Wrinkles and sagging skin—just normal aging, or can you blame your sweet tooth? We dive into “sugar sag,” exploring how sugar, processed foods, and even your crispy breakfast toast might be making you look older than if you’d said no to chocolate cake and yes to broccoli. Along the way, we encounter statistical adjustment, training and test data sets, what we call “references to nowhere,” plus some cadavers and collagen. Ever heard of an AGE reader? Find out how this tool might offer a sneak peek at your date’s age—and maybe even a clue about his… um… “performance.”
Statistical topics
Methodologic morals
Citations
Collagen turnover:
Cadaver study:
Studies of AGEs and diabetes and health:
Review article with conflicts of interest:
Clinical study on AGE interrupter cream:
The citation trail: