Early maturation of a person affects his entire life. In particular, it can make a person vulnerable to a number of chronic diseases associated with aging, according to Canadian scientists from the University of British Columbia, according to an Internet publication for girls and women from 14 to 35 years old Pannochka. Net Researchers have studied the impact of early life experiences on human health in adulthood. Within the framework of the study, the scientists compiled genome profiles of 103 healthy people aged 25 to 40 years. In the past, the participants in the experiment were either at the upper or lower levels of the socioeconomic level. The place of these people in society was determined by the size of their families' income, the level of education and employment of the first five years of life.
It turned out that those people who were in early life in cramped circumstances, genes associated with inflammation, at some point selectively "turned on". Scientists believe that this is due to the fact that in people with low socioeconomic status at the beginning of life, cells do not respond effectively to the hormone cortisol, which affects the inflammatory processes. There is also a certain biological "legacy" of early life experience that persecutes a person in the future, experts say..
Researchers came to the conclusion that early life experience is implanted in the human body. The revealed regularity may be associated with a higher incidence of injury to people growing up in the "bottoms" of the society, infectious, respiratory, cardiovascular diseases, as well as some forms of cancer, experts from the interdisciplinary team of researchers noted, which also included scientists from the University of California, USA.
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