number and quality of eggs in the ovaries
start to fall.
The lining of the womb may become thinner,
making it less likely for a fertilised egg to take,
and also creating an environment hostile to
sperm.
Male fertility also starts to drop around this
age. Men who wait until their 40s before
starting a family have a greater chance of their
partner having a miscarriage, because of the
poorer quality of their sperm.

• HAIR
Starts ageing at 30
Male hair loss usually begins in the 30s. Hair is
made in tiny pouches just under the skin's
surface, known as follices.
A hair normally grows from each follicle for
about three years, is then shed, and a new hair
grows.
However, with male-pattern baldness, changes
in levels of testosterone from their early-30s
affect this cycle, causing the hair follicles to
shrink.
Each new hair is thinner than the previous one.
Eventually, all that remains is a much smaller
hair follicle and a thin stump of hair that does
not grow out to the skin surface.
Most people will have some grey hair by the
age of 35. When we are young, our hair is
coloured by the pigments produced by cells in
the hair follicle known as melanocytes.
As we grow older, melanocytes become less
active, so less pigment is produced, the colour
fades, and grey hairs grow instead
interesting !
Re: When Your Body Start Aging by Nobody: 5:16pm On Aug 24, 2014
Tushborn: i dont want old op abeg comot jare
U wan come die now ?
Re: When Your Body Start Aging by Nobody: 5:21pm On Aug 24, 2014
kobonaire: I won't lie, growing old scares the F out of me ... especially in our modern day world where the elderly sadly have lesser and lesser significance in society
undecided
Everyday of My life I keep imagining what life will be in my 80s and outa curiosity I'm waiting patiently to have a firsthand experience of what happens after death ....... cheesy

What I hate is PAIN , NO TO PAIN !

1 Like

Re: When Your Body Start Aging by bidexmat(m): 5:31pm On Aug 24, 2014
i just dey check evry part of ma body as i dey read read this tin. na wa ooo!! *singing* " this world is not my home!
Re: When Your Body Start Aging by kobonaire(m): 5:57pm On Aug 24, 2014
donroxy: Everyday of My life I keep imagining what life will be in my 80s and outa curiosity I'm waiting patiently to have a firsthand experience of what happens after death ....... cheesy
What I hate is PAIN , NO TO PAIN !
Big mystery my guy
Re: When Your Body Start Aging by Nobody: 5:58pm On Aug 24, 2014
kobonaire: Big mystery my guy
exactly , why you come dey fear old age ?
Re: When Your Body Start Aging by kobonaire(m): 6:02pm On Aug 24, 2014
donroxy: exactly , why you come dey fear old age ?
i don't know my guy .... some of the ailments that may come with old age is what scares me : eg Alzheimer's, physical disability .... etc
Re: When Your Body Start Aging by Nobody: 6:10pm On Aug 24, 2014
kobonaire: i don't know my guy .... some of the ailments that may come with old age is what scares me : eg Alzheimer's, physical disability .... etc
That is why you should respect your body right now that you are young so as for her to respect you @ old age !!

Me , I'm kinda weird sha cuz I assume my body is a another being apart from me cheesy .... And I take care of it like my firstborn !!

1 Like

Re: When Your Body Start Aging by kobonaire(m): 6:15pm On Aug 24, 2014
donroxy: That is why you should respect your body right now that you are young so as for her to respect you @ old age !!

Me , I'm kinda weird sha cuz I assume my body is a another being apart from me cheesy .... And I take care of it like my firstborn !!
good advice bro .... very difficult to implement though, with all the delicious unhealthy temptations:- suya, fried egg, sugary drinks etc ..... tongue
Re: When Your Body Start Aging by rucream: 6:46pm On Aug 24, 2014
To me,it still depends on how well u take care of your body
Re: When Your Body Start Aging by simdam500(m): 8:54pm On Aug 24, 2014
hisableplc: Thank God am in Africa, Nigeria for that matter all these theory no dey our practical for here...
My granny proves 'em wrong her memory sharp pass my own self
lmao... You dont wanna know... My granny never forget things, even when i've let go
Re: When Your Body Start Aging by simdam500(m): 8:58pm On Aug 24, 2014
Op... Cool information u brought forth...

