What the Life of a 117-Year-Old Can—and Can’t—Teach Us About Aging

With lab results far from ideal why did Maria Branyas Morera live more than a century?
What the Life of a 117-Year-Old Can—and Can’t—Teach Us About Aging
Maria Branyas Morera in 2019 at the age of 112. Courtesy Manel Esteller/Maria Branyas family via Eloy Santos
|Updated:
0:00

Seeing a red number on a lab report can be a jolt—and Maria Branyas Morera had her fair share of those. Her LDL cholesterol was above the cutoff, and her blood showed genetic wear and tear often linked to disease and aging.

Yet she became the world’s verified oldest woman, dying peacefully in her sleep in August 2024 at 117—without ever developing cancer, cardiovascular disease, or dementia.

Sheramy Tsai
Sheramy Tsai
Author
Sheramy Tsai, BSN, RN, is a seasoned nurse with a decade-long writing career. An alum of Middlebury College and Johns Hopkins, Tsai combines her writing and nursing expertise to deliver impactful content. Living in Vermont, she balances her professional life with sustainable living and raising three children.