Youâve probably heard stories here and there about super-centenarians, i.e. people who live to be 110 or older. And youâve probably also thought that sounds like a pretty sweet deal.
Now, scientists have concluded that super-centenarians may become even more common in the futureâand people could even live way beyond that age.
Thatâs the takeaway from a new review published in the journal Nature, which analyzed the lifespan of the longest-living people from the U.S., UK, France, and Japan for each year since 1968.
Based on the data, the reviewâs researchers say they couldnât find evidence that a human lifespan limit exists. But, they say, if it does, we havenât hit it or properly ID'ed it yet.
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Thatâs pretty cool to know, given that the longest-living person in history was Jeanne Calment of France, who lived to the ripe old age of 122 years, 164 days.
For the review, researchers extended trend lines in lifespans and found that they continue to increase into the foreseeable future.
That follows a historical trend, which has seen people progressively live longer over time.
The review points out that, for example, in 1920, the average newborn in Canada could expect to live 60 years, a Canadian born in 1980 could expect 76 years, and today, life expectancy has jumped to 82 years.
Itâs worth pointing out that the new findings seemingly contradict a study published in Nature in October, which determined that most humans will max out at a younger age than Calment.
âIt seems highly likely we have reached our ceiling,â study co-author Jan Vijg, an expert on aging at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, told The New York Times when his findings were released.
âFrom now on, this is it. Humans will never get older than 115.â
But, of course, they have. The new reviewâs researchers say they canât even give a guesstimate of how long people will live, based on historical trends and future projections, but it seems like your great-great-great-grandchild could be celebrating their 100th birthday like itâs no biggie.