Simco

Publication

Science-Driven Nutrition for a Healthier Future

2025

Recent breakthroughs in nutritional science have introduced a transformative concept: targeted fasting-mimicking nutrition. This approach activates the body’s natural repair mechanisms—cellular rejuvenation, autophagy, and metabolic reset—without requiring complete food deprivation.

By simulating the biological effects of fasting through carefully designed nutrient programs, this technology helps reduce inflammation, improve insulin sensitivity, and support healthy weight loss. Clinical studies have shown it to be effective in lowering key risk factors for diabetes, cardiovascular disease, and age-related conditions.

As chronic diseases linked to poor metabolic health continue to rise—particularly in regions with high rates of diabetes and obesity—such science-backed nutrition plans provide a powerful, non-invasive tool for preventive care and long-term wellness.

This technology is gaining global traction among healthcare providers, wellness institutions, and individuals seeking a natural, sustainable path to healthier aging and chronic disease prevention.

First introduced five decades ago, MRI scanners are now a cornerstone of modern medicine, vital for diagnosing a wide range of conditions — including strokes, tumors, and spinal conditions — while avoiding exposing patients to radiation.

But they remain hard to come by in developing countries: Africa has less than one MRI machine per million people, while the figures in the United States and Japan are 40 and 55 per million, respectively.

To tackle the problem, Yujiao Zhao and colleagues at the University of Hong Kong built a simplified, low-powered MRI machine using store-bought hardware that cost around $22,000, and published their findings in the prestigious journal Science. 

MRI uses a strong magnetic field and radio waves to align and manipulate the body’s hydrogen atoms, producing detailed images of internal structures and organs. 

The strength of magnets is measured in units called teslas (T), with conventional MRIs requiring powerful electromagnets that have wires bathed in supercooled liquid helium to generate magnetic fields of 1.5T to 7T.

These machines demand high electricity inputs, far exceeding what standard wall outlets can provide, and must be housed in radio frequency-shielded rooms to prevent equipment interference. Current clinical use MRIs cost upwards of million dollars.

By contrast, the Hong Kong research team’s full body MRI machine used a helium-free 0.05T magnet and required just 1800 watts — comparable to a hair dryer, meaning it could use a standard socket. What’s more, it did not require radio shielding. 

To compensate for the reduced image detail and higher levels of radio interference, the researchers integrated their system with a deep learning algorithm trained on a vast dataset of high-resolution images of human anatomical structures.

They then tested their machine on 30 healthy adult volunteers, performing scans over their bodies from their brains down to their knees. 

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