Literature DB >> 11320100

Kinetics of human aging: I. Rates of senescence between ages 30 and 70 years in healthy people.

M E Sehl1, F E Yates.   

Abstract

A calculation of loss rates is reported for human structural and functional variables from a substantially larger data set than has been previously studied. Data were collected for healthy, nonsmoking human subjects of both sexes from a literature search of cross-sectional, longitudinal, and cross-sequential studies. The number of studies analyzed was 469, and the total number of subjects was 54,274. A linear model provided a fit of the data, for each variable, that was not significantly different from the best polynomial fit. Therefore, linear loss rates (as a percent decline per year from the reference value at age 30) were calculated for 445 variables from 13 organ systems, and additionally for 24 variables even more integrative, such as maximum oxygen consumption and exercise performance, that express effects of multiple contributing variables and systems. The frequency distribution of the 13 individual system linear loss rates (as percent loss per year) for a very healthy population has roughly a unimodal, right-skewed shape, with mean 0.65, median 0.5, and variance 0.32. (The actual underlying distribution could be a truncated Gaussian, an exponential, Poisson, gamma or some other). The linear estimates of loss rates were clustered between 0% and 2% per year for variables from most organ systems, with exceptions being the endocrine, thermoregulatory, and gastrointestinal systems, for which wider ranges (up to approximately 3% per year) of loss rates were found. We suggest that this set of linear losses over time, observed in healthy individuals between ages (approximately) 30 to 70 years, exposes the underlying kinetics of human senescence, independent of effects of substantial disease.

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Mesh:

Year:  2001        PMID: 11320100     DOI: 10.1093/gerona/56.5.b198

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Gerontol A Biol Sci Med Sci        ISSN: 1079-5006            Impact factor:   6.053


  47 in total

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4.  Factors affecting short-term precision of musculoskeletal measures using peripheral quantitative computed tomography (pQCT).

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Review 5.  Functional impact of sarcopenia in respiratory muscles.

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Review 6.  Rate and mechanism of maximal oxygen consumption decline with aging: implications for exercise training.

Authors:  Steven Hawkins; Robert Wiswell
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7.  Multisystem Trajectories Over the Adult Life Course and Relations to Cardiovascular Disease and Death.

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Journal:  J Gerontol A Biol Sci Med Sci       Date:  2019-10-04       Impact factor: 6.053

8.  Predictors of change in grip strength over 3 years in the African American health project.

Authors:  Douglas K Miller; Theodore K Malmstrom; J Philip Miller; Elena M Andresen; Mario Schootman; Fredric D Wolinsky
Journal:  J Aging Health       Date:  2010-01-05

9.  Rule-based cell systems model of aging using feedback loop motifs mediated by stress responses.

Authors:  Andres Kriete; William J Bosl; Glenn Booker
Journal:  PLoS Comput Biol       Date:  2010-06-17       Impact factor: 4.475

10.  Diaphragm muscle sarcopenia in Fischer 344 and Brown Norway rats.

Authors:  Jonathan E Elliott; Tanya S Omar; Carlos B Mantilla; Gary C Sieck
Journal:  Exp Physiol       Date:  2016-06-08       Impact factor: 2.969

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