Many people think that large quantity of moles can be a reason of mortification. But according to researchers these moles should be the cause of celebration because males and females who have more than one hundred beauty spots have tougher bones than normal which make them less prone to develop osteoporosis.
Such people seem to have fewer wrinkles that help them to appear up to seven years younger than their actual age. Moles are the result of speedily dividing cells which create a dark pigment in the skin, generally in childhood. They frequently start to vanish from middle age but in some people they go on to spread.
The other benefits of moles may include tauter muscles, healthier eyes and heart. These far prevail over the risk of skin cancer associated with the presence of moles that can develop into malignant melanoma subsequent to over exposure to sunshine. Until now everybody had overlooked moles said genetics expert Prof Tim Spector.
The research team from King’s College London examined more than twelve hundred non-alike female twins aged between eighteen and eighty years and found those with more than one hundred moles were half as likely to grow osteoporosis as those with less than twenty-five. People with abundance of moles are known to generate white blood cells having long telomeres.
Telomere is part of DNA that permits it to reproduce and prevent worsening. The longer the telomere is, the more time before it starts to mortify, much like the plastic tip on a shoelace. The research team is trying to find out the potential benefits and presented its findings to the Royal Society of Medicine.
The research published by Milan University showed that excessive use of alcohol shortened telomeres and paced the growth of chronic diseases. It has also been proposed by Harvard researchers that short telomere areas could influence skin cancer, though they did not connect their study to moles.
