ageing rate
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2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Laura A. Bardon ◽  
Clare A. Corish ◽  
Meabh Lane ◽  
Maria Gabriella Bizzaro ◽  
Katherine Loayza Villarroel ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Malnutrition negatively impacts on health, quality of life and disease outcomes in older adults. The reported factors associated with, and determinants of malnutrition, are inconsistent between studies. These factors may vary according to differences in rate of ageing. This review critically examines the evidence for the most frequently reported sociodemographic factors and determinants of malnutrition and identifies differences according to rates of ageing. Methods A systematic search of the PubMed Central and Embase databases was conducted in April 2019 to identify papers on ageing and poor nutritional status. Numerous factors were identified, including factors from demographic, food intake, lifestyle, social, physical functioning, psychological and disease-related domains. Where possible, community-dwelling populations assessed within the included studies (N = 68) were categorised according to their ageing rate: ‘successful’, ‘usual’ or ‘accelerated’. Results Low education level and unmarried status appear to be more frequently associated with malnutrition within the successful ageing category. Indicators of declining mobility and function are associated with malnutrition and increase in severity across the ageing categories. Falls and hospitalisation are associated with malnutrition irrespective of rate of ageing. Factors associated with malnutrition from the food intake, social and disease-related domains increase in severity in the accelerated ageing category. Having a cognitive impairment appears to be a determinant of malnutrition in successfully ageing populations whilst dementia is reported to be associated with malnutrition within usual and accelerated ageing populations. Conclusions This review summarises the factors associated with malnutrition and malnutrition risk reported in community-dwelling older adults focusing on differences identified according to rate of ageing. As the rate of ageing speeds up, an increasing number of factors are reported within the food intake, social and disease-related domains; these factors increase in severity in the accelerated ageing category. Knowledge of the specific factors and determinants associated with malnutrition according to older adults’ ageing rate could contribute to the identification and prevention of malnutrition. As most studies included in this review were cross-sectional, longitudinal studies and meta-analyses comprehensively assessing potential contributory factors are required to establish the true determinants of malnutrition.


2021 ◽  
Vol 100 (11) ◽  
pp. 1328-1332
Author(s):  
Denis D. Karimov ◽  
Eldar R. Kudoyarov ◽  
Guzel F. Mukhammadiyeva ◽  
Munira M. Ziatdinova ◽  
Samat S. Baigildin ◽  
...  

Aging is an individual, complex biological process, modulated by internal and external factors, characterized by a progressive loss of biological / physiological integrity, which leads to body dysfunction, increases vulnerability and death. Influence of activity type on aging rate has been convincingly shown in many studies, which makes it possible assess differences in aging rate of workers, exposed various occupational factors, conditions, work nature and intensity in certain professional and seniority groups, adequately reflects health state and can predict effectiveness of human labor activity. As integral indicator, it can help identify individuals at risk of age-related disorders, serving as a measure of relative fitness and predicting later life disability and mortality, regardless of chronological age. The article provides an overview of the main measuring ageing rate methods based on biomarkers, such as functional (“Kiev model”, WAI) and molecular genetic biomarkers (determination of telomere length, β-galactosidase enzyme activity) of human ageing, applicable in occupational medicine. The review discusses the main requirements for biomarker sets compilation, methods applicability and reliability, mathematical approaches to biological age calculating, and some workers biological age calculating problems. This allows assuming the great potential for using biological age to assess the impact of working conditions and work nature on workers’ ageing rate to prevent disability and improve quality of life.


