Poor people age faster than their well-to-do counterparts because they have shorter telomeres, says a new Scottish study.
Poor people age faster than their well-to-do counterparts because they have shorter telomeres, says a new Scottish study. Telomeres are the cap-like molecular structures on the tips of the chromosomes that scientists say are closely linked to biological age.
"We know that people who are born with shorter telomeres than normal also have a shorter lifespan," CBS News quoted Dr. Maria Blasco of the Spanish National Cancer Research Center in Madrid as telling The Independent in May.
She created a 700-dollar test that supposedly predicts aging by measuring telomeres.
In the new study, which took 10 years, researchers from the University of Glasgow compared telomere length in 382 local residents.
Those who had a household income less than 41,000 dollars, their telomeres shortened by 7.7 percent over the study, while telomeres for those who made more money shortened by only 0.6 percent.
They also noticed Glaswegians who rented reduced their telomere length by 8.7 percent, compared to homeowners who only saw a 2.2 percent length reduction.
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Blasco thinks short telomeres are linked to worse health.
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The study will be publishing in the upcoming issue of PLoS One.
Source-ANI