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Deep inside the Amazon rainforest scientists uncover the keys to longer living: ‘We found zero cases of Alzheimer’s. It is remarkable’

An indigenous tribe in the heart of the Bolivian jungle may provide clues to how long a person can live. Scientists claim they are the healthiest people ever studied.

The Tsimane community is one of the last groups of people on the planet to live a full subsistence lifestyle of hunting, foraging, and farming. Less than 10 percent of their daylight hours are spent in sedentary activities, compared to 54 percent in industrious populations, and they have little access to processed foods, alcohol, and cigarettes.

For decades, scientists have marveled at the astonishing heart and brain health of the Tsimane tribe, who are deep-rooted in the Amazon rainforest, 600 kilometers (370 miles) north of La Paz, Bolivia’s largest city.

There have been no reported cases of Alzheimer’s among the tribe’s 16,000 members, while research has shown that older members of the tribe have 70 percent less brain atrophy than their peers in industrialized countries.

A decrease in hypertension, diabetes and heart problems was also observed.

The Tsimane farming-foraging community (pictured) from lowland Bolivia was once said to have the 'healthiest hearts ever studied'

The Tsimane farming-foraging community (pictured) from lowland Bolivia was once said to have the ‘healthiest hearts ever studied’

A team of researchers led by University of New Mexico anthropologist Hillard Kaplan has been studying the tribe for two decades.

They found that the Tsimanes are constantly active, hunting animals, planting food and weaving roofs.

An average hunt for the tribe lasts more than eight hours and covers 18 km.

Meanwhile, only 14 percent of the calories they consume come from fat, compared to 34 percent in the U.S., according to the study conducted by the BBC.

Their diet is also high in fiber, with 72 percent of their calories coming from carbohydrates, compared to 52 percent in the U.S.

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In addition, they usually get their protein from the animals they hunt, such as birds, monkeys and fish. Furthermore, they do not use frying in their cooking.

Scientists conclude that such lifestyle habits could hold the key to longer lives in Western societies.

Normally, fats, cholesterol, and other substances build up in people’s blood vessels. These substances can cause their arteries to thicken or harden as they age, causing atherosclerosis.

The Tsimane and Moseten hunter-gatherer communities in the Bolivian Amazon have a dementia rate 11 times lower than the US, a study finds

The Tsimane and Moseten hunter-gatherer communities in the Bolivian Amazon have a dementia rate 11 times lower than the US, a study finds

The Tsimane and Moseten hunter-gatherer communities in the Bolivian Amazon have a dementia rate 11 times lower than the US, a study finds

The Tsimane are a tribe of about 16,000 people who live along the banks of the Maniqui River in the Bolivian Amazon.

The Tsimane are a tribe of about 16,000 people who live along the banks of the Maniqui River in the Bolivian Amazon.

The Tsimane are a tribe of about 16,000 people who live along the banks of the Maniqui River in the Bolivian Amazon.

But a 2017 study published by The Lancet found that 65 percent of 705 Tsimanes over the age of 40 had coronary artery calcium (CAC), a sign of clogged arteries that puts patients at greater risk of heart attack.

For comparison, 80 percent of Americans show symptoms of CAC.

Professor Kaplan concluded: ‘The arteries of a 75-year-old Tsimane look more like the arteries of a 50-year-old American.’

However, the study is partly limited by the fact that Tsimanes do not keep track of their age, as many have difficulty counting.

Scientists often use the ages of their children to calculate data about tribe members.

A 78-year-old Tsimane named Juan told the BBC: ‘Now the hardest part is my body. I can’t walk far anymore… it takes two days at most.’

Despite their remarkable brain and heart health, Tsimane populations have low life expectancies due to other threats in their environment.

When Professor Kaplan began his research, their life expectancy was just 45 years, but it has now risen to 50 years.

Bolivian doctor Daniel Eid Rodríguez, a medical coordinator for the researchers, told the BBC: ‘These people who reached the age of 80 were the ones who managed to survive a childhood full of diseases and infections.’

Tribe members were found to have high levels of pathogens and inflammation, suggesting they are constantly fighting infection.

It is speculated that this constant exposure to infections could also benefit their long-term health.

However, some aspects of the Tsimanes’ way of life are changing. Several wildfires in the region in 2023 destroyed nearly two million hectares of jungle and forest, causing animals to leave.

It has made hunting in the region more difficult, BBC defeated.

The tribe also begins using boats with outboard motors, which reduces the amount of rowing they do before – one of the most strenuous activities they are used to.

Tsimane Hilda, who is said to be 81 years old, told the newspaper: “I am not afraid of dying because they are going to bury me and I will lie there… very still.”

WHO ARE THE TSIMANE TRIBE?

The Tsimane are a tribe of about 16,000 people who live along the banks of the Maniqui River in the Bolivian Amazon.

Unlike other tribes in the Amazon, the group has remained isolated from modern society since they rejected the advances of Jesuit missionaries in the late 17th century.

The tribe, which consists of 80 small villages scattered across the rainforest, is one of the last groups in the world that survives solely by foraging, fishing and hunting.

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They fish with bows and arrows and poisonous vines, and hunt with machetes and sniffer dogs.

Despite their rugged lifestyle, Tsimane men have a third less testosterone than Western men, but the testosterone levels of Bolivian hunter-farmers do not decline with age.

Thanks to their stable testosterone levels, tribesmen rarely suffer from obesity, heart disease and other ailments associated with old age.

The breast milk of Tsimane women contains more omega-3 fatty acids, which are crucial for brain development, than the breast milk of Western women.

The average Tsimane family has nine children, although about five percent die before their first birthday and 15 percent die before they are five years old.

More than 70 percent of the Tsimane diet consists of high-fiber carbohydrates, including rice, plantain, cassava, corn, nuts and fruits.

The tribesmen eat only 38 grams of fat per day, of which 11 grams are saturated fat and no trans fats.

The Tsiname are traditionally animists and believe that supernatural beings living in the forest determine their fate.

They brew cassava beer in huge vats, an important part of social events that bring families and villages together.

They speak Tsimane as their primary language—a language completely different from other indigenous groups even a few miles away. But many also speak Spanish, thanks to recent bilingual education efforts.

The small number of Tsimane living around the town of San Borja own motorcycles and use cell phones, but further along the Maniqui River, life for the tribesmen is much more traditional.

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