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    100-Year-Olds Just as Unhealthy as the Rest of Us

    Centenarians may have a great deal of wisdom to share, but this apparently does not include advice on how to live to age 100.

    Researchers at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine of Yeshiva University have found that many very old people — age 95 and older — could be poster children for bad health behavior with their smoking, drinking, poor diet, obesity and lack of exercise.

    The very old are, in fact, no more virtuous than the general population when it comes to shunning bad health habits, leaving researchers to conclude that their genes are mostly responsible for their remarkable longevity.

    But before you fall off the wagon and start tossing down doughnuts for breakfast just because your Aunt Edna just turned 102, remember that genetics is a game of chance. What didn't kill Aunt Edna still could kill you prematurely, the researchers cautioned.

    The chosen few

    The study, appearing Aug. 3 in the online edition of the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society, followed the lives of 477 Ashkenazi Jews between the ages of 95 and 112. They were enrolled in Einstein College's Longevity Genes Project, an ongoing study that seeks to understand why centenarians live as long as they do. About 1 in 4,400 Americans lives to age 100, according to 2010 census data.

    A research team led by Nir Barzilai compared these old folks with a group of people representing the general public, captured in a snapshot of health habits collected in the 1970s. The people in this control group were born around the same time as the 95-and-above study group, but they have since died.

    The living, old people in the study were remarkably ordinary in their lifestyles, Barzilai said. By and large, they weren't vegetarians, vitamin-pill-poppers or health freaks. Their profiles nearly matched that of the control group in terms of the percentage who were overweight, exercised (or didn't exercise), or smoked. One woman, at age 107, smoked for over 90 years.

    Whatever killed the control group — cardiovascular disease, cancer and other diseases clearly associated with lifestyle choices — somehow didn't kill them. "Their genes protected them," Barzilai said. [10 Easy Paths to Self Destruction]

    Put down that doughnut

    Barzilai said that it would be wrong to forego health advice with the assumption that your genes will determine how long you will live. For the general population, there is a preponderance of evidence that diet and exercise can postpone or ward off chronic disease and extend life. Many studies on Seventh Day Adventists — with their limited consumption of alcohol, tobacco and meat — attribute upward of 10 extra years of life as a result of lifestyle choices.

    Note also that those people now age 100 lived in an era when obesity was nearly nonexistent and when daily exercise such as walking down streets or up a few flights of steps was more common. Barzilai said anyone can benefit from exercise at any age, even these indestructible old people pushing and exceeding triple digits.

    The big picture for the Longevity Genes Project is to identify those genes keeping folks alive for so long and then use them as targets for drug development. For example, most people treated successfully for heart disease ultimately die well before their 90s from yet another age-related disease. This is because we "never change the aging process" with our treatments and cures, Barzilai said.

    That is, we can't turn everyone into centenarians by curing one disease at a time.

    "Aging is the major risk factor," Barzilai said. If researchers can figure out which genes work to slow aging and make ordinary people more resilient to chronic disease, we all will have a much better chance of reaching our 100th birthday — and have enough breath to blow out the candles.

    Christopher Wanjek is the author of the books "Bad Medicine" and "Food At Work." His column, Bad Medicine, appears regularly on LiveScience. Follow LiveScience for the latest in science news and discoveries on Twitter @livescienceand on Facebook.

    What do you feel about this article?

     

    1,407 comments

    • Old Guy  •  9 months ago
      Imagine the lack of stress suffered by people who do not obsess over what or how much they eat, who sleep when they are tired instead of when the clock tells them to, who laugh out loud, sneeze out loud, have a drink when the urge strikes them and make love when the spirit moves them, and who can sit in a chair all day long without feeling guilty. It wouldn't be any surprise to learn that the tiny minority who live like that is the same tiny minority that lives to a good old age as the rest of us run ourselves into the ground trying to both fit in and succeed.
      • ed 9 months ago
        I totally agree, I think stress is what kills us early.
      • Brett W 9 months ago
        this comment should be featured on Yahoo!. the crazy thing is that the only thing stopping everyone from living like that is their own mentality. i lost my job a couple months ago and was excited about the next opportunity that would inevitable come my way. now i'm about to get a better job that pays more all while thoroughly enjoying my time off! the only thing that prevents one's happiness is choosing not to be happy. i wish everyone realized that happiness is a choice - and one easily made once you have the realization.
      • Anne 9 months ago
        Marvelous! Marvelous! I don't drink alcohol; but a big glass of Coke and a big glass of chocolate milk make me feel great!
    • Sara  •  9 months ago
      My 95 year old grandma would always ask me to make her "scotch and sodas" because I made them so well. 8 oz glass, three ice cubes, all scotch and no soda. LOL! "That's perfect dear! Thank you!"

