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    Why Some People Live to 110

    SUNDAY, Jan. 8 (HealthDay News) -- People who live 110 years or longer have as many disease-associated genes as those in the general population, but they may also be blessed with protective genes that help them live so long, researchers report.

    The team of U.S. scientists noted that supercentenarians, as they are called, are extremely rare, with only one per 5 million people in developed nations. There is growing evidence that genetics play a major role in living to such an old age.

    In what they describe as a first-of-a-kind study, the researchers analyzed the whole genome sequences of a man and a woman who lived past the age of 114 and found that they had as many disease-associated genes as other people.

    For example, the man had 37 genetic mutations associated with increased risk for colon cancer.

    "In fact, he had presented with an obstructing colon cancer earlier in his life that had not metastasized and was cured with surgery. He was in phenomenal cognitive and physical shape near the time of his death," study senior author Dr. Thomas Perls, director of the New England Centenarian Study, said in a Boston University Medical Center news release.

    The woman had numerous genetic variations associated with age-related disease, such as heart disease, cancer and Alzheimer's disease. She did develop congestive heart failure and mild cognitive impairment, but these conditions didn't become evident until she was more than 108 years old.

    "The presence of these disease-associated variants is consistent with our and other researchers' findings that centenarians carry as many disease-associated genes as the general population," Perls said. "The difference may be that the centenarians likely have longevity-associated variants that cancel out the disease genes. That effect may extend to the point that the diseases don't occur -- or, if they do, are much less pathogenic or markedly delayed towards the end of life, in these individuals who are practically living to the limit of the human lifespan."

    The study was published Jan. 3 in the journal Frontiers in Genetics, and researchers will be able to access the information at the U.S. National Institutes of Health data repository.

    More information

    The American Academy of Family Physicians discusses good health habits at age 60 and older.

     

    19 comments

    • Jenny  •  4 mths ago
      A long and fulfilling life in good health, that is something most folks would like, even beyond age 120. I hope we get there in my generation.
    • Um...riddlemedis!  •  4 mths ago
      Put money into improving the health of man. The moon can wait...
    • Ger925  •  Pleasanton, California  •  4 mths ago
      "She did develop congestive heart failure and mild cognitive impairment, but these conditions didn't become evident until she was more than 108 years old." Somehow, I may fail to wail uncontrollably about that poor lady's misfortune.
    • Actor  •  4 mths ago
      if you don't have the genes, you have other options. your actions will actually reshape your genes, that is how they work, constantly remaking themselves. if you adopt vegetarianism, exercize daily and keep your mind active, you will surely have excellent health and live long.
    • geezer  •  Galveston, Texas  •  4 mths ago
      I wish they had expounded on medication.
      Are those studied on or off?

      I hate to admit I'm 84. Have survived cancer since 2002, after surgery. I'm careful of my diet.
      I've never been on any regular medication of any kind. Not even asperin.
      I don't remember the last time I had a headache. My last cold was 1997, visiting Canada. It was doozy, but I got over it. I've never had a flu shot. I love to dance, but haven't met anyone near my age that can keep up. I feel a bit silly doing rock with all those teeny boppers, but I still can. Not as long as I used to, but take a break with slow ones.

      My three girls are on all kinds of medications and all in bad health. They spend more on doctors/meds than I spend to live. wth happened?

      However, who wants to live to 100-110? I've been alone again, now for 10 years and don't think I care to for another 30. All my friends are dead. I don't want to outlive my children. One was enough.