2021 ◽  
Vol 41 (13/14) ◽  
pp. 34-50
Author(s):  
Rie Miyazaki

PurposeThis article aims to explore how Japanese women with younger children changed their commitment to the labour market between 2000 and 2019 by comparing mothers in three-generation and nuclear family households.Design/methodology/approachJapan currently has the highest ageing rate in the world at nearly 30%. Since the 1990s, employment flexibilization and women's labour market participation have proceeded in parallel, and the conservative family values of the patriarchy and gender division of labour that have provided intergenerational aid for care within households have been shrinking, by conducting a descriptive analysis of the Labour Force Survey (LFS).FindingsThis study identified that a conspicuous increase in part-time employment among mothers in both household types and a decrease by half in the working mother's population in three-generation households. These results suggest that the function of inter-generational assistance by multi-generation cohabitation, which was once thought to be effective in helping working mothers with younger children, is declining.Originality/valueA study examining the transformation of mothers' employment behaviour differences between three-generation households and nuclear family households is rare. This paper makes a new contribution to the research regarding the grandparents' caregiving, household types and mothers' employment.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhi-Ting You ◽  
Min Zhong ◽  
Qing Gao ◽  
Hong-Xiang Wei ◽  
Xi-Hao Zeng

This paper uses panel data from inland provinces of China to perform a fixed effect regression and finds that the development of the digital economy has a significant promotional effect on the health of residents. Then, the population ageing rate is further used as a threshold variable for a threshold regression, and the relationship between the development of the digital economy and the health of residents from the perspective of ageing is discussed. The empirical results show that the ageing of the population will reduce the role of the digital economy in promoting residents' health. There is a non-linear single threshold effect between the development of the digital economy and residents' health indicators. In areas of China with a better developed digital economy, when the ageing rate exceeds the threshold, the positive impact of the development of the digital economy on population health has increased compared with the population ageing below the threshold. These asymmetric developments are closely related to economic development, historical and cultural factors, and policies formulated by the government. Therefore, as the digital economy continues to advance, the government should also provide health services fairly and efficiently, and formulate effective Internet assistance policies for the elderly so that the development of the digital economy can more comprehensively promote the health of residents of all ages.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Axel Kowald ◽  
Thomas B L Kirkwood

AbstractSenescent cells play an important role in mammalian ageing and in the etiology of age-related diseases. Treatment of mice with senolytics – drugs that selectively remove senescent cells – causes an extension of median lifespan but has little effect on maximum lifespan. Postponement of some mortality to later ages, without a corresponding increase in maximum mortality, can be termed ‘compression of mortality’. When we fit the standard Gompertz mortality model to the survival data following senolytic treatment, we find an increase in the slope parameter, commonly described as the ‘actuarial ageing rate’. These observations raise important questions about the actions of senolytic treatments and their effects on health and survival, which are not yet sufficiently understood. To explore how the survival data from senolytics experiments might be explained, we combine recent exploration of the evolutionary basis of cellular senescence with theoretical consideration of the molecular processes that might be involved. We perform numerical simulations of senescent cell accumulation and senolytic treatment in an ageing population. The simulations suggest that while senolytics diminish the burden of senescent cells, they may also impair the general repair capacity of the organism, leading to a faster accumulation post-treatment of new senescent cells. Our results suggest a framework to address the benefits and possible side effects of senolytic therapies, with the potential to aid the design of optimal treatment regimens.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sophie Bennett ◽  
Antje Girndt ◽  
Alfredo Sánchez-Tójar ◽  
Terry Burke ◽  
Mirre J. P. Simons ◽  
...  

Offspring of older parents in many species display decreased longevity, a faster ageing rate and lower fecundity than offspring born to younger parents. Biomarkers, such as telomeres, that tend to shorten as individual age, may provide insight into the mechanisms of parental age effects. Parental age could determine telomere length either through inheritance of shortened telomeres or through indirect effects, such as variation in parental care with parent ages, which in turn might lead to variation in offspring telomere length. There is no current consensus as to the heritability of telomere length, and the direction and extent of parental age effects however. To address this, here we experimentally investigate how parental age is associated with telomere length at two time points in early life in a captive population of house sparrows (Passer domesticus). We experimentally separated parental age from sex effects by allowing the parent birds to only mate with young, or old partners. We found that telomere length of the offspring increased between the age of 0.5 and 3 months at the group and individual level, which has been reported previously predominantly in non-avian taxa. We further show that older fathers produced daughters with a greater early-life increase in telomere length, supporting sex-specific inheritance, and or sex-specific non-genetic effects. Overall, our results highlight the need for more studies testing early-life telomere dynamics and sex-specific heritability of telomere length.


