Author Archives: Vince Giuliano

About Vince Giuliano

Being a follower, connoisseur, and interpreter of longevity research is my latest career, since 2007. I believe I am unique among the researchers and writers in the aging sciences community in one critical respect. That is, I personally practice the anti-aging interventions that I preach and that has kept me healthy, young, active and highly involved at my age, now 96. I am as productive as I was at age 45. I don’t know of anybody else active in that community in my age bracket. In particular, I have focused on the importance of controlling chronic inflammation for healthy aging, and have written a number of articles on that subject in this blog. In 2014, I created a dietary supplement to further this objective. In 2019, two family colleagues and I started up Synergy Bioherbals, a dietary supplement company that is now selling this product. As of November 2025, I believe the longevity interventions I have already published in this blog and are being followed by me will easily get me to age 100 and somewhat beyond, still healthy, highly functional and working Further, I have been researching and will be pubishing about additional interventions which I expect will buy me several additional years of active healthy living. In earlier reincarnations of my career. I was Founding Dean of a graduate school and a full University Professor at the State University of New York, a senior consultant working in a variety of fields at Arthur D. Little, Inc., Chief Scientist and C00 of Mirror Systems, a software company, and an international Internet consultant. I got off the ground with one of the earliest PhD's from Harvard in a field later to become known as computer science. Because there was no academic field of computer science at the time, to get through I had to qualify myself in hard sciences, so my studies focused heavily on quantum physics. In various ways I contributed to the Computer Revolution starting in the 1950s and the Internet Revolution starting in the late 1980s. I am now engaged in doing the same for The Longevity Revolution. I have published something like 200 books and papers as well as over 430 substantive.entries in this blog, and have enjoyed various periods of notoriety. If you do a Google search on Vincent E. Giuliano, most if not all of the entries on the first few pages that come up will be ones relating to me. I have a general writings site at www.vincegiuliano.com and an extensive site of my art at www.giulianoart.com. Please note that I have recently changed my mailbox to vegiuliano@agingsciences.com.

How am I doing?

A year after first publishing the online treatise Anti-Aging Firewalls – The Science And Technology Of Longevity and six months after initiating this blog, it’s a good time to ask the question “How am I doing with my anti-aging firewalls … Continue reading

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Naked complexity

In this blog and in my treatise Anti-Aging Firewalls – The Science And Technology Of Longevity I try to steer a mid course between scientific over-simplification and loosing readers because the content is too technical for them to fathom.  I … Continue reading

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Linking up the theories of aging

Research reports continue to appear that identify linkages between theories of aging I have covered in the treatise Anti-Aging Firewalls – The Science And Technology Of Longevity.  The latest shows a link between the Telomere shortening and damage, the Programmed … Continue reading

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A simple treatment for human genetic diseases

Here is how it might work.  Suppose your child is born with an incurable disease due to a mutated gene.  After diagnosis, the cure would go like this:  Step 1: hair, blood or skin cells are collected from the patient … Continue reading

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Epigenomic complexity

Some time ago I posted an item Everything relates to everything else – at least in the science of longevity.  Recent research shows that applies to epigenomic information.  For some time it has been known that epigenomic information can be … Continue reading

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Transformed State of Medicine – 2025

A recent article*  appearing in Scientific American magazine points to several developments coming together to transform the practice of medicine as we know it.  I cover a few of the key points here and comment on their implications for both … Continue reading

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Histone acetylase and deacetylase inhibitors

Readers, please don’t turn off on this post because the subject sounds too technical.  It relates to a major application area of epigenomics that has a lot to do with aging and anti-aging science. First, a simplified review of a … Continue reading

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Another rare genetic disease, and shortevity genes

Thanks again to Res for suggesting the lead which led to this post.  Adding to the list of rare genetic disorders affecting longevity recently discussed in this Blog, there is Wolfram Syndrome.  This is a disease long known to be … Continue reading

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Social ethics of longevity

Is increasing longevity be good for the society or does it pose a burden on younger people?  I outline where I am on this issue here because it has a lot to do with what motivates me to continue generating … Continue reading

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Hoyeraal-Hreidarsson Syndrome and telomere dysfunction

Exotic genetic diseases often provide important clues for the aging process, and I have previously discussed implications of Hutchinson-Gilford progeria and Werner Syndrome in this Blog.  This time, a research item on Hoyeraal-Hreidarsson Syndrome(HHS)  came to my attention.  “Hoyeraal-Hreidarsson syndrome … Continue reading

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