Archive for August, 2009

Bangladesh’s foreign exchange surpasses $6 bln

Saturday, August 29th, 2009

Bangladesh’s foreign exchange reserve has surpassed 6 billion U.S. dollars, a senior official said on Monday.

The official of the Bangladesh Bank (BB) on condition of anonymity told Xinhua, foreign exchange reserve stood at over 6.1 billion U.S. dollars on Monday due mainly to hefty growth in inflow of remittances and export earnings.

“Reserve is maintaining an upward trend since the last few months with strong remittance inflows, satisfactory export growth and a slower growth in imports,” he said.

According to BB statistics, Bangladesh’s remittance inflow grew24.43 percent to around 7.03 billion U.S. dollars in July-March period of the current fiscal year (July 2008-June 2009) despite a global recession that forces job cuts around the world.

Bangladesh’s exports in the first eight months of the current fiscal year 2008-09 (July 2008-June 2009) posted 15.90 percent growth and stood at around 10.35 billion U.S. dollars.

The country’s Letter of Credits (L/Cs) against imports worth 1.57 billion were settled in February over that of 1.999 billion U.S. dollars in January, according to the central bank provisional statistics.

OPEC forecasts continuous decline in global oil demand in second half of 2008

Wednesday, August 26th, 2009

The crude oil demand worldwide would continue to decline this year due to the global economic crisis, according to a monthly oil market report published here Wednesday by the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries(OPEC).

The report said that the global crude oil demand in the first half of this year averaged 85.6 million barrels per day, representing a reduction of 0.4 percent or up to 0.35 million barrels per day compared to last year.

The downward trend would continue in the second half of this year, with a decline of 1.6 percent or up to 1.4 million barrels per day, the report said.

According to the report, the current economic recession was the main reason for a drop in demand in the international crude oil market. Especially, major crude oil consumers, the member countries of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) were seen with significant drops in oil demand.

The report also said that the crude oil demand of the OECD in 2008 declined 3.4 percent to 47.51 million barrels per day, with a reduction of 1.7 million barrels per day from the previous year. In which, North America declined 4.9 percent to 24.3 million barrels per day and Western Europe declined 0.6 percent to 15.2 million barrels per day.

The crude oil demand of the OECD would further drop in 2009, in which North America would decline to 23.7 million barrels per day and Western Europe would drop to 14.75 million barrels per day, according to the report.

In this context, the international market demand for OPEC oil was expected to average 28.7 million barrels per day, representing a drop of 2.1 million barrels per day from the previous year.

In addition, this report also shows that, OPEC crude oil output in March was 27.9 million barrels per day, with a drop of 145,000 barrels per day compared to February.

OPEC oil prices fell to less than 35 U.S. dollars per barrel by the end of 2008. It appeared to take a slight upward trend with fluctuation since the beginning of this year to 50 U.S. dollars per battle in April. However, due to the contracted oil demand by the prospect of economic weakness, the continuous climb of oil price was hard.

OPEC Secretary-General Abdalla Salem El-Badri as well as other OPEC leaders said that, the oil prices should be kept between 70 and 75 U.S. dollars per barrel, which would be able to support the sustaining OPEC industrial investment.

However, in view of the current severe downturn in the global economy, the prices between 40 to 50 U.S. dollars per barrel were also acceptable.

The next oil ministerial conference of OPEC will be held in Vienna on May 28 of this year, to discuss the OPEC oil output quota for the next phase.

Chinese aviation industry surges higher

Sunday, August 23rd, 2009

No airline can afford to miss the China ride.

China’s fast-growing economy is making the country a shining star in the global aviation market. Since the country adopted the reforms and opening up policies in 1978, its air traffic has been increasing at double-digit rate each year to keep pace with the explosive growth in passenger and cargo throughput.

China’s air traffic has maintained an average annual growth rate of 18 percent since 1980, almost double the country’s GDP growth rate and three times the world’s average air traffic growth rate during the same period, according to figures from the Civil Aviation Administration of China (CAAC), the industry watchdog.

