longo in A Sentence

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    Longo proved herself and many others wrong.

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    Longo says by year's end, a commercial diet program based on his research should be available.

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    However, patients whose treatments aren't working can ask their doctor about trying it now, Longo says.

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    Tirkey alleged that Longo had lured the children with the false promise of education and employment.

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    Though these new findings are in mice, Longo is optimistic that they will translate to humans, since many of the cancers were human.

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    Setting aside your weight status, Longo says eating all the time may also harm some“intercellular regenerative processes” that protect you from disease, including cancer.

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    Eventually, Longo says he hopes intermittent fasting diets could be used to treat diabetes and cardiovascular disease, though that would require FDA approval and is still likely years in the future.

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    With each genetic change that enables it to grow and metastasize,“the tumor has to give up something, and we think that something is the ability to deal with extreme environments,” Longo says.

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    Even if you're careful about what you eat and your total calorie intake, snacking between meals can keep your blood sugar levels elevated, which can increase your risk for weight issues and metabolic diseases like diabetes, Longo explains.

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    In the opinion adopted at the Plenary Session on 23 May 2018 and drafted by Ulrich Samm and Antonio Longo, the Committee emphasises that the EuroHPC Joint Undertaking will definitely bring added value to the EU's digital sovereignty and independence, making the Union a crucial player in digital development, with a direct impact on competitiveness and people's quality of life.

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    Our conclusion is that by pushing the mice into an extreme state and then bringing them back--by starving them and then feeding them again--the cells in the pancreas are triggered to use some kind of developmental reprogramming that rebuilds the part of the organ that's no longer functioning," says senior author Valter Longo of the University of Southern California School of Gerontology and Director of the USC Longevity Institute.

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