      Her brother lived as long as she did too.
      • daydreams83 9 months ago
        Go grandma!! I knew a lady who died at 104 or 105...I can't remember which, but in her later years, she enjoyed a hot toddy every night before bed. :)
      • ELAINE 9 months ago
        Alcohol is a chemical and addicting. You would do better with focusing on Jesus and living a healthy life style. I bless you in the name of Jesus! That lifetime is still but a "wink of an eye." Eternity with our Lord and Savior is forever and with new bodies! All hail the King of Kings!
      • nathan 9 months ago
        Scotchy Scotch Scotch.
    • Dude  •  9 months ago
      Life is like jello. Try to hold on too hard and it slides between your fingers...relax and enjoy it. When it's gone, it's gone and you won't regret enjoying it.
      • chankity bop 9 months ago
        hahahahah wtf....i just picture someone looking really depressed over lost jello on the kitchen floor.
      • sue 9 months ago
        Actually, a lot of people will regret enjoying the things in life if they are not living according to God...as for the cowardly, the faithless, the detestable, as for murderers, the sexually immoral, sorcerers, idolaters, and all liars, their portion will be in the lake that burns with fire and sulfur, Rev 21:8
      • Biggreyoldman 9 months ago
        Joe, to bad your God hates so much, mine loves.
    • RedeyeLover  •  9 months ago
      I work on a gero unit, and I'm saying there is no way I want to live to be 90+ if my QUALITY OF LIFE isn't great. Taking care of too many seniors who are just "existing" and not living, way too sad.
      • Orca 9 months ago
        This is why we need to have the right to die. Kevorkian has it right! I would rather die with dignity than wandering around crapping my diapers and not knowing where I am while in constant pain. Why do we torture our old? At least with real torture, it ends, or you die.
    • carolynr  •  9 months ago
      It's not about living longer, it's about feeling good until you die. That should be the goal.
    • Maybe  •  9 months ago
      Eat kale and brussel sprouts everyday. You may not live longer, but it will seem longer.
    • Biggreyoldman  •  9 months ago
      I want to die in my sleep, like my Uncle, not screaming and yelling like his passengers.
    • Independent voter  •  9 months ago
      I got married at 25. During the next 50 years my wife got me to quit smoking, lose weight, stop eating fatty foods, walk 5 miles a day, sex no more they once a month. Here I am at 75 with arthritis in both knees and right arm. Degenerative disk disease., an artificial heart valve and a pacemaker.
      I don't know which is worse. The suffering I'm experiencing now or the suffering I went through to get here.
    • The Psychotic Libertarian  •  9 months ago
      A guy walks into the doctor's office and says "Doc, I want to live to be 100 years old." The doctor asks "Do you drink?" The man says no. Do you smoke? Again, the answer was no. What about over eating or chasing women? Once again the reply was no. Then the doctor looks at him and asks "then why in the heck do you want to live to 100?"

      LOVE that joke... You see, GENETICS has a much stronger indication of your life expectancy than weight, smoking, drinking, and exercise. Living in fear of "what if" means you survive, not actually LIVE.
    • Carmen  •  9 months ago
      I'd just like to throw my 2 cents in....
      All of my relatives who've lived 80+ had something in common... they were very active; physically & mentally. If you let yourself go, ya go. If yo keep living, you DO keep living.
      Age really is a state of mind.
    • smith  •  9 months ago
      When did longevity, or quantity of life, supercede QUALITY of life, or how well you feel and function while you're living?? I'd rather have a happy, healthier quality of life than to live longer, but not be able to function like I's wish...
    • Hogan  •  9 months ago
      Statistically speaking, somebody has to live longer than average.
    • Questmr  •  9 months ago
      On the flip side...I would like to know how many health nuts die working out. I know of at least two.
    • JiI  •  9 months ago
      My grandma is nearly 101. Lives on black coffee, red meat, chocolate, ice cream, fried chicken, pork chops and donuts. Doesn't like fruits and vegitables. Can open a stuck jar of pickles bare-handed and can get up off of the floor faster than me. (She likes sitting on the floor and working on whatever she does there.)
    • A Yahoo!User  •  9 months ago
      old age isnt for sissys, you think it hurts when your 30 40 50 0r 60 wait till your 70 or 80.
      arthritis is hell.
    • A Yahoo! User  •  9 months ago
      If I live to be 100, I am going to eat all the burgers and chocolate cake I want.
    • Louie  •  9 months ago
      I'm 70 and after what I went thoiugh with my three kids, I want to live long enough to become a huge problem for them!
    • Eclipse27  •  9 months ago
      My great grandfather was a farmer and he worked hard and ate mostly what grew naturally in his farm and he lived to 113. All this processed junk like being sold to us is the cause of unhealthiness.
    • nobodyn  •  9 months ago
      Question I'd like to ask: how many of these 100 plus people were taking prescription medication? Most of the older people I know take none. The pharmaceutical companies are killing us while their stocks soar.
    • A Yahoo! User  •  9 months ago
      History of long lives in my family and all of them drank, smoked or chewed, even ran doughnut shops !
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