| Literature DB >> 20157573 |
Abstract
This paper reviews the contemporary evidence that radiation can accelerate aging, degenerative health effects and mortality. Around the 1960s, the idea that ionizing radiation caused premature aging was dismissed as the radiation-induced health effects appeared to be virtually confined to neoplasms. More recently, radiation has become associated with a much wider spectrum of age-related diseases, including cardiovascular disease; although some diseases of old age, such as diabetes, are notably absent as a radiation risk. On the basis of recent research, is there a stronger case today to be made linking radiation and aging? Comparison is made between the now-known biological mechanisms of aging and those of radiation, including oxidative stress, chromosomal damage, apoptosis, stem cell exhaustion and inflammation. The association between radiation effects and the free-radical theory of aging as the causative hypothesis seems to be more compelling than that between radiation and the nutrient-sensing TOR pathway. Premature aging has been assessed by biomarkers in calorie restriction studies; yet, biomarkers such as telomere erosion and p16(INK4a) are ambiguous for radiation-induced aging. Some animal studies suggest low dose radiation may even demonstrate hormesis health benefits. Regardless, there is virtually no support for a life span extending hypothesis for A-bomb survivors and other exposed subjects.Entities:
Keywords: aging; and radiation; cancer; life span; oxidative stress
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 20157573 PMCID: PMC2815743 DOI: 10.18632/aging.100081
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Aging (Albany NY) ISSN: 1945-4589 Impact factor: 5.682
A comparison of the mechanistic theories and biological processes of aging with the health effects of IR.
| Physiological characteristics | IR health effects | |||
|
Endogenous or exogenous
free radicals
[ |
Damage to proteins
(glycation), lipids and DNA [ | Cancer, cataracts, atherosclerosis and Alzheimer's plaques. | ||
|
Endogenous
electron leakage
[ |
Increased 8-oxo-dG lesions in mitochondrial DNA and decreased
repair [ |
Cancer and neurodegeneration
[ | ||
|
The higher the metabolic
rate, the shorter the life span [ |
Oxidative damage increases
with metabolic rate [ |
Calorie restriction lowers
body temperature, increases life span [ | ||
|
Oxidative stress [ |
Shorter telomeres lead to
replicative senescence [ |
Cardiovascular disease [ | ||
|
"Mitotic clock" [ | As above. | As above. | As above. | |
|
Hypothalamus receptor
insensitivity and increased autoimmunity [ |
Hyperinsulinemia, reduced innate
and adaptive immune response (immunosenescence) and increased autoimmune
antibodies [ | Diabetes, autoimmune hypothyroidism, rheumatoid arthritis. | ||
| Hormone levels. |
Decreased naïve T-cells and
lymphocytes [ | Viral and bacterial infections, i.e., pneumonia. | ||
|
Metabolic syndrome and
activation of the TOR pathway [ | Increased insulin resistance, blood glucose and leptin. | Diabetes, cardiovascular disease, stroke, hypertension and dementia | ||
Evidence on IR's ability to induce the major pathological diseases and detrimental biological effects of aging.
| Radiation induced? | |
|
Yes: A-bomb survivors and
radiotherapy induce excess leukaemia [ | |