A group of researchers from Singapore is investigating the question of how long a human system can live the longest.
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They found that the age of complete loss of resilience ranges from 120 to 150 years.Speaking to Scientific American, study co-author Peter Fedichev |
Immortality, the fountain of youth or the thought of living forever have been one of the greatest wishes over the centuries, as Mark Twain said: “Life would be infinitely happier if we could only be born at the age of 80 and little by little Approach 18 “.
Now a group of researchers from Singapore is investigating the question of how long a human system can live the longest. In an article published in the journal Nature Communication, researchers at the Singapore-based biotech company Gero point to an” underlying rhythm of aging “down.”
This defines the service life between 120-150 years. Entitled “Longitudinal Analysis of Blood Markers Shows Progressive Loss of Resilience and Predicts the Limit of Human Life,” the article states that death is an intrinsic biological property that the researchers studied changes in blood cell counts and independent of stress factors.
Number of daily steps people took. They looked at health data from large groups in the US, UK and Russia disintegration, ”the researchers said in a statement. Led by Timothy V Pyrkov, the team observed that as people age, factors go beyond the disease.
A predictable and gradual decrease in the body’s ability to return blood cells. They found that the rhythm of decline determines when this resilience completely disappears and leads to death.
They found that the age of complete loss of resilience ranges from 120 to 150 years.Speaking to Scientific American, study co-author Peter Fedichev, founder of Gero, said that “most biologists would consider blood cell counts and step counts to be quite different, the fact that both sources draw exactly the same future, suggests that this rhythm of aging “The most interesting observation from research was the fact that sometime between thirty and forty, exercise capacity suddenly decreases and the body slowly loses its ability to cope with and recover from stress.
This work explains why even the most effective prevention and treatment of age-related diseases could only improve average life expectancy, but not the maximum, unless true antiaging therapies have been developed, “added co-author Andrei Gudkov of Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center, USA Research could guide drug development to slow the process and extend lifespan, as recovery rate is a major sign of aging 122 years old in France.