An investigation by scientists from the Royal Academy (UK) found that people with as many moles on the body looked as young as they were, solid muscles, little wrinkles, hard bones. Especially for women, more moles will look younger than at least 7 years of age compared to the actual age.
Illustration. (Internet source)
According to scientists, moles formed by melanin are produced during the rapid division of cells.
Usually moles form at age four and up to 40 years old will stop. On average, the whole human body ranges from 30 to 40 moles.
Scientists studied 1,200 female twins aged 18 to 79 who found that some subjects after 40 years of age still develop moles, furthermore their skin becomes smooth and no wrinkles appear.
Scientists say people have more moles, the longer the telomeres of white blood cells, the stronger the cell's ability to copy. Telomeres are sequences of DNA replication at the end of the chromosome and carry the cell transcription gene.
Each time the cell divides, telomeres will shorten a bit, so the short length of telomeres can determine the cell's ability to divide.
According to scientists, telomere is relatively long, which can not only guarantee skin's youthfulness, but also protect other parts of the body, such as bones, eyes, and heart, slowing down aging. eyesight, osteoporosis and heart disease.
If a person has 100 moles on the body, the risk of osteoporosis is less than half that of those with only 25 flies.