The shorter you are, the greater your odds of living a longer life, scientists have found for the first time.
Short height and long life have a direct connection in Japanese men, according to research based on the Kuakini Honolulu Heart Programme (HHP) and the Kuakini Honolulu-Asia Ageing Study (HAAS).
"We split people into two groups - those that were 5-foot-2 and shorter, and 5-4 and taller," said Dr Bradley Willcox, one of the investigators for the study and a Professor in the University of Hawaii (UH) John A Burns School of Medicine's Department of Geriatric Medicine.
The researchers showed that shorter men were more likely to have a protective form of the longevity gene, FOXO3, leading to smaller body size during early development and a longer lifespan.
Shorter men were also more likely to have lower blood insulin levels and less cancer.
"This study shows for the first time, that body size is linked to this gene," said Willcox.
"We knew that in animal models of ageing. We did not know that in humans. We have the same or a slightly different version in mice, roundworms, flies, even yeast has a version of this gene, and it's important in longevity across all these species," said Willcox.
The Kuakini HHP started in 1965 with 8,006 American men of Japanese ancestry born between the years 1900 and 1919. The lifestyles and health conditions of these men were closely followed and studied by the researchers through the years.
Approximately 1,200 men from the study lived into their 90s and 100s, and approximately 250 of those men are still alive today.
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