Although aging is the most well recognized risk factor for many chronic diseases, interactions between the aging process and age-related disease has not been seriously addressed or systematically explored. One of the most noticeable aspects of the molecular inflammation hypothesis of aging is that many age-related chronic diseases undergo a pathway common to the inflammatory process, which is a contributory factor in, or in part of, disease progression (Chung HY, 2006). For example, a number of diseases, including cardiovascular diseases, cancer, diabetes, metabolic syndrome, dementia, arthritis, and osteoporosis are recognized as inflammatory disorders, according to recent medical investigations.