“The day you discover lifestyle as medicine, you have found your fountain of youth.”

Our goal

Regardless of previous knowledge, every layperson should be able to become a professional for their own health.

Our history

How LiLo was born

I am working on a paper on lifestyle-based prevention of the diseases of aging. In the process, I come across the editorial “Patient, study thyself” in the journal BMC Medicine. Author Paul Wicks profiles Sara Riggare, a Swedish engineer. Diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease at just under 32, she begins studying medicine to learn how to treat herself. She uses the N-of-1 method to experiment on herself and discover what works for her. She pours her experiences and findings into an elaborate doctoral dissertation. Because of a missing ethics vote on the self-experiment, she is denied her doctorate. The Kafkaesque ethics bureaucracy is not new to me as a scientist. The N-of-1 method, surprisingly, is. Could it help lay people tap into personalized lifestyle medicine to avoid becoming patients in the first place? Without having to study medicine, without misplaced ethics dictates, without quasi-religious dietary bureaucracy? Simply discover for yourself what suits your own genetic makeup? My gut feeling tells me that I have stumbled upon something exciting. I’ll have to research that.

My literature research on N-of-1 is finished. The fascinating finding: Although legitimized by the EMA (European Medicines Agency) as well as by the American FDA as a gold standard method, N-of-1 lies dormant in medicine. No one has yet kissed it awake. Probably because it is not at all trivial, because it is too costly for clinical practice, and because the idea of the layman treating himself is anathema to the guardians of the grail of medicine. There must be a solution for this!

I am talking with my partners, with N-of-1 experts and colleagues about the idea of a digital assistant for individualized lay-appropriate deceleration of vascular aging. What we need is more N-of-1 expertise, an affordable “medical-grade” mHealth device for reliable pulse wave velocity (PWV) measurement, and a suitable IT architecture.

I am participating in the symposium “Small is beautiful {again}” at the University of Leuven in Belgium. The community is still small, but the expertise is gigantic. And I talk to the company Withings about their WLAN scale, which also measures PWV.

My long-time friends and partners, Moritz Gmelin and Pascal Bauer, catch fire for the idea. Moritz is ready to implement it on the IT architecture of the electronic patient record he developed. Pascal, as a passionate preventive physician becomes our medical conscience and clinical advisor.

We outline our project idea and apply for funding from the IGP program of the Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy. We name our project LiLo – Lifestylelotse (lifestyle pilot)

The BMWi grants the funding commitment. LiLo is born.

We built the architecture for LiLo, programmed the algorithms for the N-of-1 evaluations, and developed the formula for calculating the rate of biological aging from Withings measurements.

A renowned German manufacturer of clinical blood pressure measurement devices approaches us. This is because its latest development will realize the derivation of PWV from a completely normal blood pressure measurement. We start with the integration of LiLo into the manufacturer’s device world.

The first test persons are on the road with LiLo. LiLo is not yet perfect, but it is convincing in the beta test. An incredible feeling.

Our history

How LiLo was born

Dec. 2020

I am working on a paper on lifestyle-based prevention of the diseases of aging. In the process, I come across the editorial “Patient, study thyself” in the journal BMC Medicine. Author Paul Wicks profiles Sara Riggare, a Swedish engineer. Diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease at just under 32, she begins studying medicine to learn how to treat herself. She uses the N-of-1 method to experiment on herself and discover what works for her. She pours her experiences and findings into an elaborate doctoral dissertation. Because of a missing ethics vote on the self-experiment, she is denied her doctorate. The Kafkaesque ethics bureaucracy is not new to me as a scientist. The N-of-1 method, surprisingly, is. Could it help lay people tap into personalized lifestyle medicine to avoid becoming patients in the first place? Without having to study medicine, without misplaced ethics dictates, without quasi-religious dietary bureaucracy? Simply discover for yourself what suits your own genetic makeup? My gut feeling tells me that I have stumbled upon something exciting. I’ll have to research that.

