What is Age Management?

                                         The Age Management Medicine Curve Explained
The field of Age Management Medicine is a relatively new approach to health care. Its goal is to maximize health, vitality, and function to the highest degree possible across the lifespan, thereby avoiding the typical “diseases of aging” that befall most individuals and bankrupt our healthcare system. This is accomplished with meticulous attention to diet, nutritional supplements, exercise, and hormone optimization.

Typical aging follows a predictable pattern. Beginning in one’s early thirties, a man notices a 
gradual decline in energy, vitality, exercise capacity, and recovery ability. This is almost always 
followed by unfavorable changes in body composition. This decline continues, often accelerating, into one’s forties and fifties. During these years, a number of common, lifelong medical issues usually surface. These include high blood pressure, diabetes, obesity, high cholesterol, and early heart disease. Take a stroll into any local Walmart, and you will see numerous examples of men just like this. In the sixth and seventh decades, the proverbial wheels start to come off. Heart attacks, strokes, knee or hip replacements, cardiac bypass surgery, 
chronic pain, and a laundry list of prescription drugs are the norm. 

Many men must continue working to keep their health insurance, without which they could not afford the litany of drugs they need to temporarily stave off an early death. These drugs often make them feel worse 
instead of better. These men are tired, grumpy, and often quietly miserable. Most haven’t had a 
decent erection in close to a decade. These men are one serious medical event away from death 
or permanent disability requiring full-time assistance either in a nursing home or from family 
members. They are hopelessly trapped in the healthcare system. They are in the “belly of the beast” and will remain there for the rest of their lives. 

The traditional approach to managing chronic disease has been to intervene only after
the disease has developed. This intervention often consisted of the application of expensive 
technological approaches that attempt to repair the damage once it has begun. The cost of 
caring for chronic illness has been estimated at $1.5 trillion, which accounts for three-fourths of annual healthcare spending.

While huge improvements in health have been made over the years as a result of these 
technological advances, this has been offset by increases in physical inactivity, unhealthy 
eating, obesity, and tobacco use. Many of the conditions that dominate healthcare 
spending are preventable.

Age Management Medicine seeks to change the disease-based focus on treatment to a health-based approach to preventing chronic disease. While aging cannot be prevented, it can be managed. While the age-related loss of functional reserve in the major organ systems cannot be stopped, it can be attenuated. 

A proper Age Management program will address all the hallmarks of aging and seeks to maintain the highest possible quality of life throughout the lifespan.