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Heritability of life span in the Old Order Amish

✍ Scribed by Mitchell, Braxton D. ;Hsueh, Wen-Chi ;King, Terri M. ;Pollin, Toni I. ;Sorkin, John ;Agarwala, Richa ;Sch�ffer, Alejandro A. ;Shuldiner, Alan R.


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2001
Tongue
English
Weight
127 KB
Volume
102
Category
Article
ISSN
0148-7299

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✦ Synopsis


Although a familial contribution to human longevity is recognized, the nature of this contribution is largely unknown. We have examined the familial contribution to life span in the Old Order Amish (OOA) population of Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. Analyses were conducted on 1,655 individuals, representing all those born prior to 1890 and appearing in the most widely available genealogy, surviving until at least age 30 years, and with known date of death. Mean age at death (AESD) in this population was 70.7AE15.6 years, and this did not change appreciably over time. Parental and offspring ages at death were signi®cantly correlated, as were ages of death among siblings. Offspring longevity was correlated with longevity of both parents, and in more or less additive fashion. For example, mean offspring age at death was 69.4AE15.3 years in individuals for whom both parents died before the age of 75 years (n 280) and increased to 73.5AE16.0 years in individuals for whom neither parent died before the age of 75 years (n 311). These differences were highly signi®cant (P 0.006). We estimated heritability of life span to be 25%AE5%, suggesting that the additive effects of genes account for one quarter of the total variability in life span in the OOA. We conclude that longevity is moderately heritable in the OOA, that the genetic effects are additive, and that genetic in¯uences on longevity are likely to be expressed across a broad range of ages.


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Body image in the Old Order Amish: A peo
✍ Platte, Petra ;Zelten, Joan F. ;Stunkard, Albert J. 📂 Article 📅 2000 🏛 Wiley (John Wiley & Sons) 🌐 English ⚖ 283 KB 👁 1 views

Objective: Body image measures were assessed among the Old Order Amish, a Protestant religious community living separate from Western industrialized society. Method: One hundred six Old Order Amish men (n = 50) and women (n = 56), aged 14-67 years, were studied by two measures of body image: (1) bod