The Biologic Basis of Aging Lecture Powerpoint Flashcards
Elderly age group
Those 65 and over
Gerontology vs geriatrics
Gerontology involves the social, psychologic, and biomedical study of aging and ALL aspects associated with it (includes social workers, etc) while geriatrics is a medical specialty
Aging definition
Deteriorative process beginning after maturity resulting in decreased viability and increased vulnerability
Senescence
Aging process at the cellular and organismal levels during the latter part of the life span (last 20%)
Life expectancy
Average lifespan of a specific population (location, gender, age, etc - remember the life expectancy for an individual age 80 is greater than those of age 10 because they have already survived all the car wrecks and such), at birth is 78.7 years overall
Female vs male life expectancy
females 81.2 years while male is 76.2 years
Maximum human lifespan
longest an individual has lived within a given population or species
Life span vs health span
Health span is how long an individual retains their health status and capabilities to live a functional life, a goal of geriatrics is to improve this over necessarily just improving life span
US life expectancy
Has improved in recent years but is not the highest in the world
Why do we age?
No concrete consistent reason known, previously thought to be related to evolution but has been discredited, likely multifactorial between genetics, metabolism, and environment, but ultimately due to a disruption in homeostasis (increase in entropy), primary aging is normal physiologic processes and secondary is acquired diseases throughout life, prevention helps save HUGE costs of healthcare - promote the idea of “healthy aging”
Cardiovascular physiologic changes that occur with aging (5)
- decreased myocytes
- increased collagen
- decreased compliance
- increased systolic pressure/LVH
- decreased maximum heart rate
Pulmonary physiologic changes that occur with aging (3)
- reduced chest wall compliance
- reduced respiratory response to hypoxia
- decreased ciliary function
Presbyopia
Reduced accommodation due to decreased compliance of the lens with age, often resulting in elderly individuals having to hold text further away in order to read
Reduced night vision mech of action
Reduced pupil size naturally during ages results in decreased light entering the eyes and as a result worsened night vision
Neurologic physiologic changes that occur with aging
- decrease in cortical gray matter, complexity of connections, neurotransmitter produciton
- demyelination (slowed conduction)
- reduced reflexes/proprioception