Feb. 2021

My literature research on N-of-1 is finished. The fascinating finding: Although legitimized by the EMA (European Medicines Agency) as well as by the American FDA as a gold standard method, N-of-1 lies dormant in medicine. No one has yet kissed it awake. Probably because it is not at all trivial, because it is too costly for clinical practice, and because the idea of the layman treating himself is anathema to the guardians of the grail of medicine. There must be a solution for this!

Mar. 2021

I am talking with my partners, with N-of-1 experts and colleagues about the idea of a digital assistant for individualized lay-appropriate deceleration of vascular aging. What we need is more N-of-1 expertise, an affordable “medical-grade” mHealth device for reliable pulse wave velocity (PWV) measurement, and a suitable IT architecture.

Apr. 2021

I am participating in the symposium “Small is beautiful {again}” at the University of Leuven in Belgium. The community is still small, but the expertise is gigantic. And I talk to the company Withings about their WLAN scale, which also measures PWV.

May 2021

My long-time friends and partners, Moritz Gmelin and Pascal Bauer, catch fire for the idea. Moritz is ready to implement it on the IT architecture of the electronic patient record he developed. Pascal, as a passionate preventive physician becomes our medical conscience and clinical advisor.

Jun. 2021

We outline our project idea and apply for funding from the IGP program of the Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy. We name our project LiLo – Lifestylelotse (lifestyle pilot)

Sep. 2021

The BMWi grants the funding commitment. LiLo is born.

Aug. 2022

We built the architecture for LiLo, programmed the algorithms for the N-of-1 evaluations, and developed the formula for calculating the rate of biological aging from Withings measurements.

Oct. 2022

A renowned German manufacturer of clinical blood pressure measurement devices approaches us. This is because its latest development will realize the derivation of PWV from a completely normal blood pressure measurement. We start with the integration of LiLo into the manufacturer’s device world.

Dec. 2022

The first test persons are on the road with LiLo. LiLo is not yet perfect, but it is convincing in the beta test. An incredible feeling.

Who we are

Small team, lots of expertise, great passion

Dr. Lutz E. Kraushaar

  • Passionate health scientist
  • Conducts research and development of diagnostics and procedures to decelerate vascular aging for more than 15 years.
  • Passionate Harley rider

Dipl. computer scientist Moritz Gmelin

  • Gifted IT developer and successful founder
  • Steely Ironman competitor

PD Dr. med. Pascal Bauer

  • thoroughbred preventive physician with specialist licenses in sports cardiology, angiology, nutritional medicine
  • charismatic handball doctor

Our goal

We want to inspire people

Our first ambassadors for successful aging ...

Lutz (65) and Juliet (67) Kraushaar and Moritz (49) and Gabi (50) Gmelin

Profile Juliet

  • Born: 1955
  • Calendrical & Vascular Age: 67 & 56
  • Discovered her fountain of youth the day she found fun in sports.
  • Even though that wasn’t until she was 40.
  • Recreational athlete: strength & endurance 6x/week
  • Motto: unapologetically different – pain IS gain

Profile Lutz

  • Born: 1957
  • Calendrical & vascular age: 65 & 52
  • Recreational athlete: strength and endurance training 6x/week
  • Diet: without restrictions;
  • allergic to diet gurus and nutrition evangelists
  • Motto: Getting old is inevitable, being old is optional.

Profile Moritz

  • Born: 1974
  • Calendrical & Vascular Age: 49 & 40
  • Endurance athlete: 30 years of training; 15 x Ironman finisher from 1994 to present.
  • Diet: without restrictions
  • Motto: Fitness starts at the end of your comfort zone.

Profile Gabi

  • Born: 1973
  • Calendrical & Vascular Age: 50 & 40
  • Endurance athlete: 20 years of running and triathlon
  • Diet: without restrictions
  • Motto: Anything you can do is not a workout.

On board

We have plenty of space on board.

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