Old Age Flashcards

1
Q

Life Expectancy

A

-Average healthy LE – number of years person can expect to live in full health, without disease/injury

  • In 1900, LE average age 50; NOW - 76 (men), 81(women)
  • –Improved nutrition, medical treatment, sanitation, safety
  • –Varies with SES, ethnicity, nationality
  • How many live to be 100 out of 10,000 (US)?– 1.7!
  • Salomon et al., 2012 –Where does US fall on list?
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2
Q

It was the best of times

A
  • Older people prioritize positive emotional states
  • –Positivity effect – shut out negative emotions
  • —-Hardest to remember upsetting images, words, facts
  • Older people live less stressful lives
  • –Report fewer daily stresses
  • –Outside world treats you with special care
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3
Q

It was the worst of times

A
  • Miserable, left to languish, lonely, impoverished?
  • Economic cutbacks in elderly entitlements
  • Social connectedness – losing friends, spouse
  • –Upsurge in depression beyond 70s
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4
Q

Aging happens

A

Progressive signs of physical deterioration intrinsic to aging process

Onset varies, but it is universal  genetically preprogrammed into DNA

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5
Q

Aging Happens: Three Principles

A

Three principles:

  1. ) Normal aging turns into disease  difficulties handling life
    - –Bone density loss  Osteoporosis
    - –Atherosclerosis (plaque build-up in arteries)  Heart disease
    - –Wear and tear on body  Arthritis
    2) Disease turns into disability daily activities affected
    - -Instrumental problems – cooking, cleaning, driving to store (independent living)
    - —Half of 85+ who are living in homes experience these
    - -Basic limitations – self-care, standing, getting to bathroom (affect 1 in 6 of oldest old)

3) Disability into universal death  Lifespan has a limit.
- -More people than ever are living to 100

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6
Q

Sensory Changes

A
  • Further declines in eyesight, hearing
  • –Elderspeak – think elderly look physically (and therefore mentally) impaired – like infant-directed speech
  • Taste and smell - Reduced sensitivity to sweet, salty, sour, bitter (common after 60)
  • –Can be caused by smoking, dentures, medications, pollutants
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7
Q

Memory

A
  • Declines with age; more difficult the task, more differences we see between younger adults and elderly
  • –Neural deterioration of frontal lobes, cortical shrinkage
  • –Memory type matters –
  • —-Episodic most fragile (e.g., “10 years ago, I went…”)
  • —-Semantic can be as good as young adult (e.g., 7 days are in one week)
  • —-Procedural longest lasting (e.g., tie shoes)
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8
Q

Dementia

A

Alzheimer’s disease – neurons wither away, replaced by neurofibrillary tangles and senile plaques

  • –Cortical decay, but early diagnosis can help
  • –Genetic link – 15% of US has two copies of genetic marker, doubles chances of getting it
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9
Q

Dementia: Causes

A

-Vascular dementia – impairments in vascular system (network of arteries feeding brain) – multiple small strokes

  • Dementia with Lewy Bodies (DLB)
  • –Third most common form of dementia
  • –Movement symptoms (akin to Parkinson’s) early on
  • –Hallucinations & misidentification of familiar people common in early stages
  • –No known genetic component
  • To prevent dementia (broadly) – heart healthy diet, well-educated, regular exercise
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