Btw... Am Sacred here

fitting myself to every point up there makes me sigh every now and then
Re: When Your Body Start Aging by Lolaabokoku(f): 9:15pm On Aug 24, 2014
Ŋĭcέ aΩ̴̩̩̩̥d̶̲̥̅̊ ‎​ educative thread
Re: When Your Body Start Aging by fubbyy(m): 9:17pm On Aug 24, 2014
the people I pity is those that look way too older than their age, all these giants,before the age of 60 you see say death done dey price dem

I have a friend whom I'm 2 years older than but he looks like my uncle and e dey sweet am

Anyway,am not scared of aging,am only scared of dying before aging
Re: When Your Body Start Aging by fubbyy(m): 9:18pm On Aug 24, 2014
the people I pity most are those that look way too older than their age, all these giants,before the age of 60 you see say death done dey price dem

I have a friend whom I'm 2 years older than but he looks like my uncle and e dey sweet am

Anyway,am not scared of aging,am only scared of dying before aging
Re: When Your Body Start Aging by igbanbajo(m): 10:02pm On Aug 24, 2014
fubbyy: When your body really starts aging

BRAIN
Starts ageing at 20,As we get older,the number of nerve cells or neurons in the brain decrease, We start with around 100 billion, but in our 20s this number starts to decline.
By 40, we could be losing up to 10,000 per
day, affecting memory, co-ordination and
brain function.
In fact, while the neurons are important, it's
actually the deterioration of the gaps between
the brain cells that has the biggest impact, says
Dr Wojtek Rakowicz, a consultant neurologist
at Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust in
London.
These tiny gaps between the end of one brain
nerve cell and another are called synapses.
Their job is to ensure the flow of information
from one cell to another, and as we age we
make fewer.


• BREASTS
Start ageing at 35
BY their mid-30s, women's breasts start losing
tissue and fat, reducing size and fullness.
Sagging starts properly at 40 and the areola
(the area surrounding the nipple) can shrink
considerably.
Although breast cancer risk increases with age,
it's not related to physical changes in the
breast.
More likely, says Gareth Evans, breast cancer
specialist at St Mary's Hospital, Manchester,
our cells become damaged with age - as a
result, the genes which control cell growth can
mutate, causing cancer.

• BLADDER
Starts ageing at 65
Loss of bladder control is more likely when
you hit 65.
The bladder starts to contract suddenly, even
when it's not full.
Women are more vulnerable to bladder
problems as, after the menopause, declining
oestrogen levels make tissues in the urethra -
the tube through which urine passes -
thinner and weaker, reducing bladder support.
Bladder capacity in an older adult generally is
about half that of a younger person - about
two cups in a 30-year-old and one cup in a 70-
year-old.
This causes more frequent trips to the loo,
particularly as poor muscle tone means the
bladder may not fully empty. This in turn can
lead to urinary tract infections.

• LUNGS
Start ageing at 20
Lung capacity slowly starts to decrease from
the age of 20.
By the age of 40, some people are already
experiencing breathlessness. This is partly
because the muscles and the rib cage which
control breathing stiffen up.
It's then harder to work the lungs and also
means some air remains in the lungs after
breathing out - causing breathlessness.
Aged 30, the average man can inhale two pints
of air in one breath. By 70, it's down to one.

• VOICE
Starts ageing at 65
Our voices become quieter and hoarser with
age. The soft tissues in the voice box (larynx)
weaken, affecting the pitch, loudness and
quality of the voice.
A woman's voice may become huskier and
lower in pitch, whereas a man's might become
thinner and higher.

• EYES
Start ageing at 40
Glasses are the norm for many over-40s as
failing eyesight kicks in - usually long-
sightedness, affecting our ability to see objects
up close.
As we age, the eye's ability to focus
deteriorates because the eyes' muscles
become weaker, says Andrew Lotery,
professor of ophthalmology at the University
of Southampton.

