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Early-life disease exposure and associations with adult survival cause of death and reproductive success in preindustrial humans

机译:工业界前人类的生命早期疾病暴露及其与成年生存死亡原因和生殖成功的关联

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摘要

A leading hypothesis proposes that increased human life span since 1850 has resulted from decreased exposure to childhood infections, which has reduced chronic inflammation and later-life mortality rates, particularly from cardiovascular disease, stroke, and cancer. Early-life cohort mortality rate often predicts later-life survival in humans, but such associations could arise from factors other than disease exposure. Additionally, the impact of early-life disease exposure on reproduction remains unknown, and thus previous work ignores a major component of fitness through which selection acts upon life-history strategy. We collected data from seven 18th- and 19th-century Finnish populations experiencing naturally varying mortality and fertility levels. We quantified early-life disease exposure as the detrended child mortality rate from infectious diseases during an individual’s first 5 y, controlling for important social factors. We found no support for an association between early-life disease exposure and all-cause mortality risk after age 15 or 50. We also found no link between early-life disease exposure and probability of death specifically from cardiovascular disease, stroke, or cancer. Independent of survival, there was no evidence to support associations between early-life disease exposure and any of several aspects of reproductive performance, including lifetime reproductive success and age at first birth, in either males or females. Our results do not support the prevailing assertion that exposure to infectious diseases in early life has long-lasting associations with later-life all-cause mortality risk or mortality putatively linked to chronic inflammation. Variation in adulthood conditions could therefore be the most likely source of recent increases in adult life span.
机译:一个主要的假设提出,自1850年以来人类寿命的延长是由于减少了对儿童感染的暴露,从而降低了慢性炎症和晚年死亡率,特别是心血管疾病,中风和癌症。早期人群的死亡率通常可以预测人类的晚期存活率,但是这种关联可能是由疾病暴露以外的因素引起的。此外,生命早期疾病暴露对生殖的影响仍然未知,因此先前的工作忽略了适应性的主要组成部分,选择通过适应性作用于生活史策略。我们收集了七个18和19世纪芬兰人口的数据,这些人口的死亡率和生育水平自然变化。我们将早期生命中的疾病暴露量化为个人在最初5年内因传染病而下降的儿童死亡率,并控制了重要的社会因素。我们没有发现支持早期生命的疾病暴露与15岁或50岁以后的全因死亡率风险之间的关联。我们还没有发现早期生命的疾病暴露与特别是心血管疾病,中风或癌症的死亡可能性之间存在关联。与生存无关,没有证据支持男性或女性的早期疾病暴露与生殖性能的任何方面之间的关联,包括终生生殖成功和初生年龄。我们的结果并不支持这样的普遍论断,即早年接触传染性疾病与晚年全因死亡风险或假定与慢性炎症相关的死亡率具有长期关联。因此,成年状况的变化可能是最近成年人寿命增加的最可能原因。

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