#long-term-health-outcomes

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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
3 days ago

This overlooked organ may be more vital for longevity than scientists realized

The AI analysis found enormous variation in the health of the thymus between individual people. In some people, it stayed very active until a very old age. And other people, it actually declined very rapidly at a younger age. Importantly, thymus health correlated with a person's overall health. People who had a healthy thymus tended to live longer, have less cancer, and less cardiovascular disease.
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fromwww.independent.co.uk
2 weeks ago

Aggressive teenagers may age faster and have a higher risk of health issues

Aggressive behavior in early adolescence predicts faster biological aging and higher BMI by age 30, according to a University of Virginia study of 121 middle school students followed into adulthood.
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