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posted by martyb on Tuesday March 03 2020, @05:42PM   Printer-friendly
from the How-old-is-Betteridge? dept.

Is Aging a Disease?

Whether ageing can be cured or not, there are arguments for thinking about it like a disease. But there are major pitfalls, too.

The first depiction of humanity's obsession with curing death is The Epic of Gilgamesh—which, dating back to at least 1800 B.C., is also one of the first recorded works of literature, period. Centuries later, the ancient Roman playwright Terentius declared, "Old age itself is a sickness," and Cicero argued "we must struggle against [old age], as against a disease." In 450 B.C., Herodotus wrote about the fountain of youth, a restorative spring that reverses aging and inspired explorers such as Ponce de León. But what once was a mythical holy grail is now seemingly within tantalizing reach. As humans' understanding and knowledge of science and technology have increased, so too have our life spans.

[...] Maybe the ancients weren't wrong, and aging can be not only delayed but cured like a disease. Over the years, the movement to classify aging as a disease has gained momentum not only from longevity enthusiasts but also from scientists. In 1954, Robert M. Perlman published a paper in the Journal of American Geriatrics Society called "The Aging Syndrome" in which he called aging a "disease complex." Since then, others have jumped on board, including gerontologists frustrated by a lack of funding to study the aging process itself.

[...] However, labeling aging itself as a disease is both misleading and detrimental. Pathologizing a universal process makes it seem toxic. In our youth-obsessed society, ageism already runs rampant in Hollywood, the job market, and even presidential races. And calling aging a disease doesn't address critical questions about why we age in the first place. Instead of calling aging a disease, scientists should aim to identify and treat the underlying processes that cause aging and age-related cellular deterioration.

Medical understanding of that cellular deterioration began in 1962, when Leonard Hayflick, professor of anatomy at the University of California San Francisco School of Medicine, made fundamental breakthroughs to understanding aging: He discovered a limit to how many times typical human cells divide before they become senescent, or exhausted. Before then, scientists had assumed human cells were immortal. Hayflick also figured out that telomeres, which cap the ends of chromosomes and prevent them from fraying, much like plastic tips preserve the ends of shoelaces, shorten each time a cell divides. When the telomeres get short enough, a cell stops dividing.

[...] Many gerontologists distinguish between "health span" and "life span," the length of time someone enjoys relative good health versus the length of someone's life. Longevity while in poor health, pain, or with limitations that sap quality of life makes little sense. Fleming urges "regulators and public policy makers to embrace healthspan as an organizing focus for facilitating the development of medicine that target aging and chronic diseases." This shift would promote research on disease-causing processes, which could help us prevent more age-related diseases, not just manage them.

As gerontologists Sean Leng and Brian Kennedy put it, "Aging is the climate change of health care." The Population Reference Bureau predicts that 100 million Americans will be 65 or older by 2060. How will we care for this population? It's daunting to think about one's own aging, let alone the 16 percent of the world's population who will be seniors[sic] citizens by midcentury. A big-picture approach focused on the processes of aging—processes we share with nearly all living organisms—will put us on a path not only to longer lives but to healthier ones.


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  • (Score: 3, Insightful) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday March 03 2020, @06:43PM (2 children)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday March 03 2020, @06:43PM (#966079)

    A disease is a pathogen or cancer that multiplies out of control.

    If you remove the one cap on human population growth
    then humanity will be the disease that multiplies out of control.
    Some say it already has

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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday March 03 2020, @08:34PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday March 03 2020, @08:34PM (#966135)

    Governments and religions impose control to MAKE humans multiply:
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abortion_law [wikipedia.org]
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_abortion [wikipedia.org]
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religion_and_abortion [wikipedia.org]
    In hunter-gatherer societies where humans have no greedy leaders in constant dire need of more cannon/arrow/spear fodder, birth control was efficiently practiced for millenia. Which actually is the whole reason why the greedy inherited the Earth; the non-expanding populations had no need to expand, and the growing ones constantly needed to.

  • (Score: 2) by FatPhil on Tuesday March 03 2020, @09:51PM

    by FatPhil (863) <{pc-soylent} {at} {asdf.fi}> on Tuesday March 03 2020, @09:51PM (#966176) Homepage
    Disagree, triply so.

    Firstly, your definition is not a universal definition, it's one of many, and others will happily include dimished organ function as a disease, and by extension organ failure likewise would be, and some organs are pretty damn essential. No pathogen or cancer is definitionally required to be involved in that organ's diminished function or failure, it can simply be that aging has reduced your body's ability to fully maintain its necessary function.

    You also seem to think a lack of aging means immortality. It doesn't, because of things like - guess what! - pathogens and cancers. Oh, and accidents, and disasters, and predation, and toxic pollution, and starvation, and crime...

    And you also don't understand equilibria. As population changes to such an extent that it negatively affects quality of life, human behaviour will change to counter those negative effects, and eventually a equilibrium will be reached. Guess what - that'll be about the time when pollution, starvation, and crime deaths balance the birth rate.
    --
    Great minds discuss ideas; average minds discuss events; small minds discuss people; the smallest discuss themselves