| Literature DB >> 30349725 |
Shigeaki Inoue1, Masafumi Saito1, Joji Kotani1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Several advanced and developing countries are now entering a superaged society, in which the percentage of elderly people exceeds 20% of the total population. In such an aging society, the number of age-related diseases such as malignant tumors, diabetes, and severe infections including sepsis is increasing, and patients with such disorders often find themselves in the ICU. MAIN BODY: Age-related diseases are closely related to age-induced immune dysfunction, by which reductions in the efficiency and specificity of the immune system are collectively termed "immunosenescence." The most noticeable is a decline in the antigen-specific acquired immune response. The exhaustion of T cells in elderly sepsis is related to an increase in nosocomial infections after septicemia, and even death over subacute periods. Another characteristic is that senescent cells that accumulate in body tissues over time cause chronic inflammation through the secretion of proinflammatory cytokines, termed senescence-associated secretory phenotype. Chronic inflammation associated with aging has been called "inflammaging," and similar age-related diseases are becoming an urgent social problem.Entities:
Keywords: Elderly; Immune paralysis; Immunosenescence; Sepsis
Year: 2018 PMID: 30349725 PMCID: PMC6186132 DOI: 10.1186/s40560-018-0333-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Intensive Care ISSN: 2052-0492
Fig. 1Changes in bone marrow/thymus accompanying aging and changes in immune response cells. Although the number of stem cells in the bone marrow is not affected by aging, differentiation into common lymphoid progenitor cells decreases and shifts to differentiation into myeloid-type common progenitor cells. Therefore, differentiation into lymphoid cells (T cells, B cells) decreases, and differentiation into myeloid cells (granulocytes/monocytes) increases. The thymus, which is the site of the differentiation and maturation of T cells, atrophies with age. Therefore, in young people, naive T cells predominate; however, with age, there is a shift to dominant T cells (memory T cells), which is activated by antigen stimulation or some internal factor. HSCs, hematopoietic stem cells; CMP, common myeloid progenitor; CLP, common lymphoid progenitor
Fig. 2Age-related changes in innate immune effector cells
Fig. 3Age-related changes in adaptive immune effector cells
Fig. 4Aging of somatic cells and immune effector cells. SAPS, senescence-associated secretory phenotype
Fig. 5Mechanism of sepsis-associated encephalopathy