On 14 Feb 2007 14:13:57 -0800, "TC" <tunder...@hotmail.com> wrote:
On Feb 14, 3:50 pm,
squ...@peoriadesignweb.com wrote:
I dont understand why people who eat relatively very healthy
only end up living 10-20% longer lives? In other words an unhealthy
person can consume 500% more fat, sugar, salt than a healthy eater,
yet only reduce his life span by 10-20%?
This tells me there is a point of diminishing returns to healthy
eating which we never hear discussed in the media.. Are there any
good scientific studies on this I can read?
The key is quality of life. My father in law suffers from a lifetime
of eating crap. He is overweight, has problems with mobility,
sleeping, chronic pain, depression, etc. He will probably fall within
your 10-20% shorter lifespan. I would not want to experience his
quality of life in his last 10 years.
I may only outlive him by 10-20% but I am certain that I will not
suffer physically and mentally as he has and will.
Man lived to 112 on sausage-and-waffles diet
'We often find it is in the genes rather than lifestyle,'
says expert
Updated: 10:31 a.m. ET Oct. 10, 2006
LOS ANGELES - George Johnson, considered California's oldest
living person at 112 and the state's last surviving World
War I veteran, had experts shaking their heads over his junk
food diet.
"He had terrible bad habits. He had a diet largely of
sausages and waffles," Dr. L. Stephen Coles, founder of the
Gerontology Research Group at the University of California,
Los Angeles, said Friday.
The 5-foot-7, 140-pound Johnson died of pneumonia Wednesday
at his Richmond home in Northern California.
"A lot of people think or imagine that your good habits and
bad habits contribute to your longevity," Coles said. "But
we often find it is in the genes rather than lifestyle."
Johnson, who was blind and living alone until his 110th
birthday when a caregiver began helping him, built the
Richmond house by hand in 1935. He got around using a walker
in recent years.
Johnson was the only living Californian considered a
"supercentenarian," a designation for those ages 110 or
older, Coles said. His group is now in the process of
validating a Los Angeles candidate who claims to be 112
years old.
Coles participated in an autopsy Thursday that was designed
to study Johnson's health.
"All of his organs were extremely youthful. They could have
been the organs of someone who was 50 or 60, not 112.
Clearly his genes had some secrets," Coles said.
'A mysterious case'
"Everything in his body that we looked at was clean as a
whistle, except for his lungs with the pneumonia," Coles
said. "He had no heart disease, he had no cancer, no
diabetes and no Alzheimer's.
"This is a mysterious case that someone could be so healthy
from a pathology point of view and that there is no obvious
cause of death."
The family was in favor of an autopsy. Relatives said
Johnson wanted them to allow it if it would help science.
Born May 1, 1894, Johnson's father managed the Baltimore and
Ohio Railway station in Philadelphia.
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Johnson was working in 1917 as a mail sorter for the U.S.
Post Office when he was drafted into the Army. The war ended
a year later, and he never served in combat.
Two years later, he and his wife moved to Northern
California.
"It was a great adventure in those days. We were young and
wanted the experience," Johnson said in a March interview
with the Contra Costa Times.
The couple settled in Fresno and remained there until 1935,
when they bought property in Richmond. They used lumber
salvaged from dismantled buildings to build their house.
During World War II, Johnson worked at the Kaiser shipyard
in Richmond and later managed the heating plant at Oak Knoll
Naval Hospital in Oakland.
He remained in good health and continued driving until he
was 102, when his vision began to fail.
Johnson's wife died in 1992 at the age of 92. The couple had
no children.
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