The Chinese airline industry transported 185 million passengers last year, up 15.9 percent year-on-year, compared with just 3.43 million passengers in 1980.

As the world’s top foreign direct investment destination, China has become the focus of manufacturers, retailers and bankers. More foreign investment means more travelers coming to China. The nature of the airline business is to follow that trend and provide people with access to regions where their businesses are growing.

Besides business travel, China is also one of the top draws in the leisure travel market. The country is expected to replace France as the world’s top tourism destination by 2014 according to the World Tourism Organization (WTO).

At the same time, the country itself is becoming a major source of tourists in the world. With their incomes rising, more and more Chinese are traveling, both within the country and going abroad. The WTO figures indicate China has already overtaken Japan as Asia’s largest source of outbound travelers and could become the world’s fourth largest source of outbound tourism by 2020.

China’s booming commercial aviation market also makes the country an important battlefield for global airplane manufacturers like Boeing and Airbus.

The country had only 140 airplanes in 1980, but it now has a fleet of over 1,000. It will remain the world’s largest commercial aircraft market outside the United States in the next 20 years, according to Boeing’s estimates.

The US aircraft maker forecasts China will need about 3,400 new airplanes, worth 340 billion U.S. dollars, over the next two decades, and the country’s fleet will nearly quadruple to 4,460 by 2026. Airbus has similar forecasts that China, driven by double-digit economic growth, will need 100 to 150 aircraft every year in the next 20 years.

Chinese aviation industry surges higher

Sunday, August 23rd, 2009

No airline can afford to miss the China ride.

China’s fast-growing economy is making the country a shining star in the global aviation market. Since the country adopted the reforms and opening up policies in 1978, its air traffic has been increasing at double-digit rate each year to keep pace with the explosive growth in passenger and cargo throughput.

China’s air traffic has maintained an average annual growth rate of 18 percent since 1980, almost double the country’s GDP growth rate and three times the world’s average air traffic growth rate during the same period, according to figures from the Civil Aviation Administration of China (CAAC), the industry watchdog.

The Chinese airline industry transported 185 million passengers last year, up 15.9 percent year-on-year, compared with just 3.43 million passengers in 1980.

As the world’s top foreign direct investment destination, China has become the focus of manufacturers, retailers and bankers. More foreign investment means more travelers coming to China. The nature of the airline business is to follow that trend and provide people with access to regions where their businesses are growing.

Besides business travel, China is also one of the top draws in the leisure travel market. The country is expected to replace France as the world’s top tourism destination by 2014 according to the World Tourism Organization (WTO).

At the same time, the country itself is becoming a major source of tourists in the world. With their incomes rising, more and more Chinese are traveling, both within the country and going abroad. The WTO figures indicate China has already overtaken Japan as Asia’s largest source of outbound travelers and could become the world’s fourth largest source of outbound tourism by 2020.

China’s booming commercial aviation market also makes the country an important battlefield for global airplane manufacturers like Boeing and Airbus.

The country had only 140 airplanes in 1980, but it now has a fleet of over 1,000. It will remain the world’s largest commercial aircraft market outside the United States in the next 20 years, according to Boeing’s estimates.

The US aircraft maker forecasts China will need about 3,400 new airplanes, worth 340 billion U.S. dollars, over the next two decades, and the country’s fleet will nearly quadruple to 4,460 by 2026. Airbus has similar forecasts that China, driven by double-digit economic growth, will need 100 to 150 aircraft every year in the next 20 years.

Kenya declares week of national mourning after tragedies

Saturday, August 22nd, 2009

The Kenyan government on Sunday declared a week of national mourning starting on Monday after fire tragedies at retail chain in Nairobi and gasoline explosion in northwest part of the east African region.

In a statement issued in Nairobi, President Mwai Kibaki who is attending the African Union summit in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia ordered the national flag to fly at half-mast in honor of the departed victims.

“All official functions and celebrations parties have been put on hold for the whole week,” Kibaki said in a statement.

Kibaki said he was saddened that so many Kenyans had lost their lives through such a tragic accident that has traumatized many families.

