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Nobody Dies of Old Age

The leading causes of death are preventable. Aging is the real risk factor — and your diet directly controls 11 biological mechanisms that determine how fast you age.

par Evida Life · Publié le 13 avril 2026 · 14 min de lecture

Photo: Photo by Matt Bennett on Unsplash (unsplash.com/@mbennettphoto)

The leading causes of death are preventable

Every year, over 40 million people die from chronic diseases. That's 74% of all deaths globally. The four biggest killers — heart disease, cancer, respiratory disease, and diabetes — are largely driven by lifestyle factors: diet, exercise, smoking, and alcohol.

❤️
Cœur & cardiovasculaire
20M
décès/an
32%
de tous les décès
80% évitable par le mode de vie
Potentiel: +6–10 années de vie
🎗️
Cancer
10M
décès/an
16%
de tous les décès
40% évitable par le mode de vie
Potentiel: +3–5 années de vie
🫁
Maladies respiratoires chroniques
4M
décès/an
6%
de tous les décès
70% évitable par le mode de vie
Potentiel: +2–4 années de vie
💉
Diabète
2M
décès/an
3%
de tous les décès
85% évitable par le mode de vie
Potentiel: +3–6 années de vie

Combined: reducing all four through lifestyle changes adds +10 to +15 years of life expectancy. That's more deaths than both World Wars combined — every single year. According to the Global Burden of Disease study (2019), dietary risks are now the #1 risk factor for early death globally — surpassing smoking, high blood pressure, and physical inactivity.

The implications are staggering. These aren't rare genetic conditions. They're diseases of lifestyle, driven primarily by what we eat, how much we move, and how we manage stress. Most of these deaths are not inevitable — they're the predictable result of decades of dietary and lifestyle choices.

Nobody dies of old age

People die of diseases. But aging is the single biggest risk factor for nearly all of them.

The risk of death rises exponentially throughout adulthood — doubling approximately every 7 years. This pattern, known as the Gompertz law of mortality, holds across virtually all human populations. If we slow biological aging by just 7 years, the risk of death, frailty, and disability is cut in half at every age. A 50-year-old would have the health profile of today's 43-year-old. A 60-year-old would resemble a current 53-year-old.

025507510030405060708090ÂgeRisque relatifMaladie cardiaqueCancerRespiratoireDiabète

Source: WHO Global Health Estimates, Global Burden of Disease 2019, Gompertz law of mortality

This is why longevity researchers increasingly argue that targeting aging itself — rather than individual diseases — would have the greatest impact on human health. If you could slow the biological clock by even a few years, you'd simultaneously reduce the risk of heart disease, cancer, dementia, diabetes, and every other age-related condition.

The 11 hallmarks of aging — and what your diet does to each one

In 2013, researchers published a landmark paper identifying the "Hallmarks of Aging" — biological mechanisms that drive the aging process. Since then, the framework has been expanded and refined. We now understand 11 interconnected pathways that determine how fast your cells deteriorate.

The remarkable finding is that nearly all of these mechanisms are directly influenced by diet. Each hallmark can be accelerated by certain foods and slowed or even partially reversed by others. The science is not theoretical — it's been demonstrated in clinical trials, observational studies, and molecular biology research.

