Nothing in gerontology comes close to fulfilling the promise of a dramatically extended life span -- despite bold claims to the contrary.
"I have little doubt that gerontologists will eventually find a way to avoid, or more likely, delay, the unpleasantries of extended life," says S. Jay Olshansky, author of "The Quest for Immortality: Science at the Frontiers of Aging." But they're not there yet.
For now, what researchers are finding is that, although we can certainly accelerate the aging process, we can't stop it.
People don't like to accept that our life spans are generally preset by genetics. "The only control we have over our life span is to shorten it," says Olshansky, an epidemiology professor at the University of Illinois at Chicago School of Public Health. We do this by being sedentary, smoking, gaining weight and abusing drugs.
Olshansky adds: "If we do everything right, the best we can do is live out our potential with as little age-related disease and disability as possible."
In the United States today the average life span for women is 80 and for men it's 75. Of the planet's current 6.5 billion inhabitants, no more than 25 people are older than 110. Jeanne Calment of Arles, France, who died in 1997 at age 122 1/2 , set the record for the greatest documented age reached by any human.
Researchers who study centenarians (people who live to 100) and super centenarians (those who live beyond 110) appreciate how rare it is to attain that age. They also understand how ridiculous it is to claim that people alive today can expect to live to age 125, which is what some longevity proponents claim is achievable.
"Saying that is inconceivably irresponsible," says Tom Perls, a geriatrician and director of the New England Centenarian Study. That said, he does believe we can borrow from the successes, if not the genes, of people who've lived to be 100. "I wouldn't be devoting my life to studying centenarians if I didn't think something would come of it."
There isn't a cure for aging because it isn't a disease, says Laurence Rubenstein, geriatrician at UCLA Medical Center. "It's a natural and complex process that involves every system in the body." That individuals age unevenly at vastly different rates suggests that genes, lifestyle and disease can all affect the rate of aging.