New Study Finds One Small Organ May Play Vital Role in Longevity
New Study Finds One Small Organ May Play Vital Role in Longevity
Researchers use AI to uncover how a fading chest gland shapes long‑term health outcomes.
BY MOSES JEANFRANCOIS, NEWS WRITER @MOSESJEANS
Illustration: Inc; Photo: Getty Images
Your upper chest could be the key to your longterm helath. A new study found a correlation between the health of a human’s thymus and the likelihood of cardiovascular disease or cancer.
Published on Wednesday in the science journal Nature, researchers detailed how the thymus is “crucial” for long-term health and lifespan, reshaping prior assumptions about the organ.
“These findings reposition the thymus as a central regulator of immune‑mediated ageing and disease susceptibility in adulthood,” the report reads.
Thymus Health a Key Indicator
Using AI tools, scientists analyzed more than 27,000 patient scans and medical records to evaluate thymus health. According to the journal, people with high thymic health had a mortality rate of 13.4%, compared with 25.5% among those with low thymic health.
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The thymus, a two-lobed gland sitting in the upper chest between the lungs, is responsible for T-lymphocytes, white blood cells that protect the body against pathogens and diseases.
Throughout the years, the thymus “decays with age” turning a once enlarged organ for health, into fatty tissue replacement as it shrinks.
The report added that 5.3% of people with low thymic health developed lung cancer, and that 16.7% of people with low thymic health developed cardiovascular disease.