AMPK — Cellular Energy Sensor
The master switch for cellular maintenance
01
PRODUITS ANIMAUX :
High calorie + saturated fat intake → AMPK inhibited. Cells stay in "growth mode" instead of "repair mode," accelerating wear.
VÉGÉTAL :
Fiber + fasting activate AMPK → triggers repair mode (beans, whole grains, berries). Caloric restriction and intermittent fasting are the most potent AMPK activators.
♻️
Autophagy — Self-Cleaning
Your cells' recycling and waste removal system
02
PRODUITS ANIMAUX :
Constant protein surplus (especially branched-chain amino acids from meat) shuts down autophagy. Cells accumulate damaged proteins and organelles.
VÉGÉTAL :
Polyphenols + caloric moderation enhance autophagy (green tea, berries, turmeric). Spermidine from wheat germ and mushrooms directly activates autophagy.
📡
mTOR — Growth Signal
The switch between growth and longevity
03
PRODUITS ANIMAUX :
Animal protein — especially rich in leucine — chronically overactivates mTOR. This promotes cell growth but suppresses the repair pathways needed for longevity.
VÉGÉTAL :
Plant protein moderates mTOR (lentils, tofu, hemp seeds). Lower leucine content of plant foods keeps mTOR from overactivating. Rapamycin, the drug that inhibits mTOR, extends lifespan in every organism tested.
📈
IGF-1 — Growth Factor
Insulin-like growth factor: growth vs. aging
04
PRODUITS ANIMAUX :
Dairy, meat, and eggs elevate IGF-1. The Growth Hormone Receptor Deficiency (Laron) study showed that very low IGF-1 virtually eliminates cancer and diabetes risk.
VÉGÉTAL :
Whole plant foods keep IGF-1 at longevity-optimal levels. Vegans have ~13% lower IGF-1 than omnivores. Lower IGF-1 is associated with longer lifespan in centenarian studies.
🧬
Telomere Shortening
Your biological clock ticking down
05
PRODUITS ANIMAUX :
Chronic inflammation from saturated fats and processed meats accelerates telomere loss. Shorter telomeres correlate with earlier disease onset and death.
VÉGÉTAL :
Antioxidants protect telomeres from oxidative damage (blueberries, broccoli, flaxseed). The Ornish trial showed telomere lengthening after 5 years of plant-based lifestyle changes — the first intervention ever proven to reverse this.
🔀
Epigenetic Drift
Gene expression changes that accumulate with age
06
PRODUITS ANIMAUX :
Saturated fats and processed foods promote pro-inflammatory gene expression patterns. DNA methylation patterns shift toward disease states.
VÉGÉTAL :
Polyphenols activate longevity genes like SIRT1 (turmeric, cruciferous vegetables, walnuts, resveratrol). Sulforaphane from broccoli sprouts is one of the most studied epigenetic modulators.
🔋
Mitochondrial Dysfunction
When your cellular power plants fail
07
PRODUITS ANIMAUX :
Saturated fats impair mitochondrial membrane fluidity. Excess iron from red meat generates reactive oxygen species inside mitochondria, damaging them from within.
VÉGÉTAL :
AMPK activation + plant antioxidants support mitochondrial biogenesis and function (leafy greens, beets, CoQ10-rich foods). Nitrates in beets directly improve mitochondrial efficiency.
🧟
Cellular Senescence
Zombie cells that poison their neighbors
08
PRODUITS ANIMAUX :
Chronic DNA damage from processed meat carcinogens (heterocyclic amines, nitrosamines) creates more senescent cells. These cells secrete inflammatory factors that damage surrounding tissue.
VÉGÉTAL :
Flavonoids (fisetin, quercetin) act as natural senolytics — clearing zombie cells (strawberries, apples, onions, capers). Fisetin is now in clinical trials as a senolytic drug.
🔥
Chronic Inflammation
Inflammaging: the slow burn that kills
09
PRODUITS ANIMAUX :
Saturated fats activate TLR4 receptors → NF-kB → inflammation. Endotoxins from animal foods trigger acute inflammatory responses. TMAO from meat/egg metabolism promotes vascular inflammation.
VÉGÉTAL :
Fiber feeds gut bacteria that produce anti-inflammatory short-chain fatty acids (oats, legumes, berries). Omega-3s from flax, chia, and walnuts reduce inflammatory mediators. A whole-food plant-based diet lowers CRP by 30–40%.
💨
Oxidative Stress
Free radical damage to DNA, proteins, and lipids
10
PRODUITS ANIMAUX :
Animal foods generate reactive oxygen species (ROS) during metabolism while providing few protective antioxidants. Heme iron from meat catalyzes Fenton reactions that produce hydroxyl radicals.
VÉGÉTAL :
Plants contain thousands of antioxidants (blueberries, dark chocolate, pecans, walnuts). A single serving of berries can neutralize free radicals for hours. Plant foods average 64x the antioxidant content of animal foods.
🦠
Gut Dysbiosis
When your microbiome turns against you
11
PRODUITS ANIMAUX :
Feeds pathogenic bacteria (Bilophila, Alistipes) that produce hydrogen sulfide and secondary bile acids — both linked to colon cancer and gut inflammation. Red meat consumption shifts the microbiome toward a pro-inflammatory profile within days.
VÉGÉTAL :
Fiber feeds protective Bifidobacteria and Lactobacilli (legumes, whole grains, onions, garlic). Diversity of plant intake correlates directly with microbiome diversity. 30+ different plants per week is the target.

