Aging & Longevity
Perceived needs and priorities of older persons in humanitarian crises: A scoping review of literature
Humanitarian emergencies, including wars, forced displacements, sudden onset disasters, and pandemics, disproportionately affect older persons. This scoping review aims to map and synthesise existing studies on the care needs of older persons in such contexts, emphasising needs directly reported by the older persons themselves. A literature search was conducted on PubMed and EMBASE, focusing on qualitative studies that reported care needs of older persons in the context of humanitarian crises....
Spatial Transcriptomic Characteristics of the Aging Human Ovary
Ovarian aging is a complex process that compromises fertility and elevates the risk of reproductive disorders. To elucidate its spatiotemporal dynamics, we integrated single-nucleus RNA sequencing and spatial transcriptomics to construct a comprehensive aging atlas of 12 human ovarian tissues spanning ages 12-54 (prepubertal, age 12, n = 1; young, ages 23-29, n = 4; middle-aged, ages 32-34, n = 2; and older-aged, ages 42-54, n = 5). Our analysis revealed aging-related transcriptomic shifts,...
Unveiling Aging and Alzheimer's Disease-Associated Dynamics of LINE1 DNA Content and Protein Expression in Mouse Brains
Despite the long interspersed nuclear element-1 (LINE1, L1) retrotransposons having been implicated in Alzheimer's disease (AD), a fundamental understanding of the AD-specific lifespan-long trajectory of L1 has been limited. Here, we characterize the content and expression of L1 covering four brain regions (hippocampus, prefrontal cortex, cerebellum, and the rest of brain tissue) of APP/PS1 mice, a murine model of AD, and their wild-type C57BL/6 littermates from 3 to 24 months of age. We report...
<sup>1</sup>H-MR spectroscopy biomarkers are associated with plasma-derived biomarkers of amyloid-β and tau in the early phase of AD continuum
The objective of the study was to evaluate the relationship of plasma biomarkers of Alzheimer's disease (AD) with in vivo proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy (¹H-MRS) markers, and their association with cognitive function across the early stages of the AD continuum. Determining these associations may clarify the AD-related biological pathways and support the development of integrated AD blood and ¹H-MRS biomarkers for early detection of these pathways. Fifty-five older adults (40 cognitively...
Depressive symptoms and plasma AT(N) biomarkers among cognitively healthy and mild cognitively impaired in a diverse cohort
Depression is a known risk factor for dementia and MCI, but its associations with AT(N) biomarkers remain inconsistent and may differ by cognitive status. We cross-sectionally studied 2929 dementia-free participants from the Health & Aging Brain Study-Health Disparities (HABS-HD). Mild cognitive impairment (MCI) was identified as having cognitive complaints, Clinical Dementia Rating scores between 0.5 and 2.0, and at least one cognitive test ≤ 1.5 SD below norms. We defined AT (N) with plasma...
Aging, Dementia, and Care Models: Global Perspectives with Insights from India
Dementia is an escalating global public health challenge, with India poised to experience one of the largest absolute increases in cases due to rapid demographic aging, lifestyle transitions, and health system constraints. This review critically examines the epidemiology, barriers to diagnosis and care, economic and social impacts, and proposes an integrated dementia care framework for India. While dementia has traditionally been viewed through a social and clinical lens, emerging evidence...
Age-related attenuation of the fast visuomotor network during rapid goal-directed reaching
Humans can react remarkably quickly to novel or displaced visual stimuli when time is of the essence. Such movements are thought to be initiated by a subcortical fast visuomotor network, but it is unclear how this network declines with age. Past work in the upper limb has detailed delayed reaching corrections to jumped visual stimuli in aging, but the underlying mechanisms contributing to these changes of the fast visuomotor network are poorly understood. Conversely, work in the lower limb has...
Age-period-cohort analysis of multimorbidity prevalence among Chinese older adults: from 2002 to 2022
This study aimed to estimate the age, period, and cohort trends of multimorbidity among Chinese older adults from 2002 to 2022, and to explore how these three trends were affected by gender and whether or not living alone. Data were extracted from the China Longitudinal Healthy Living Survey (CLHLS) (2002-2022), and a total of 52,876 valid samples aged 65 to 105 were included. We measured 15 types of chronic diseases, and participants having two or more chronic diseases were considered to have...
Control of aging-associated neurodegeneration via hypothalamic extracellular vesicles containing parathymosin
Aging-associated neurodegeneration underlies various neurological diseases; however, the neurocrine basis remains poorly understood. Here, we investigate the role of parathymosin (PTMS), a secretory protein with nuclear functions that has recently been identified as a circulating factor in the brain. The results show that loss of PTMS is sufficient to cause severe, age-dependent neurodegeneration and reduced lifespan, whereas hypothalamic PTMS gain of function counteracts aging-associated brain...