• HEART
- Starts ageing at 40
The heart pumps blood less effectively around
the body as we get older.
This is because blood vessels become less
elastic, while arteries can harden or become
blocked because of fatty deposits forming on
the coronary arteries - caused by eating too
much saturated fat.
The blood supply to the heart is then reduced,
resulting in painful angina.
Men over 45 and women over 55 are at
greater risk of a heart attack.
A recent study by Lloyds Pharmacy found the
average person in the UK has a 'heart age' five
years older than their chronological age,
probably due to obesity and lack of exercise.

• LIVER
Starts ageing at 70
This is the only organ in the body which seems
to defy the ag ing process.
'Its cells have an extraordinary capacity to
regenerate,' explain David Lloyd, a consultant
liver surgeon at Leicester Royal Infir mary.
He says he can remove ha a liver during
surgery and it will grow to the size of a
complete liver within three months.
If a donor doesn't drink, use drug or suffer
from infection, then it is possible to transplant
a 70-year-old liver into a 20-year-old.

• KIDNEYS
Starts ageing at 50
With kidneys, the number of filtering units
(nephrons) that remove waste from the
bloodstream starts to reduce in middle age.
One effect of this is their inability to turn off
urine production at night, causing frequent
trips to the bathroom.
The kidneys of a 75-year-old person will filter
only half the amount of blood that a 30-year-
old's will.

• PROSTATE
Starts ageing at 50
The prostate often becomes enlarged with age,
leading to problems such as increased need to
urinate, says Professor Roger Kirby, director of
the Prostate Centre in London. This is known
as benign prostatic hyperplasia and affects half
of men over 50, but rarely those under 40.
It occurs when the prostate absorbs large
amounts of the male sex hormone
testosterone, which increases the growth of
cells in the prostate.
A normal prostate is the size of a walnut, but
the condition can increase this to the size of a
tangerine.

• BONES
Start ageing at 35
'Throughout our life, old bone is broken down
by cells called osteoclasts and replaced by
bone-building cells called osteoblasts - a
process called bone turnover,' explains Robert
Moots, professor of rheumatology at Aintree
University Hospital in Liverpool.
Children's bone growth is rapid - the skeleton
takes just two years to renew itself
completely. In adults, this can take ten years.
Until our mid-20s, bone density is still
increasing. But at 35 bone loss begins as part
of the natural ageing process.
This becomes more rapid in post-menopausal
women and can cause the bone-thinning
condition osteoporosis.
The shrinking in size and density of bones can
lead to loss of height. Bones in the back shrivel
up or crumble between the vertebrae. We lose
two inches in height by the time we're 80.

• TEETH
Start ageing at 40
As we age, we produce less saliva, which
washes away bacteria, so teeth and gums are
more vulnerable to decay.
Receding gums - when tissue is lost from
gums around the teeth - is common in adults
over 40.

• MUSCLES
Start ageing at 30
Muscle is constantly being built up and broken
down, a process which is well balanced in
young adults.
However, by the time we're 30, breakdown is
greater than buildup, explains Professor
Robert Moots.
Once adults reach 40, they start to lose
between 0.5 and 2 per cent of their muscle
each year. Regular exercise can help prevent
this.

• HEARING
Starts ageing mid-50s
More than half of people over 60 lose hearing
because of their age, according to the Royal
National Institute for the Deaf.
The condition, known as presbycusis, happens
due to a loss of 'hair cells' - tiny sensory cells
in the inner ear which pick up sound vibrations
and send them to the brain.

• SKIN
Starts ageing mid-20s
The skin starts to age naturally in your
mid-20s.
According to Dr Andrew Wright, a consultant
dermatologist with Bradford NHS Trust, as we
get older production of collagen - the protein
which acts as scaffolding to the skin - slows,
and elastin, the substance that enables skin to
snap back into place, has less spring and can
even break.
Dead skin cells don't shed as quickly and
turnover of new skin cells may decrease
slightly.
This causes fine wrinkles and thin, transparent
skin - even if the first signs may not appear
until our mid-30s (unless accelerated by
smoking or sun damage).

