Study associates toxic people with accelerated biological aging

A study funded by the U.S. National Institute on Aging concludes that interacting with problematic people accelerates biological aging. Each additional such person increases biological age by about nine months and speeds up the aging rate by 1.5%.

The study surveyed more than 2,000 people on the prevalence of problematic people in their lives. It then measured their biological age and aging rate using DNA patterns in saliva samples. Findings show that interacting with individuals who cause problems or complications is associated with faster biological aging. Each additional “molestia” in a person's life adds approximately nine months to their biological age. Those with more problematic people aged faster; for each additional one, their aging rate accelerated by 1.5% and increased their biological age by nine months. Biological age measures the organism's real aging, unlike chronological age, which counts time since birth. It has long been known that positive relationships prevent cognitive decline and delay biological aging. Researchers emphasize the importance of minimizing exposure to people who generate high stress and conflicts.

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Lab scene with dark chocolate, blood vial, and graph linking theobromine to slower biological aging.
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Dark chocolate compound theobromine linked with slower biological aging

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Researchers at King's College London have identified theobromine, a cocoa-derived compound, as being associated with slower biological aging. In a study published on December 10, 2025, in the journal Aging, higher blood levels of theobromine were linked to younger biological ages in participants from two European cohorts. Scientists say the findings are promising but caution that they do not justify eating more dark chocolate without further research.

New research from New York University indicates that anxiety about growing older, particularly concerns over health decline, correlates with accelerated cellular aging in women. The study, involving 726 participants, used epigenetic clocks to measure biological aging rates. Fears related to appearance or fertility showed no similar connection.

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A new study in BMJ Mental Health suggests that drinking up to four cups of coffee a day is associated with slower biological aging in people with severe mental disorders, reflected in longer telomeres—chromosome caps linked to cellular aging. The observed difference in telomere length corresponds to roughly five extra years of biological youth compared with non-coffee drinkers, while higher intake shows no such benefit and may contribute to cellular stress.

A large-scale international study has found that age-related memory decline stems from broad structural changes across the brain, rather than a single region or gene. Analyzing over 10,000 MRI scans from thousands of healthy adults, researchers observed that brain shrinkage's impact on memory intensifies nonlinearly in later life. The findings highlight a distributed vulnerability that accelerates memory loss once a tipping point is reached.

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A randomized clinical trial suggests that a year of guideline-level aerobic exercise was associated with small but measurable reductions in an MRI-based estimate of “brain age,” leaving participants’ brains looking close to one year younger than those of a usual-care control group.

A decades-long UK cohort study following 10,930 people born in 1970 found that children who showed more attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) traits at age 10 had higher odds of multiple self-reported physical health conditions and physical health–related disability by age 46. The research, published in JAMA Network Open, suggests smoking, psychological distress and higher body mass index partly help explain the link, and highlights the need for better identification and support across adulthood.

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Researchers at McMaster University and the Population Health Research Institute report that simple retinal scans, combined with genetic and blood data, may offer a non-invasive window into cardiovascular health and biological aging. An analysis of more than 74,000 people linked simpler eye-vessel patterns to higher heart-disease risk and faster aging. The study, published October 24, 2025, in Science Advances, points to potential early-detection tools that remain under investigation.

 

 

 

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