1 / 15

Life Expectancy, Aging and Centenarian research

Life Expectancy, Aging and Centenarian research. Carolyn R. Fallahi, Ph. D. Life Expectancy. The definition of Life span: the maximum # of years an individual can live. What is the maximum? Probably 120 years. Average Life Expectancy. Males 74 women 80 overall 77

philliprene
Télécharger la présentation

Life Expectancy, Aging and Centenarian research

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Life Expectancy, Aging and Centenarian research Carolyn R. Fallahi, Ph. D.

  2. Life Expectancy • The definition of Life span: the maximum # of years an individual can live. • What is the maximum? Probably 120 years.

  3. Average Life Expectancy • Males 74 • women 80 • overall 77 • social factors affect when we will die. • Sex differences & longevity.

  4. Predictors of Psychological longevity? • 1921 Louis Terman • “Termite” study • Reanalyzed by Friedman et al (1995)

  5. Centenarians • The number of centenarians has increased. • In 1980 there were only 15,000 centenarians. • 2000 there were 77,000 • Projected that by 2050, 834,000 • New England Centenarian study.

  6. Segerberg, 1982 • 1,200 centenarians interviewed • What makes a difference?

  7. Duke Longitudinal Study • Palmore (1982) • 25 year period • 270 volunteers • Ages 60-94

  8. The Nun Study • David Snowdon • 678 nuns in Minnesota • Issues: intellectual job & folic acid

  9. Theories of Aging • The first 3 theories that I’m going to talk about today explain aging at a cellular level.

  10. Theories of Aging • Cellular Clock Theory: Leonard Hayflick (1977) theory. • Cells can divide a maximum number of times, approximately 75-80 times. • As we age, our cells become less capable of dividing.

  11. Cellular Clock Theory • The tips of chromosomes are called telomeres and they are DNA sequences that cap chromosomes. • After about 70 or 80 replications, the telomeres are dramatically reduced and the cell can no longer reproduce.

  12. Free – Radical Theory • A second microbiological theory of aging is called the free-radical theory. • People age b/c their cells metabolize energy. • When they do this, they generate waste that includes unstable oxygen molecules known as free radicals. • These cells cause damage.

  13. Mitochonrial Theory • The role of mitochondria – tiny cellular bodies that supply energy for function, growth, and repair – might play in aging. • It seems that the decay of mitochondria is primarily due to oxidative damage and loss of critical micronutrients supplied by the cell.

  14. Hormonal Stress Theory • This theory explains aging not at a cellular level, but at a hormonal level. • The hormonal stress theory – argues that aging in the body’s hormonal system can lower resistance to stress and increase the likelihood of disease.

  15. Which one is correct? • This is anyone’s best guest. • Maybe all of them are involved.

More Related