• TASTE AND SMELL
Start ageing at 60
We start out in life with about 10,000 taste
buds scattered on the tongue. This number can
halve later in life.
After we turn 60, taste and smell gradually
decline, partly as a result of the normal ageing
process.
This can be accelerated by problems such as
polyps in the nasal or sinus cavities. It can also
be the cumulative effect of years of smoking.

• FERTILITY
Starts ageing at 35
Female fertility begins to decline after 35, as
the number and quality of eggs in the ovaries
start to fall.
The lining of the womb may become thinner,
making it less likely for a fertilised egg to take,
and also creating an environment hostile to
sperm.
Male fertility also starts to drop around this
age. Men who wait until their 40s before
starting a family have a greater chance of their
partner having a miscarriage, because of the
poorer quality of their sperm.

• HAIR
Starts ageing at 30
Male hair loss usually begins in the 30s. Hair is
made in tiny pouches just under the skin's
surface, known as follices.
A hair normally grows from each follicle for
about three years, is then shed, and a new hair
grows.
However, with male-pattern baldness, changes
in levels of testosterone from their early-30s
affect this cycle, causing the hair follicles to
shrink.
Each new hair is thinner than the previous one.
Eventually, all that remains is a much smaller
hair follicle and a thin stump of hair that does
not grow out to the skin surface.
Most people will have some grey hair by the
age of 35. When we are young, our hair is
coloured by the pigments produced by cells in
the hair follicle known as melanocytes.
As we grow older, melanocytes become less
active, so less pigment is produced, the colour
fades, and grey hairs grow instead

bookmarked
Re: When Your Body Start Aging by Nobody: 11:52pm On Aug 24, 2014
Life on earth is so short. By the time you approach 30 to 40, most people have already spent half of their days on earth.

Life continues after here. Don't miss heaven !
Re: When Your Body Start Aging by hisableplc(m): 7:38am On Aug 25, 2014
simdam500: lmao... You dont wanna know... My granny never forget things, even when i've let go

ur granny try oh she go fit pass jamb again self if given the opportunity

Dont mind them dats just 1 in a 10th of defiling those rules if u go to some villages u will find some that are still alive they cant even count their age they just cut `em short and say they are 85, 92, etc but for real some av clocked 120-150 yrs.
grin grin grin
Re: When Your Body Start Aging by Ninilowo(m): 4:15pm On Aug 25, 2014
Only for the whites sha. I am 45 and hardly will you notice a difference between me and twenty something coutesy of good diet and sports.
Re: When Your Body Start Aging by Infoay: 4:33pm On Aug 25, 2014
God remain ageless..........
Re: When Your Body Start Aging by StepG: 4:56pm On Aug 25, 2014
fubbyy: When your body really starts aging

BRAIN
Starts ageing at 20,As we get older,the number of nerve cells or neurons in the brain decrease, We start with around 100 billion, but in our 20s this number starts to decline.
By 40, we could be losing up to 10,000 per
day, affecting memory, co-ordination and
brain function.
In fact, while the neurons are important, it's
actually the deterioration of the gaps between
the brain cells that has the biggest impact, says
Dr Wojtek Rakowicz, a consultant neurologist
at Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust in
London.
These tiny gaps between the end of one brain
nerve cell and another are called synapses.
Their job is to ensure the flow of information
from one cell to another, and as we age we
make fewer.


• BREASTS
Start ageing at 35
BY their mid-30s, women's breasts start losing
tissue and fat, reducing size and fullness.
Sagging starts properly at 40 and the areola
(the area surrounding the nipple) can shrink
considerably.
Although breast cancer risk increases with age,
it's not related to physical changes in the
breast.
More likely, says Gareth Evans, breast cancer
specialist at St Mary's Hospital, Manchester,
our cells become damaged with age - as a
result, the genes which control cell growth can
mutate, causing cancer.

