▲ | People Who Live to 100 Have a Unique Relationship with Disease(sciencealert.com) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
22 points by prmph a day ago | 6 comments | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
▲ | lithocarpus a day ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
The "unique" relationship appears to be primarily that those living to 100 developed significantly lower rates of chronic disease - cardiovascular and metabolic - in their younger years, than those who died earlier. In other words, healthier people live longer. Nothing "unique" or surprising in this article that I could find. Rates of these chronic diseases are rapidly increasing. ~48% of US adults have hypertension (chronic cardiovascular disease) and ~38% have pre-diabetes (chronic metabolic disease). Particularly concerning is 33% of children age 12-17 have pre-diabetes. Understanding the most prevalent causes of these diseases should be IMHO the top priority for anyone who cares about health. My hunch is that #1 and #2 would be low exercise and poor food. For exercise it's obvious what to do. For food it's a big debate. My hunch is that the problem must lie in foods or aspects of foods that are new to the human diet. So I discourage eating anything that requires industrial processes to create and thus was never eaten by people before the industrial revolution. This includes probably 95% of prepared or packaged food sold in the US. In particular refined flours, refined sweeteners, and refined oils, and then all the stuff with un-natural sounding names. I'm aware that many institutions of science and health declare that for cardiovascular disease, the villain is natural fat and salt. I've spent a lot of time looking at their rationale for this. I think they are wrong and that this conclusion is based on badly done and poorly interpreted science. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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▲ | litoE a day ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
According to George Burns "Once you get to be 100 you have it made because very few people die past age 100." |