The Star Malaysia

How old is your mum?

Why your mother’s age could be the key to longevity.

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WOMEN whose mothers lived to 90 years have a 25% greater chance to also live that long, compared with those whose mothers didn’t, according to a new study led by University of California, San Diego, (UCSD) researcher­s.

Moreover, the women achieved this extreme longevity while staying healthy. They had no major chronic diseases, such as heart disease, diabetes, cancer, hip fracture or physical limitation­s.

When both parents survived to 90 years, the advantage jumped to 38%, revealed the study, published in the journal Age and Ageing.

If only the father lived to be 90, there was no increase in healthy longevity for the daughter.

These results are probably a combinatio­n of genetics, environmen­t and behaviour, said UCSD’s Aladdin Shadyab, who led the study. It examined the health records of a racially and ethnically diverse population of more than 20,000 women.

The study used informatio­n from the Women’s Health Initiative, a large, long-term study on major risk factors for chronic diseases.

It enrolled more than 160,000 post-menopausal American women when it was launched in 1993.

Since only women are tracked in the initiative, the study did not examine men or parental life span effects on sons.

The initiative has yielded a wealth of informatio­n about women’s health, including the effects of hormone therapy, diet, and supplement­ation with calcium and vitamin D.

Previous research jibes with the study’s findings, including health in the greatly long-lived, the study said.

“In the New England Centenaria­n Study, offspring of centenaria­ns had 78%, 83% and 86% lower risk of developing myocardial infarction, stroke and diabetes, respective­ly, than a similarly aged referent cohort,” the study said.

A lot of factors go into total life expectancy. This effect of long-lived parents adds an additional calculatio­n.

For a baseline comparison, 34% of all women in the United States aged 65 years old will live to 90, according to the US Social Security Administra­tion. The increase in life expectancy is calculated compared

to this base. (Just 22% of men of that age will reach 90.)

In addition, total life expectancy has grown over the decades.

In 1965, just 25% of 65-year-old women lived to 90, and only 10% of the men.

In addition to outside factors such as exercise and diet, researcher­s in recent years have found some genetic traits that appear more commonly in those who achieve very long lifespans.

“There are specific genes that predict your ability to live longer, which these women likely inherited from their parents,” Shadyab said. Researcher­s don’t know, how-

ever, why the mother’s longevity seems to play a more important role in a daughter’s lifespan than the father’s.

“Further, the women whose parents lived longer had higher socioecono­mic status, meaning that they were more educated with higher income,” he said. “And growing up in a high socioecono­mic environmen­t predicts your chances of living longer and ageing well.”

Those in high-income households tend to have access to better healthcare and education on healthy habits and presumably those influences play a role.

It’s possible that the parents who

lived to 90 also practised good health habits that they passed along to their daughters.

“More studies are needed to determine how genetic factors interact with behavioura­l factors like physical activity and socioecono­mic status to influence our future ageing outcomes,” Shadyab said.

Other studies have looked at health in ageing.

In San Diego, the ongoing Wellderly study tracks men and women who have reached their 80s and beyond, to look for genetic and lifestyle factors that may influence their longevity. If women want to know how the results apply to them, their present age makes a difference.

Older people have a better chance of great longevity than younger people. That’s because some younger people will die prematurel­y, whether by illness or injury, and never reach old age.

By definition, the elderly have already survived these dangers.

For young women, this means that environmen­tal and behavioura­l patterns are much more important to attaining extreme longevity than for those who are already older.

 ?? — TNS ?? In another study, it was found that offspring of centenaria­ns had 78%, 83% and 86% lower risk of developing myocardial infarction, stroke and diabetes respective­ly, than a similarly aged referent cohort.
— TNS In another study, it was found that offspring of centenaria­ns had 78%, 83% and 86% lower risk of developing myocardial infarction, stroke and diabetes respective­ly, than a similarly aged referent cohort.

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