• BLADDER
Starts ageing at 65
Loss of bladder control is more likely when
you hit 65.
The bladder starts to contract suddenly, even
when it's not full.
Women are more vulnerable to bladder
problems as, after the menopause, declining
oestrogen levels make tissues in the urethra -
the tube through which urine passes -
thinner and weaker, reducing bladder support.
Bladder capacity in an older adult generally is
about half that of a younger person - about
two cups in a 30-year-old and one cup in a 70-
year-old.
This causes more frequent trips to the loo,
particularly as poor muscle tone means the
bladder may not fully empty. This in turn can
lead to urinary tract infections.

• LUNGS
Start ageing at 20
Lung capacity slowly starts to decrease from
the age of 20.
By the age of 40, some people are already
experiencing breathlessness. This is partly
because the muscles and the rib cage which
control breathing stiffen up.
It's then harder to work the lungs and also
means some air remains in the lungs after
breathing out - causing breathlessness.
Aged 30, the average man can inhale two pints
of air in one breath. By 70, it's down to one.

• VOICE
Starts ageing at 65
Our voices become quieter and hoarser with
age. The soft tissues in the voice box (larynx)
weaken, affecting the pitch, loudness and
quality of the voice.
A woman's voice may become huskier and
lower in pitch, whereas a man's might become
thinner and higher.

• EYES
Start ageing at 40
Glasses are the norm for many over-40s as
failing eyesight kicks in - usually long-
sightedness, affecting our ability to see objects
up close.
As we age, the eye's ability to focus
deteriorates because the eyes' muscles
become weaker, says Andrew Lotery,
professor of ophthalmology at the University
of Southampton.

• HEART
- Starts ageing at 40
The heart pumps blood less effectively around
the body as we get older.
This is because blood vessels become less
elastic, while arteries can harden or become
blocked because of fatty deposits forming on
the coronary arteries - caused by eating too
much saturated fat.
The blood supply to the heart is then reduced,
resulting in painful angina.
Men over 45 and women over 55 are at
greater risk of a heart attack.
A recent study by Lloyds Pharmacy found the
average person in the UK has a 'heart age' five
years older than their chronological age,
probably due to obesity and lack of exercise.

• LIVER
Starts ageing at 70
This is the only organ in the body which seems
to defy the ag ing process.
'Its cells have an extraordinary capacity to
regenerate,' explain David Lloyd, a consultant
liver surgeon at Leicester Royal Infir mary.
He says he can remove ha a liver during
surgery and it will grow to the size of a
complete liver within three months.
If a donor doesn't drink, use drug or suffer
from infection, then it is possible to transplant
a 70-year-old liver into a 20-year-old.

• KIDNEYS
Starts ageing at 50
With kidneys, the number of filtering units
(nephrons) that remove waste from the
bloodstream starts to reduce in middle age.
One effect of this is their inability to turn off
urine production at night, causing frequent
trips to the bathroom.
The kidneys of a 75-year-old person will filter
only half the amount of blood that a 30-year-
old's will.

• PROSTATE
Starts ageing at 50
The prostate often becomes enlarged with age,
leading to problems such as increased need to
urinate, says Professor Roger Kirby, director of
the Prostate Centre in London. This is known
as benign prostatic hyperplasia and affects half
of men over 50, but rarely those under 40.
It occurs when the prostate absorbs large
amounts of the male sex hormone
testosterone, which increases the growth of
cells in the prostate.
A normal prostate is the size of a walnut, but
the condition can increase this to the size of a
tangerine.

• BONES
Start ageing at 35
'Throughout our life, old bone is broken down
by cells called osteoclasts and replaced by
bone-building cells called osteoblasts - a
process called bone turnover,' explains Robert
Moots, professor of rheumatology at Aintree
University Hospital in Liverpool.
Children's bone growth is rapid - the skeleton
takes just two years to renew itself
completely. In adults, this can take ten years.
Until our mid-20s, bone density is still
increasing. But at 35 bone loss begins as part
of the natural ageing process.
This becomes more rapid in post-menopausal
women and can cause the bone-thinning
condition osteoporosis.
The shrinking in size and density of bones can
lead to loss of height. Bones in the back shrivel
up or crumble between the vertebrae. We lose
two inches in height by the time we're 80.

