A Tsimane
father and son hunt fish in a river. (Michael Gurven)
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Researchers said Friday
they had found an indigenous Amazonian tribe with the lowest levels of artery
hardening -- a portender of heart disease -- ever observed.
Most
members of the Tsimane community, an indigenous Amazonian tribe, are active for
between four and seven hours a day -- hunting, gathering, fishing and
farming, the study found
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And
while they hailed the group's "subsistence lifestyle" as a
heart-protecting factor, others cautioned against romanticizing the community's
hand-to-mouth existence.
Known
as the Tsimane, the small forager-farmer community in Bolivia was five times
less likely to develop coronary atherosclerosis (artery hardening) than people
in the United States -- where it is a major killer, scientists wrote in The
Lancet medical journal.
They
pointed to the community's low-fat, high-fibre diet and non-smoking, physically
active lifestyle -- factors which most scientists agree contribute to good
health.
The
study was an observational one, meaning it merely uncovered a correlation
between lifestyle and heart health, and cannot conclude that one causes the
other.
Yet,
"the loss of subsistence diets and lifestyles could be classed as a new
risk factor for vascular (blood vessel) ageing," study co-author Hillard
Kaplan of the University of New Mexico concluded.
"We
believe that components of this way of life could benefit contemporary
sedentary populations."
The
Tsimane diet comprises unprocessed, high-fibre carbohydrates such as rice,
corn, nuts and fruit, as well as wild game and fish.
The
community eats little fat, few smoke, and most are active for between four and
seven hours a day -- hunting, gathering, fishing and farming, the study found.
Observers
pointed out that while the Tsimane had lower levels of artery calcification and
heart disease, the most common age of death was 70, compared with about 80 in
most developed countries.
And
these were just the ones who survive childhood -- one in five die in the first
year of life.
"There
may not be many old Tsimane men with heart disease but that's probably because
only the fittest and healthiest Tsimane survive to old age," commented
Gavin Sandercock, a cardiology expert from the University of Essex.
For
Tim Chico, a University of Sheffield cardiologist, it is important "not to romanticize" the Tsimane existence.
"Two-thirds
of them suffer intestinal worms and they have a very hard life without fresh
water sewerage or electricity," he said.
Rates
of diseases other than heart disease were much higher in the Tsimane --
especially of the infectious kind.
"So,
would I live like the Tsimane to reduce my risk of heart disease? No way,"
Chico said via the Science Media Centre in London.
Researchers
took CT scans of the hearts of 705 adults aged 40-94 in 85 villages in 2014 and
2015 for the study.
Based
on the results, they concluded that almost nine in 10 Tsimane people (85
percent) had no risk of heart disease, 13 percent had a low risk, and only
three percent a moderate or high risk.
By comparison, about half of Americans aged 45-84 have a moderate or high risk of heart disease.
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