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© InternetMust have good genes: Scientists discover centenarians can indulge their vices if they have good genes
Smoking, drinking and eating fast food will not stop you living to a ripe old age - if you have the right genes.

A study of hundreds of centenarians revealed they were just as likely to have vices as other people - and in some cases they indulged in them more.

Some of them had smoked for 85 years, others got through more than two packets of cigarettes a day. They also exercised less than their shorter-lived counterparts but were less likely to become obese.

The bad news is it is almost impossible to be sure if you are one of the lucky few blessed with the longevity genes.

This means, say the American researchers, that there is no excuse for not taking care of your health.

The study of 500 centenarians found they were no more likely to have dieted than the others and were more likely to have smoked and drunk

Almost 500 men and women aged between 95 and 109 were asked about how they had lived their lives for the study.

Those quizzed were Ashkenazi Jews, whose relatively recent descent from small founder groups means there is less variation in their genes than in the general population, making it easier to spot the effects of genetics.

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© AlamyThe study of 500 men and women aged between 95 and 109 found they were more likely to have smoked and drunk
The results were then compared with the answers of a second group who were born around the same time but had had normal lifespans.

If lifestyle was more important than genetics, the results would have shown the centenarians to be less likely to smoke than the others and have led healthier lives.

But this was far from the case, the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society reported.

The long-lived men and women were no more likely to have dieted than the others and were more likely to have smoked and drunk.

Researcher Nir Barzilai, of the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York, said: 'This study suggests centenarians may possess additional longevity genes that help to buffer them against the harmful effects of an unhealthy lifestyle.'

But most of us will not be so lucky. He added: 'Although this study demonstrates centenarians can be obese, smoke and avoid exercise, these lifestyle habits are not good choices for most of us who do not have a family history of longevity.'

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© Pugh