The effect of aging on the rate of linear nail growth

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Abstract

The linear nail growth rate is a simple, inexpensive, noninvasive technique for the measurement of aging. When the many endogenous and exogenous factors known to influence this rate are either controlled or considered, the measurement of the rate for 1 year gives data that are both age-related and age-caused. The rate of linear nail growth decreases 50% over the life spans of both dogs and humans. In the beagle, which has a life span 20% that of man, the rate of decrease is 5 times faster than in man. There are circadian and multiple-year biorhythms of the rate of linear nail growth. There are approximately 7-yr periods of slow decline that alternate with 7-yr periods of more rapid decline.

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Orentreich, N., Markofsky, J., & Vogelman, J. H. (1979). The effect of aging on the rate of linear nail growth. Journal of Investigative Dermatology, 73(1), 126–130. https://doi.org/10.1111/1523-1747.ep12532799

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