      If I ever need meds to live, they better not prescribe a bunch at one time. I may make sure it doesn't get old.
    • A Yahoo! User  •  4 mths ago
      Although longevity studies are rampant now, perhaps another consideration is in order: eating the juvenile of the plant rather than dead food. Put the very best into the body for best results.
    • Noonsa  •  4 mths ago
      The point is not living a long life - it's living a long life HEALTHILY. Nobody wants to live 200 years slumped in a wheelchair eating slop through a tube implanted into your stomach. The key is extending our ENTIRE lives in order to make our 'healthy' years longer.
      So perhaps in the next 500 years, humans will be facilitated by science so that babies stay babies longer (doesn't sound fun, but hear me out). Then it takes 20 years to reach puberty. Then 40 years later you have kids - and probably fewer than we're having now. 100 more years and you're starting to slow down. Perhaps you don't die for another 80 years or more.
      This may SOUND extreme, but if you look at how long we live now in contrast to our lifespans in antiquity (35 was considered 'elder' back then), you'll realize how different we are and how far we've come. We're amazing NOW ^.^ It's the future!! (even without personal jetpacks or flying cars)
      • Chris 4 mths ago
        Funny how as science and technology evolve, life expectancy regresses.
      • Actor 4 mths ago
        that seems like a good plan. its almost Biblical. in old religious stories, there were people who were said to live 100's of years. maybe they had a science we didn't know about.
    • observation  •  4 mths ago
      Has anyone done a study on what percentage of these really old people avoided doctors versus those who took the regular cocktail of pills prescribed by doctors to old people?
      • snady1 4 mths ago
        When they do I want to know about it becasue I avoid them like the plauge.
    • barbara  •  4 mths ago
      i like the recent study about a drug that flushes out dying cells ('senescent cells'). the flushing made the mice in the study stay youthful.
      • PabloH 4 mths ago
        sing me up for that drug.
      • snady1 4 mths ago
        I wonder if it is a ton of water that helps with that.
    • beto  •  Prescott, Arizona  •  4 mths ago
      I agree with Tony B., geez I'm 59 with a bad back and feel 79 now, at 110 I could not even move.I gonna have to get back surgery which scares the bejeebers out of me, but may be my only chance at enjoying life again. Pain pills only help bad back pain for so long then your tolerent to them, that leaves the knife.Maybe I'll come out of it ok.
      • Michelle 4 mths ago
        Get the surgery, it worked well for me, then do the physical therapy it is worth it. I did it 14 years ago in my 30's and have not had sciatica since then
    • c.  •  New York, New York  •  4 mths ago
      I would like to know their medical history and whatever prescription medication they are on. It is important for the public to know.
      • MikeyPooh 4 mths ago
        i want to know your history too. how many bank accounts have you had? what is your PIN number? how well do you satisfy your wife?
      • geezer 4 mths ago
        My post addressed that same thing.
        I think doctors over medicate in many cases.
    • Noonsa  •  4 mths ago
      I believe I heard that in cancer research they've started to understand that if you stop/slow/alter cell division you'll curb the cancer creation. But that slows the aging of the cells. So I think the moment they figure out "age management" or life extention, they'll also have the cure for cancer.
      :) Here's hopin!
    • Repairman Dave  •  4 mths ago
      This only proves one thing. Drs really don't know anything for sure about how long you'll live!
    • Dave  •  Rockwood, Michigan  •  4 mths ago
      And luck.
    • Mixed Chick  •  Houston, Texas  •  4 mths ago
      Whoever sold us all on the idea of living to be 100 as if it is some kind of right? For those of us in the health care profession we see every day what it really means to be 80, 90, 100, no thank you, I hope physician assisted suicide is legal in all states by the time I get there...everything wears out even the brain and they cannot transplant that nor is there a replacement for it like a hip we are seeing Dementia in people as 'young' as 50 and 60 now, and I hope we all start thinking in terms of living our best lives possible and making a difference while we are here and functioning well, being there for our families and friends, helping someone less fortunate than ourselves, etc., not some arbitrary number the drug companies would like us to aspire to so they can keep making billions.
    • Tony B  •  4 mths ago
      Who the hell wants to be that old.
    • STEVE  •  Indianapolis, Indiana  •  4 mths ago
      What rock has the author of this article been living under for the last forty years , everyone knows genetics can let you live longer . If youre parents were long lived , the odds are you will too .
    • RHRNS  •  Tracy City, Tennessee  •  4 mths ago
      ASK GOD HE CAN TELL YOU..
    • Sancho  •  4 mths ago
      You come into this world wound like a clock. Tick, tick, tick, tick. Ding. Dead.
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