Is there a mate or anxiety? Easy to die soon

Living with a mate or worry and stress can make many people return to eternity earlier than the life they deserve.

Professor Pat Monaghan, a lecturer at Glasgow University in the UK, and his colleagues studied the maggots to learn about the relationship between bird's longevity and the level of anxiety of a mate.

Picture 1 of Is there a mate or anxiety?  Easy to die soon

The team selects the fragile bird because each of them only lives with one of the opposite sex throughout their lives. In addition, the mechanism of dealing with stress in the fragile bird is like a human. Therefore, the results of their research can be applied to us.

Experts divided some newly born manholes into two equal groups. They inject stress hormones into one group, and the other group is not injected. Then both groups were raised in a normal environment. Due to the effects of stress hormones, half of the birds often fall into a state of anxiety and panic.

Picture 2 of Is there a mate or anxiety?  Easy to die soon
Japanese fragrant birds.

When the birds turn into a mature stage, experts create conditions for them to choose their partners. Then they track their partner's lifespan.

The results show that the life expectancy of the birds vaccinated is much shorter than the others. Their partners are also four times more likely to die early than their mates.

According to Monaghan, if we extrapolate this finding in humans, we can say that if someone has to live in a stress-free environment when they are babies, the risk of premature death of both them and their spouse is high. more than the others.