He expressed sympathy for the bereaved families and wished all those who have been admitted to various hospitals with serious burns a quick recovery.

At least 111 people died in tanker gasoline explosion on Saturday night after a truck carrying fuel overturned on the highway between the cities of Nakuru and Eldoret.

Hundreds of people had gathered to collect the spilled gasoline when the truck burst into flames late Saturday. On Wednesday, at least 26 people died when a branch of the country’s retail chain, Nakumat, caught fire.

In his statement, President Kibaki regretted that such a tragic accident occurred so soon after another fire killed many innocent lives at the Nakumatt Supermarket in Nairobi and directed all relevant arms of the government to take necessary measures to avert such tragedies.

There were scenes of grief and anguish as relatives turned up to inquire of their kin’s conditions at the Rift Valley Provincial General Hospital.

Graphic images of burnt people characterized ward nine of the hospital where the injured were rushed for treatment.

“Certainly this is a national tragedy. We have just been informed that more succumbed to injuries in hospitals. The total number is now 111,” Interior Minister George Saitoti said.

Bodies burnt beyond recognition were still strewn across the road as emergency services struggled to cope with the number of casualties.

The injured were dispatched to several hospitals in the country while extra body bags also had to be sent from the capital, rescuers said.

“Thirty-four of the survivors who suffered serious burns have been airlifted to Nairobi for specialized treatment,” Saitoti told reporters.

The cause of the fire remains unclear. There have been several reports that a dropped cigarette ignited the blaze, though witness have also said that someone started the fire intentionally after being blocked from accessing the fuel.

Prime Minister Raila Odinga and several cabinet ministers visited the site of the fire on Sunday and expressed sympathy for the victims, but also warned of the dangers of collecting spilled fuel, noting that similar accidents have happened before in Kenya.

“We need to carry out a massive public education, awareness needs to be created among our people that it doesn’t pay to get a few buckets of fuel and then put yourself in such a serious risk of losing your life,” Odinga said.

“But we don’t want to play the blame game at the time of a disaster like this. There is going to be time for us to deal with those issues later. At the moment we must try to save the lives of those who survived.”

Since Wednesday’s inferno, the media have criticized the government for its slow response and poor disaster planning. There have also been accusations that the government’s response to Saturday’s fire was too slow.

According to Kenya’s Nation newspaper, a fire engine arrived from the town of Nakuru an hour after the blaze began.

HK stocks close 0.88% higher on mainland policy hopes

Thursday, August 20th, 2009

Hong Kong stocks rose 115.01 points, or 0.88 percent, to close at 13,178.90 on Thursday, on hopes that the mainland will announce new stimulus measures to boost the economy.

Turnover jumped to 52.83 billion HK dollars (6.8 billion U.S. dollars) from 36.48 billion HK dollars (4.7 billion U.S. dollars) on Wednesday.

The market had risen sharply on continued hopes the mainland will announce new stimulus measures to boost the economy, and analysts said these hopes will help support the blue-chip index in the coming weeks.

However, investors viewed the disappointing earnings of computer maker Lenovo and retailer Esprit as a sign that other Hong Kong firms will also report worse-than-expected results, trimming gains in the benchmark index after it surged to a high of 13,492.53 points earlier in the session.

Lenovo’s net loss was wider than the average 58 million U.S. dollars loss forecast by analysts surveyed by Dow Jones Newswires. Lenovo ended the session down 2.7 percent at 1.46 HK dollars, reversing a gain of 2.7 percent earlier in the session. Still, analysts said hopes for fresh market-boosting measures in the mainland will likely drive investor demand in coming sessions, giving the Hang Seng Index more room for further gains.

Conglomerate Citic Pacific was among the day’s biggest blue-chip gainers after several newspapers reported that it approached China’s sovereign wealth fund to take a 50 percent stake in its unit, Citic Capital Holdings Ltd., to raise funds for the company. It ended up 5.4 percent at 9.70 HK dollars.

Property developers continued to suffer from concerns of weakening housing demand and negative homeowner equity. DBS Vickers Director Peter Lai said he expects the sector to under perform the broad market in the near term.

