Literature DB >> 32286241

The shift of the paradigm between ageing and diseases.

Francesco Salvatore1,2,3.   

Abstract

In the area of the Medical Sciences, the chronological age has always been, and still is, an indicator by which we try to understand the health status of an individual. However, besides considering people born with an already expressed disease, each human genome has sequence alterations called predisposing mutations; carriers of such genetic alterations have an increased risk of contracting diseases during their life. In addition, the exposome, i.e. the totality of environmental noxae ("hits") to which our body is exposed throughout life (through ingestion, breathing, body surface hits, and psychosociological stress agents, etc.) contributes to increase gradually but inexorably the frailty of an organism, and this process is usually referred to as "physiological ageing". This position paper proposes that we invert our visual angle and view the passage-of-time not as the cause of diseases, but consider the genome alterations present at birth and the noxae received during our life as the real major causes of ageing. The Biomedical Sciences are now increasingly unraveling the etiopathogenesis of most chronic degenerative diseases; thus, it will be possible to monitor and treat those that most contribute to the increased frailty of each person, which is now referred to with the misnomer "physiological ageing". These concepts are not banal; indeed, they imply that we must try to avoid the causes of alterations that result later in chronic degenerative diseases. Thus, we should shift our attention from the cure to the prevention of alterations/diseases also to improve both the length and quality of our life. Moreover, this approach involves real personalized or individualized medicine, thus conferring a more direct benefit to each of us by finalizing either the cure or the monitoring of diseases.

Entities:  

Keywords:  chronic degenerative diseases; disease predisposition; exposome; healthy ageing; healthy and active longevity; life expectancy; mortality rate; physiological ageing; predictive medicine

Year:  2020        PMID: 32286241     DOI: 10.1515/cclm-2020-0125

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Chem Lab Med        ISSN: 1434-6621            Impact factor:   3.694


  2 in total

1.  Association between prehospital shock index variation and 28-day mortality among patients with septic shock.

Authors:  Romain Jouffroy; Basile Gilbert; Léa Thomas; Emmanuel Bloch-Laine; Patrick Ecollan; Josiane Boularan; Vincent Bounes; Benoit Vivien; Papa-Ngalgou Gueye
Journal:  BMC Emerg Med       Date:  2022-05-19

2.  Prehospital norepinephrine administration reduces 30-day mortality among septic shock patients.

Authors:  Romain Jouffroy; Adèle Hajjar; Basile Gilbert; Jean Pierre Tourtier; Emmanuel Bloch-Laine; Patrick Ecollan; Josiane Boularan; Vincent Bounes; Benoit Vivien; Papa-Ngalgou Gueye
Journal:  BMC Infect Dis       Date:  2022-04-06       Impact factor: 3.090

  2 in total

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