• TEETH
Start ageing at 40
As we age, we produce less saliva, which
washes away bacteria, so teeth and gums are
more vulnerable to decay.
Receding gums - when tissue is lost from
gums around the teeth - is common in adults
over 40.

• MUSCLES
Start ageing at 30
Muscle is constantly being built up and broken
down, a process which is well balanced in
young adults.
However, by the time we're 30, breakdown is
greater than buildup, explains Professor
Robert Moots.
Once adults reach 40, they start to lose
between 0.5 and 2 per cent of their muscle
each year. Regular exercise can help prevent
this.hmm

• HEARING
Starts ageing mid-50s
More than half of people over 60 lose hearing
because of their age, according to the Royal
National Institute for the Deaf.
The condition, known as presbycusis, happens
due to a loss of 'hair cells' - tiny sensory cells
in the inner ear which pick up sound vibrations
and send them to the brain.

• SKIN
Starts ageing mid-20s
The skin starts to age naturally in your
mid-20s.
According to Dr Andrew Wright, a consultant
dermatologist with Bradford NHS Trust, as we
get older production of collagen - the protein
which acts as scaffolding to the skin - slows,
and elastin, the substance that enables skin to
snap back into place, has less spring and can
even break.
Dead skin cells don't shed as quickly and
turnover of new skin cells may decrease
slightly.
This causes fine wrinkles and thin, transparent
skin - even if the first signs may not appear
until our mid-30s (unless accelerated by
smoking or sun damage).

• TASTE AND SMELL
Start ageing at 60
We start out in life with about 10,000 taste
buds scattered on the tongue. This number can
halve later in life.
After we turn 60, taste and smell gradually
decline, partly as a result of the normal ageing
process.
This can be accelerated by problems such as
polyps in the nasal or sinus cavities. It can also
be the cumulative effect of years of smoking.

• FERTILITY
Starts ageing at 35
Female fertility begins to decline after 35, as
the number and quality of eggs in the ovaries
start to fall.
The lining of the womb may become thinner,
making it less likely for a fertilised egg to take,
and also creating an environment hostile to
sperm.
Male fertility also starts to drop around this
age. Men who wait until their 40s before
starting a family have a greater chance of their
partner having a miscarriage, because of the
poorer quality of their sperm.

• HAIR
Starts ageing at 30
Male hair loss usually begins in the 30s. Hair is
made in tiny pouches just under the skin's
surface, known as follices.
A hair normally grows from each follicle for
about three years, is then shed, and a new hair
grows.
However, with male-pattern baldness, changes
in levels of testosterone from their early-30s
affect this cycle, causing the hair follicles to
shrink.
Each new hair is thinner than the previous one.
Eventually, all that remains is a much smaller
hair follicle and a thin stump of hair that does
not grow out to the skin surface.
Most people will have some grey hair by the
age of 35. When we are young, our hair is
coloured by the pigments produced by cells in
the hair follicle known as melanocytes.
As we grow older, melanocytes become less
active, so less pigment is produced, the colour
fades, and grey hairs grow instead
Re: When Your Body Start Aging by fubbyy(m): 4:57pm On Aug 25, 2014
Ninilowo: Only for the whites sha. I am 45 and hardly will you notice a difference between me and twenty something coutesy of good diet and sports.
that's nice, am 27 but I suspect I will get so fat in future which will make me look older than my age
Re: When Your Body Start Aging by Nobody: 5:29pm On Aug 25, 2014
kobonaire: good advice bro .... very difficult to implement though, with all the delicious unhealthy temptations:- suya, fried egg, sugary drinks etc ..... tongue
No wahala na , enjoy yaself cheesy

1 Like

Re: When Your Body Start Aging by Nobody: 9:49am On Aug 26, 2014
Maxwell86: My Joystick should not age oh.........





That's the most important body part followed by the brain ..... grin grin grin
so in terms of importance your joystick comes first b4 ur brain? damnnn....I think I'm going to faint... shocked

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