“The trend is not going to change, as property prices are expected to fall more, with cases in negative equity mortgages tipped to rise further,” said Lai.

Cheung Kong fell 2.6 percent to 64.60 HK dollars, Sun Hung Kai Properties declined 2.5 percent to 62.90 HK dollars, and Henderson Land was down 2.2 percent at 26.95 HK dollars. (One U.S. dollar =7.7465 HK dollars)

Autumn babies at greater risk of asthma: study

Friday, August 14th, 2009

Babies born four months before the peak cold and flu season have a 30 percent higher risk of developing asthma, U.S. researchers said on Friday, suggesting that these common infections may trigger asthma.

“All infants are exposed to this and it is potentially preventable,” said Dr. Tina Hartert, director of the center for Asthma Research at Vanderbilt University, whose study appears in the American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine.

She said it has been known for some time that infants in the Northern Hemisphere born in the fall are at higher risk of developing asthma, but the study is the first to tie this trend to peak viral activity in the winter months.

Hartert and colleagues studied the medical records of 95,000 infants and their mothers in the state of Tennessee.

They found that all babies in the study were at increased risk if they had bronchiolitis, a lung infection usually caused by respiratory syncytial virus or RSV. But autumn babies were at the highest risk.

“What we were able to show was the timing of birth and the risk of developing asthma moves in time almost to the day with the peak of these viral infections each winter,” she said.

While genetic risk factors predispose a child to develop asthma, Hartert thinks environmental exposure such as winter viral infection, and particularly RSV infection, may activate those genes.

Nearly every child is infected with RSV early in life, with infections occurring most often between the ages of 3 and 6 months. The virus usually clears up without serious complications.

Hartert said the task now is to prove that preventing such infections could keep infants from developing asthma. “That is where we are now. We need to prove that preventing this infection prevents this lifelong chronic disease,” she said.

The easiest way to do that would be a vaccine, but so far, none exists. Vaccine makers GenVec Inc, AstraZeneca’s MedImmune unit and others are working on RSV vaccines.

“It’s in the pipeline. We just don’t have one yet,” Hartert said.

J-Lo: losing baby weight not easy

Thursday, August 13th, 2009

Jennifer Lopez has admitted it wasn’t all easy going losing her baby weight after she gave birth to twins Max and Emme. Skip related content

“It did take a lot of work,” she admitted to Entertainment Tonight.

“I thought it was gonna drop off easily because I had been in shape my whole life, but it wasn’t. I gained about 50 pounds with my twins, and the first 30 dropped off like that, and I was like, ‘Ha, this is gonna be so easy.’ That last 20 - that took a while.”

The 39-year-old star, who gave birth to the twins last February, is currently back on the movie set filming romantic comedy The Back-Up Plan.

“I bring the babies to work with me,” she revealed.

“I love it. Honestly, one of the best days of my life was the first day back working on this film. I wanted to do this film really badly - and bringing my babies with me that morning. I was like, ‘Oh my God, they’re with me, I’m making a movie, they’re here!’ It’s great having kids on set. It’s the best.”

British acts head Grammy nominees

Monday, August 10th, 2009

Coldplay, Adele, Leona Lewis, Led Zeppelin singer Robert Plant and MIA will all compete with each other for the major honour at the awards show on February 8.

Chris Martin’s band, Radiohead, and Plant will also face each other in the album of the year category while Welsh singer Duffy, who shot to number one with her catchy single, Mercy, and fellow British soul singer Adele were among those nominated for best new artist.

In all, Coldplay received an impressive seven nominations but rapper Lil’ Wayne - with eight nods, including album of the year for Tha Carter III - is expected to be the big winner on the night.

The top nominees were revealed live during a prime-time concert special which replaced the Recording Academy’s traditional morning roll call of nominee names at a press conference ahead of the awards show.

Last year’s show drew 17.2 million viewers, making it one of the least-watched Grammys and continuing the trend of shrinking awards-show audiences.

Youthfulness an American obsession - at what cost?

