A study by scientists from the Chinese Academy of Sciences has shown a possible link between hypoxia and longevity. They found that people living under hypoxic conditions on the Tibetan Plateau tended to live longer than their peers in other regions of China. In fact, the proportion of people over 91 and long-lived in Tibet continues to rise, although the proportion of older people over 60 is still much lower than in the rest of China.
The findings
were published in Cell Research and are based on data from China’s 2010 demographic census. It also noted that there were many more men over the age of 100 in the region than in the rest of the country.
According to Zhang Ya-ping, vice president of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, and Wu Dong-dong, a professor at the Kunming Institute of Zoology, the link between longevity and life at high altitude is not just an assumption. Arguing that hypoxia may contribute to longevity, the researchers suggest that this environment may alter the expression of genes associated with aging, leading to increased longevity.
Prof. Gustavo R. Zubieta-Calleja of the High Altitude Institute of Lung and Pathology (Bolivia), who studied the lives of people in the Andean region of South America,
came to similar conclusions. The cities of La Paz, Potosí, Cochabamba and Chuquisaca had significantly higher proportions of people over 90 and 100 years of age compared to the regions below.
Benjamin Honigman, M.D., of the University of Colorado, partnered with the Harvard School of Global Health to
analyze data by U.S. county, which found that people living at higher altitudes have a lower chance of dying from coronary heart disease and tend to live longer than others. Scientists have suggested that this may be due to the low partial pressure of oxygen found in mountainous terrain. Another explanation may be that the increased solar radiation at altitude helps the body better synthesize vitamin D, which also has beneficial effects.
Experts from the University of Athens, together with the Harvard School of Public Health, who analyzed life expectancy in Greece,
found that living in mountainous areas has a “protective effect” against total and cardiovascular mortality due to the effects of moderate hypoxia.