Browsing by Autor "Edhitt Cortez Linares"
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Item type: Item , Arterial Stiffness in Heart‐Healthy Indigenous Tsimane Forager‐Horticulturalists(Wiley, 2025) Tianyu Cao; Edhitt Cortez Linares; Raúl Quispe Gutierrez; Daniel Eid Rodríguez; Juana Bani Cuata; Michael I. Miyamoto; Christopher von Rueden; Daniel K. Cummings; Paul L. Hooper; Benjamin C. TrumbleTsimane forager-farmers of the Bolivian Amazon demonstrate substantially lower arterial stiffness throughout adulthood than more urbanized and sedentary populations, and the differences are only partially explained by conventional cardiometabolic risk factors.Item type: Item , Rapidly declining body temperature in a tropical human population(American Association for the Advancement of Science, 2020) Michael Gurven; Thomas S. Kraft; Sarah Alami; Juan Copajira Adrian; Edhitt Cortez Linares; Daniel K. Cummings; Daniel Eid Rodríguez; Paul L. Hooper; Adrian V. Jaeggi; Raúl Quispe GutierrezNormal human body temperature (BT) has long been considered to be 37.0°C. Yet, BTs have declined over the past two centuries in the United States, coinciding with reductions in infection and increasing life expectancy. The generality of and reasons behind this phenomenon have not yet been well studied. Here, we show that Bolivian forager-farmers (<i>n</i> = 17,958 observations of 5481 adults age 15+ years) inhabiting a pathogen-rich environment exhibited higher BT when first examined in the early 21st century (~37.0°C). BT subsequently declined by ~0.05°C/year over 16 years of socioeconomic and epidemiological change to ~36.5°C by 2018. As predicted, infections and other lifestyle factors explain variation in BT, but these factors do not account for the temporal declines. Changes in physical activity, body composition, antibiotic usage, and thermal environment are potential causes of the temporal decline.Item type: Item , Very Low Prevalence and Incidence of Atrial Fibrillation among Bolivian Forager-Farmers(Elsevier BV, 2021) Christopher J. Rowan; Michael Eskander; Edmond Seabright; Daniel Eid Rodríguez; Edhitt Cortez Linares; Raúl Quispe Gutierrez; Juan Copajira Adrian; Daniel K. Cummings; Bret Beheim; Kirsten TolstrupTsimane and Moseten show the lowest levels of atrial fibrillation ever reported, 1/20 to ~1/6 of rates in high-income countries. These findings provide additional evidence that a subsistence lifestyle with high levels of physical activity, and a diet low in processed carbohydrates and fat is cardioprotective, despite frequent infection-induced inflammation. Findings suggest that atrial fibrillation is a modifiable lifestyle disease rather than an inevitable feature of cardiovascular aging.