Monday, August 10th, 2009

It’s one of those photos that make you do a double-take. Dr. Jeffry Life stands in jeans, his shirt off. His face is that of a distinguished-looking grandpa; his head is balding, and what hair there is is white. But his 69-year-old body looks like it belongs to a muscle-bound 30-year-old.

The photo regularly runs in ads for the Cenegenics Medical Institute, a Las Vegas-based clinic that specializes in “age management,” a growing field in a society obsessed with staying young. Life, who swears that’s his real last name, also keeps a framed copy of the photo on his office wall at Cenegenics.

“He’s the man!” patient Ed Detwiler says teasingly, pointing to the photo of the doctor who, in many ways, has become his role model.

Detwiler, 47, has been Life’s patient for more than three years. In that time, he has adopted the regimen that his doctor also follows — drastically changing his exercise and eating habits and injecting himself each day with human growth hormone. He also receives weekly testosterone injections.

He does it because it makes him feel better, more energetic, clear-minded.

He does it because he wants to live a long, healthy life.

“If I were stooped over and bedridden, what kind of quality of life is that?” asks Detwiler, a real estate developer in suburban Las Vegas who says he’s doing this, in part, for his wife, who is nine years younger. “If I can get out and be active and travel and see the world and be able to make a difference in other people’s lives, then yes, I would want to have as long an existence as possible.”

It is a common sentiment in a society where many of us strive to look and feel decades younger — to prove to ourselves and the world that we are healthier and more vital than our parents were at our age. We’ve all heard it: 60 is the new 50, the new 40 and so on.

But often, we need a little help. Sometimes, a lot of help.

As the baby boomers march toward retirement, Botox, wrinkle fillers and hormones of various kinds have become big business. Medco’s latest drug trend report shows, for instance, that human growth hormone use grew almost 6 percent in 2007.

The list for age-defying tactics is endless. Want six-pack abs? There’s a surgical procedure to create fake ones. How about drastically cutting your calorie intake to slow the aging process? There’s a group of die-hards that swears by it.

This search for eternal youthfulness certainly isn’t new. “In 1,500 B.C. people were ingesting tiger gonads to rejuvenate them,” says Dr. Gene Cohen, a George Washington University expert on aging.

But for a generation of adults who’ve been weaned on the modern marketing message — that for a price, you can have it all — the quest is taking on a new urgency.

There is, of course, much to be said for taking good care of yourself. Eating healthy and exercising your body and your brain regularly are considered tried-and-true tactics for staying young. Protecting yourself from harmful sun rays is another. Even flossing teeth is a habit that, according to research on people who live to 100, might extend life.

But that’s generally where the consensus ends.

Many in mainstream medicine and elsewhere worry that we’re becoming too focused on treatments with short-term benefits that have potentially dangerous side effects and scant, if any, evidence that they’ll help in the long run. In doing so, they wonder if some people are actually jeopardizing their chance at a long, healthy life, both physically and emotionally.

“The quest to live forever and the desire to avoid diseases and not suffer” is understandable, says S. Jay Olshansky, a public health professor and longevity researcher at the University of Illinois at Chicago.

But it can make people vulnerable to far-fetched and potentially dangerous scams, he said, with some of the more bizarre including fetal cell injections, inhaling radon gas, even cutting off testicles, an ancient practice meant to reduce overexposure to reproductive hormones.

“There’s a large industry of people trying to sell to people what doesn’t yet exist and they’re making gobs of money doing it — much to the dismay of those of us who are vigilant about protecting public health,” he says.

There also are concerns that this obsession is sending the wrong message to younger generations.

Surveys from cosmetic surgery trade groups suggest that sizable numbers of people, even in their 20s, are getting cosmetic procedures.

And a fall 2007 survey from TRU, a research firm that specializes in the teenage demographic, found that a quarter of young people, 12 to 19 — and a third of girls in that age group — are interested in having cosmetic surgery to improve their appearance.

Michael Wood, vice president and director of syndicated research at TRU, was a bit startled by the results.

“There’s no doubt that the celebration of youth and looking younger has certainly accelerated in the last 10 years, five years even,” Wood says. “And this is a generation that’s growing up with that at a very young age.”

