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Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124


This presentation “connects the dots” between telomeres and optimal lifestyle and health outcomes.
Renowned longevity physician Ron Rothenberg, MD, will reveal how telomeres are beneficially affected by nutrition, exercise, stress reduction, meditation, and yoga, or negatively affected by exposure to radiation, environmental toxins, and poor diet.
Dr. Rothenberg will describe the “known” known effects of telomerase to prevent telomere loss or extend telomere length. There are also significant “illegal” effects as well, including mitochondrial protection. These may be as important as nuclear effects.
He will also share a comprehensive overview of the peer-reviewed medical literature on TA-65 – a documented effective telomerase activator derived from a specific species of Astragalus, and its key clinical implications.
Key learning objectives:
Ron Rothenberg, MD He is among the first 10 doctors certified by the American Board of Anti-Aging and Regenerative Medicine. Throughout his career, he was always formulating new paradigms in medicine. After training at Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, he practiced medicine while also studying the treatment of indigenous people in the Amazon Basin. He trained in emergency medicine at Los Angeles County-USC Medical Center, then founded the Graduate Institute for Primary and Emergency Physicians at the UC San Diego School of Medicine, where he was a professor of clinical preventive medicine.
Dr. Rothenberg lectures worldwide and has educated more than 45,000 physicians through his continuing education seminars. He currently serves as the Medical Director of the California Health Span Institute located on the campus of Scripps Memorial Hospital, Encinitas. In addition to his numerous publications in anti-aging and preventive medicine, he is co-author of Hormonal BioIdentity.