Source: López-Otín et al. (2013, 2023), Cell; Kennedy et al. (2014), Cold Spring Harb Perspect Med

The pattern across all 11 hallmarks is striking: whole plant foods consistently activate protective pathways (AMPK, autophagy, antioxidant defense, anti-inflammatory signaling), while animal-derived and processed foods consistently activate damaging pathways (mTOR overactivation, IGF-1 elevation, inflammation, oxidative stress).

This doesn't mean you need a perfect diet. But it does mean the direction matters enormously. Every meal is a signal to your cells: repair or deteriorate. Protect or damage. Slow aging or accelerate it.

Only one diet has been proven to reverse the #1 killer

Of all the diets promoted today — keto, carnivore, paleo, Mediterranean, vegan — only one has been tested in randomized controlled trials and shown to not just slow, but actually reverse the progression of the diseases that kill most people.

Heart disease: reversed in clinical trials — In 1990, Dr. Dean Ornish published a landmark randomized controlled trial in The Lancet showing that a whole-food plant-based diet with lifestyle changes (exercise, stress management, social support) could reverse coronary heart disease — measured by PET scans showing plaque regression. The 5-year follow-up (JAMA, 1998) showed even more reversal, while the control group continued to worsen. Dr. Esselstyn's 2014 study confirmed similar results with 198 patients over 12 years. 123

Cancer: slowed and reversed in trials — In the Prostate Cancer Lifestyle Trial, Dr. Ornish showed that a whole-food plant-based diet slowed or reversed early-stage prostate cancer progression without surgery or radiation. Blood from patients on the plant-based diet inhibited cancer cell growth by 70% in vitro. After 5 years, the same patients showed increased telomerase activity — the enzyme that maintains telomere length. 45

Type 2 diabetes: put into remission — Multiple randomized trials have shown that plant-based diets can improve insulin sensitivity, lower HbA1c, and in many cases achieve full remission of type 2 diabetes — often more effectively than medication alone. A 2006 randomized trial by Barnard et al. in Diabetes Care found that a low-fat vegan diet improved glycemic control 3x more than the standard ADA diet. 67

What this means for you

The science is unambiguous on the direction, even if debates continue about specific details. Moving toward a whole-food, predominantly plant-based diet reduces your risk across every major chronic disease and slows the biological mechanisms of aging at a molecular level.

You don't need to be perfect. But every shift in the right direction — more beans, more greens, more whole grains, fewer processed foods, less red and processed meat — moves the needle on your biological age.

Shouldn't the diet proven to reverse disease be the default? No other dietary pattern — not keto, not paleo, not carnivore — has been shown in randomized controlled trials to reverse heart disease or slow cancer. The question isn't whether it works. The question is why it isn't the standard of care.

7 References

  1. 1
    Can lifestyle changes reverse coronary heart disease?
    Ornish D. et al.·The Lancet· 1990study
  2. 2
  3. 3
    A way to reverse coronary artery disease
    Esselstyn C.B. et al.·Journal of Family Practice· 2014study
  4. 4
  5. 5
    Increased telomerase activity and comprehensive lifestyle changes
    Ornish D. et al.·Lancet Oncology· 2008study
  6. 6
    Plant-based dietary patterns and incidence of type 2 diabetes
    Satija A. et al.·PLOS Medicine· 2016study
  7. 7
    A low-fat vegan diet improves glycemic control
    Barnard N.D. et al.·Diabetes Care· 2006study

Tags

#aging#disease-prevention#hallmarks#longevity#plant-based

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