The effect has been palpable, says Neil Howe, a respected generational expert who has written extensively about “millennials,” young people who are coming of age in this century.

“I guess even young isn’t enough anymore,” Howe says. “It’s got to be ‘perfect’ young.”

Alex Sabbag, a 23-year-old Chicagoan, has felt the pressure, both self-imposed and societal.

“I’ll age until I’m 25. Then I’m over it,” she said to co-workers during a lunchroom conversation that turned to the topic of Botox.

She was only partly serious. But she says she’s also accepted that we live in a society where being well put-together and youthful gives you status.

“We all buy into it,” Sabbag says. And plastic surgery and other cosmetic procedures are part of it.

She’s never had anything done, though wouldn’t rule it out in the future. She also vividly recalls how her mother left home for several days, when Sabbag was in elementary school, and returned after having a facelift.

“I think it gives women and men alike worlds of confidence that ultimately makes them better people,” Sabbag says. “Yes, it is a vain practice … but I think there comes a point for people when hard work isn’t enough to kick the last bit of belly fat or gravity has become entirely too unbeatable, and so a little nip-tuck of the forehead needs to happen.”

Detwiler, Life’s patient at Cenegenics, is not looking for the appearance of youth. He’s looking to extend his youthfulness, and his life.

He knows about human growth hormone and its controversies in sports. But this, he and his doctor insist, is different. While it is illegal for these kinds of hormones to be dispensed for anti-aging purposes, he takes relatively low doses prescribed for “hormone deficiency.” The idea is to bring his levels back up to those of a young man in his 20s.

“My friends say, ‘Oh, Ed’s on steroids,’” says Detwiler, who has watched as muscle has replaced fat on his belly and elsewhere. “No, I’m not. Look at me. Do I look like I’m on steroids?”

He holds out his arms to indicate that his body is fit-looking, but not monstrous. “I’m not. I’m on hormone therapy,” he says of a regimen that costs him more than $1,000 a month.

Besides human growth hormone, testosterone, and an adrenal hormone known as DHEA, his diet now largely consists of things like hard-boiled eggs, fruits, nuts, Greek yogurt, salads and palm-sized pieces of fish, chicken or low-fat beef. He also exercises regularly, alternating between intense cardio workouts and weight-resistance training.

“I can’t tell you in words how great I feel,” says the man who used to crack open a Pepsi to get him through the day.

For a group known as the Calorie Restriction Society, youthfulness isn’t found in hormones. It’s reducing food intake to, in some cases, near-starvation levels.

But the claims are much the same — “lots of energy” and feeling “sharp,” says Brian Delaney, a 45-year-old California-born writer now living in Sweden. He’s the president of the group that claims about 2,000 members worldwide and many more followers who use the method in hopes of markedly increasing their longevity.

By cutting daily calories to about 1,900, roughly half the recommended amount for someone his height and age, and exercising every day, Delaney has shrunk himself to about 140 pounds. He says his blood pressure, cholesterol and blood sugar levels have improved dramatically.

At 5 foot 11, he admits he’s “scrawny,” which he calls the main drawback.

Hunger and wearing extra clothes to stay warm — because of little body fat or, he claims, an effect of slowed aging — are barely annoyances for Delaney.

He says he eats sensibly, replacing junk food with lots of fruits and vegetables, no meat, and two meals daily — no lunch. Breakfast is often “a hearty bowl” of granola, with fruit, nuts and soy milk; while dinner could be fish, rice, beans, a large salad and red wine.

Other than “tons of fine wrinkles” he blames on too much sun as a kid, Delaney says in most respects, “I look much younger” than 45.

It is a bragging right many strive for.

“When we were younger, we’d talk about someone who was 60 and that was old. And now my gym is full of women over 60 and they look phenomenal,” says Renee Young, a 48-year-old businesswoman in New Rochelle, N.Y. “They don’t want to be categorized as old.”

But there’s more to it than that. Youthfulness, she says frankly, is also a means of survival in the business world, including in her line of work, public relations.