Polymers ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (3) ◽  
pp. 324
Author(s):  
Johnatan M. Rodríguez-Serna ◽  
Ricardo Albarracín-Sánchez

Partial Discharges (PD) in cavities are responsible for the greatest ageing rate in polymeric solid dielectrics due to chemical and physical deterioration mechanisms activated by the charge carriers, Ultra Violet (UV) radiation and local temperature rising during PDs activity. From the above, it is necessary to develop prognosis tools based on PDs measurements as diagnostic quantities in order to infer the time-to-breakdown, life, of solid dielectrics for improving the reliability of electrical assets, especially in current applications where they are subject to great electrical stresses in voltage frequency and magnitude. In this paper, the degradation in polymeric materials induced by PDs in cavities is briefly discussed from a phenomenological point of view, and then it is quantitatively evaluated using a simulation-based approach and a new proposed damage function. The time-to-breakdown calculated from simulations exhibits good agreement when compared with experimental measurements. Additionally, an analysis on the effect of the magnitude and frequency of the applied voltage on the degradation rate is also presented and the effectiveness of a degradation indicator, proposed by other authors, is evaluated under different stress conditions.


Author(s):  
Valentina Yurievna Stupko ◽  
Natalya Vasilevna Zobova ◽  
Yuri Leonidovich Gurevich

High biological activity of nanoparticles (NPs) makes them promising for using in fertilizers composition. Design of such products is impossible without detection of active substance influence mechanisms on growth and development of plant as well as without detection of critical points, when influence of the investigated agent is at its maximum. Biogenic ferrihydrites (FH) are promising regulators of plant cell antioxidant system activity, also under edaphic stresses. Callus cultures are well known as convenient model system for screening of tissue and cell response to different environmental exposure. Investigation results of FH NP`s, which were produced by authors, influence on growth and development of callus culture of soft spring wheat mature wheat embryos of are presented in present article. The absence of competitive in relation to 2,4-D influence of involved levels of FH NPs (1 and 10 mg/l) on dedifferentiation process of embryo tissues was indicated. The presence of investigated agent induced the decrease of culture growth rate. However, postponed positive effect manifested in reduction of ageing rate after passing to fresh medium, the bigger, the higher had been FH NP`s level at the previous cultivation stage. The present effect may be of critical importance under field conditions under the influence of unfavorable edaphic and climatic factors, which adds further credence the potential of presented NPs applicability in agriculture.


2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Edyta Małachowska ◽  
Marcin Dubowik ◽  
Piotr Boruszewski ◽  
Joanna Łojewska ◽  
Piotr Przybysz

AbstractPaper degradation on a macroscopic scale is characterised primarily by yellowing, an increase in brittleness, and other destructive changes caused by the hydrolysis of glycoside bonds and oxidation reactions. Until now, lignin has been believed to cause these changes. However, contemporary analysis has not confirmed this assumption and has attributed low paper resistance to ageing with acidification owing to the production in acid environments that involve aluminium sulfate. In view of the common belief this manuscript presents studies on the accelerated ageing of papers with different lignin contents that are produced in neutral environments. To achieve the objective, artificially aged papers under conditions of increased humidity and temperature were investigated using chromatographic (SEC) and spectroscopic (FTIR and UV–Vis spectroscopy) techniques. Mechanical tests were used to determine the decrease in tensile properties of the samples. We observed no effects of the lignin content on the ageing rate of paper produced at neutral pH. This work also reveals the extent to which spectroscopic methods are useful for studying the papers containing lignin.


2020 ◽  
Vol 14 (20) ◽  
pp. 4363-4370
Author(s):  
Mohsen Hosseinkhanloo ◽  
Seyed Hadi Mousavi Motlagh ◽  
Ali Naderian Jahromi ◽  
Navid Taghizadeghan Kalantari

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