Peter Attia· MD
I think because the CTP is common and it's very protective and that's why you do it look it's a cross-sectional okay it by the way it's a good question that's what we asked why it's not flat but for a person who's born and is going to be a centenarian for them it's really not so so they don't die women is I need to I need to do the math we and we we could this over dinner will sketch this out on a napkin you take a hundred people who are going to be centenarians a hundred people who are not eight percent of each of them call it ten percent of each of them have LPA we should do the math on if it's are we being fooled by the age because I do have one alternative hypothesis by the way I'll show you I'll show you dinner I'll show you the actual calculation computation okay so this would be good this will answer my question because the other hypothesis I've often wondered is depending on so I'll start with my question and then I'll go to my hypothesis how much phenotyping have you done on the LPA do you know how much heterogeneity is with their Kringle repeats for example no i and i don't have their LP a level I have just their LP a genotype so the things that we've done are though we can do actually we've done a little bit on the CTP levels or we've done but those calculation are on gene to gene interaction