“It feels like you’re put out to pasture. No one wants to feel that how they look means that their ability to do anything is decreased,” Young says. “If you have a younger look, you feel healthier. You feel that you’re still in the game.”

In the back of her mind is the fact that her own mother died when she was only 56.

So five or six mornings a week, even when she’d rather pull the covers over her head, Young gets up and puts in two hours at the gym.

That’s more than double the hour or so a day generally recommended for optimal health. And still, for her, that wasn’t enough. She recently spent nearly $20,000 on a tummy tuck because, as she puts it, no number of abdominal crunches was going to make her as trim as she wanted to be.

The result has been a makeover for her entire sense of self, she says.

“I made a commitment this summer. If I was going to go through all this surgery, then it was going to have to be part of a complete program,” says Young, who’s also getting more rest and eating healthier.

“I can definitely see the result.” She, too, says she has not felt this good in years.

Using a cosmetic procedure as a motivator is worthwhile, and lucrative, to say the least, says Dr. Jonathan Lippitz. He’s an emergency room physician in suburban Chicago who does cosmetic procedures, such as Botox and skin fillers, in a separate practice.

But it’s also a “very slippery slope,” with patients sometimes willing to take more risk than they should and some doctors who’ll accommodate.

“They’ll always find somebody willing to do it,” he says.

In his own practice, he says he finds himself continually walking a fine line in deciding which procedures he’ll do — and which ones he won’t.

“We all say, ‘I want my hair different. I want my eyes different,’” Lippitz says. “This idea of being perfect is a problem, though, because it’s not reality.

“I have people coming in and saying ‘I want these lips.’ I say, ‘You can’t have these lips.’

“I say, ‘We’ll work with what you have.’”

But what if what they have is just fine? These are the sorts of questions that trouble Dr. Michael Morgan, a dentist who does cosmetic work in another Chicago suburb.

He’s been seeing more young, female clients walking through his doors. And even his own 13-year-old daughter asked if he would whiten her teeth, something he didn’t think she needed. Nor did he consider it safe for her young teeth or “age appropriate.”

“There’s a consciousness about it. They are much more concerned with the appearance of their face. But there’s also a social pressure,” he says of the younger generation for whom he’ll do the most conservative procedures, but no more.

He sounds a little sad when he talks about it.

“There’s nothing wrong with wanting to look better. We want to look young. We want to look great,” he says. “But part of that feeling has to come from within.”

For those going to even greater lengths to try to keep aging — and ultimately death — at bay, there also are no guarantees.

Calorie restriction guru Dr. Roy Walford succumbed to complications from Lou Gehrig’s disease at age 79, closer to the average than the “extraordinarily long life” his followers talk about on their Web site.

Meanwhile, Dr. Alan Mintz, founder of Cenegenics, died at the relatively young age of 69 due to complications during a brain biopsy.

Some research has suggested that human growth hormone injections can cause cancer. They’ve also been linked with nerve pain, elevated cholesterol and increased risks for diabetes.

Even so, Life, now the chief medical officer at Cenegenics, remains steadfast. Among other things, he points to studies that suggest that human growth hormone in low doses poses no cancer risk if there is no preexisting cancer.

“Within the next 10 years, maybe less, this is going to be thought of as mainstream medicine — preventing disease, slowing the aging process down, preventing people from losing their ability to take care of themselves when they get older and ending up in nursing homes,” Life says. “This is really the cutting edge of medicine.”

Detwiler is betting on that.

“There are those who might think I’m cheating God’s way. I don’t know,” he says. “But I don’t want to regress. Why should I?”

He says his overall body fat has dropped from nearly 17 percent to less than 10 percent. He can’t remember the last time he had a cold or the flu. And he says he’s had the stamina to work long hours, putting him on pace to earn more than a million dollars this year.

That’s what he knows now. The future, he says, will be anyone’s guess.

“People might ask, ‘Hey, what’s happened to these people? Was it cutting edge? Or did it cut it short?’” he says, as he walks into a gym for another workout.

“I think only time will tell.”