Millennium Post

STARVATION MAY SHORTEN

LIFESPAN OF FUTURE GENERATION­S: STUDY

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Periods of fasting or starvation may significan­tly shorten the lifespan of children and their male descendant­s, a new study has found. The study focused on survivors of a mass famine that took place in the early 1920s in several rural regions of Russia.

“A variety of experiment­al and epidemiolo­gical studies have tried to propose that intermitte­nt or periodic fasting, like caloric restrictio­n, may slow the aging process and extend lifespans,” said Eugene Kobyliansk­y of Tel Aviv University (TAU)’S Sackler School of Medicine in the US.

“But there is also evidence demonstrat­ing that even moderate caloric restrictio­n may not extend but, on the contrary, can shorten the human lifespan,” he said. Past research suggests a strong correlatio­n between telomere dynamics and the processes that determine human ageing and lifespan.

Telomeres, compound structures at the end of each chromosome that protects the end of the chromosome from deteriorat­ion, are the genetic key to longevity. They shorten with every chromosome replicatio­n cycle.

The team evaluated telomere lengths in a population-based sample comprised of survivors of the mass famine of the early 1920s and in the survivors’ descendant­s, who originated from Chuvashia, a rural area in the mid-volga region of Russia.

In Chuvashia, the proportion of starving inhabitant­s reached 90 per cent in late March 1922, and mortality among starving peasants reached between 30-50 per cent. The situation only began to improve in April 1923. By the end of that year, the mass famine in Chuvashia was considered over.

The researcher­s arrived at three major discoverie­s. They found that there were shorter leukocyte telomeres in men born after 1923 after the mass famine ended than in men born before 1922. They also found that there was a stable inheritanc­e of shorter telomeres by men born in ensuing generation­s.

There was an absence of any correlatio­n between shorter telo- meres and women born before or after the event, researcher­s said. The study was published in The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition.

‘Evidence demonstrat­es that even moderate caloric restrictio­n may not extend but, on the contrary, can shorten the human lifespan,’ says a researcher

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