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2 PFAS Chemicals Linked to Faster Aging in Middle-Aged Men

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DMNews · 8h
Scientists found that men in their 50s are aging faster than women, and toxic ‘forever chemicals’ may be the reason
New research reveals that men in their 50s are biologically aging faster than women the same age, and the culprit may be decades of invisible PFAS accumulation that builds silently in male bodies.

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 · 2d
Forever Chemicals Linked to Faster Aging in Middle-Aged Men, Study Finds
 · 1d
Middle-aged men may be aging faster due to 'forever chemicals'
 · 1d
"Forever chemicals" may accelerate aging in men, new research finds
Exposure to PFAS “forever chemicals” may be accelerating biological aging in men in their 50s and early 60s, according to new research published in Frontiers in Aging.

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Direct Marketing News · 1d
Forever chemicals are now linked to accelerated biological aging in men, and the exposure window starts decades earlier than researchers expected
 · 1d
Men in their 50s may be aging faster than women due to toxic ‘forever chemicals’
ABC 17 News · 1d
Hombres de entre 50 y 60 años podrían estar envejeciendo más rápido que las mujeres debido a los tóxicos “químicos eternos”
“Las asociaciones entre la exposición a PFAS y el envejecimiento epigenético acelerado fueron más fuertes en hombres de entre 50 y 65 años”, dijo el autor principal del estudio, Xiangwei Li, profesor ...

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WKTV · 1d
Men in Their 50s May Be Aging Faster Due to Toxic ‘Forever Chemicals’
 · 1d
Two PFAS Chemicals Linked to Faster Aging in Middle-Aged Men
PsyPost on MSN
15d

Younger women find men with beards less attractive than older women do

A new study published in Adaptive Human Behavior and Physiology suggests that a woman’s age and reproductive status may influence her preferences for male physical traits. The research indicates that postmenopausal women perceive certain masculine characteristics,
Techno-Science.net on MSN
5d

This protein would affect men's bones (but not women's)

According to a recent study, the liver may play a previously unrecognized role in bone health, but only in men. The study conducted at McGill University and published in Matrix Biology revealed
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