Activation of cGAS-STING signaling in senescent cells promotes the aging process by remodeling the functions of the immune system
An accumulation of senescent cells within tissues is a hallmark of the aging process. Cellular senescence is associated with an increased level of cytosolic dsDNA which primarily originates from a leakage of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) and a loss of genomic DNA integrity. Cytosolic dsDNA is an important alarming factor for cytosolic dsDNA sensors which trigger the remodeling of the immune system through diverse signaling pathways. The cyclic GMP-AMP synthase (cGAS)-stimulator of interferon genes...
Age-related changes and lack of effect of midlife resistance wheel exercise on afferent connectivity of lumbar alpha motor neurons in ageing mouse spinal cord
This two part study on the afferent connectivity of lumbar spinal motor neurons in normal ageing mice investigates; Study 1: time course analysis of age-related changes in the synaptic coverage of lumbar spinal cords of male C57BL/BJ mice at 4,15,18 and 24 months of age and Study 2: the effect of long term 8-month resistance wheel exercise (RWE) on lumbar spinal cords of male C57BL/6J mice exercised from 15 to 23 months of age. Uniquely, each study used spinal cords obtained from the same mice...
Hypertension-induced neurovascular and cognitive dysfunction at single-cell resolution
Hypertension is a leading cause of cognitive impairment, attributed to cerebrovascular insufficiency, blood-brain barrier disruption, and white matter damage. However, how hypertension affects brain cells remains unclear. Using single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) in a mouse model of hypertension induced by angiotensin II, a peptide involved in human hypertension, we mapped neocortical transcriptomic changes before (3 days) and after (42 days) onset of neurovascular and cognitive deficits....
Effect of ninjin'yoeito on age-related decline in responsiveness of the brain reward system in mice
The reward system involved in the regulation of appetite and motivated behaviors involves mesolimbic dopamine signaling from the ventral tegmental area (VTA) to the nucleus accumbens (Nac). Age-related loss of dopaminergic neurons and weakening of dopamine signals reportedly cause reward system dysfunction, and similarly, age-related changes in microglia in the VTA have been suggested to be involved in this dysfunction. Ninjin'yoeito (NYT), a traditional Japanese herbal medicine, has been...
Telehealth Use by Residence Type in Older Adults Receiving Long-Term Services and Supports: The US National Core Indicators Survey (2021-2022)
CONCLUSIONS AND IMPLICATIONS: Older LTSS users in residential care and nursing homes have significantly lower adjusted odds of using telehealth than those living in the community. These findings underscore the importance of considering residential context when evaluating telehealth access and delivery among older adults, particularly those using LTSS.
Oocyte Age-Dependent DNA Damage Can Be Reverted by the DNA Repair Competent Karyoplasm of Young Oocytes
Mammalian fully grown oocytes are believed to exhibit a weakened DNA damage response, leading to the accumulation of substantial levels of DNA damage and increased frequency of aneuploidies in an age-dependent manner. These hallmarks of reproductive ageing are generally presumed to be irreversible by rendering the oocyte chromosome complement incompatible with development. To test whether this is indeed true, we performed a series of germinal vesicle (GV) transfers between oocytes from females...
Life after migration: A comparative study on successful aging in India
Understanding the dynamics of successful aging in India is crucial, especially in the context of a rising aging population. India, being home to one of the largest internal migrant population in the world, presents a unique context to examine how migration influences aging outcomes. This study investigates disparities in successful aging outcomes between migrant and non-migrant populations in India. Utilizing the Longitudinal Aging Study in India data (n = 23,690), it focuses on the impact of...
Dehydroepiandrosterone opposes cardiac aging via NFkappaB/IL-10/Sirt1/Nrf2 mediated pathway in aged rats
CONCLUSION: DHEA supplementation in aged rats mitigated cardiovascular aging by improving hemodynamic parameters, reducing myocardial injury, demoting inflammation, enhancing antioxidant capacity, and activating key protective genes. Our findings support a potential therapeutic value of DHEA in modulating age-dependent decline in cardiac functions through a possible NFκB/IL-10/Sirt1/Nrf2 pathway.
The Association between Early Life Circumstances and Multi-System Biological Aging: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
OBJECTIVE: To systematically investigate the relationship between early life circumstances and multi-system biological aging and to synthesize evidence on mediating and moderating factors. Methods Studies from PubMed, EMBASE, Web of Science, Scopus, PsycInfo, CNKI, and SinoMed were searched from inception to February 2025. We included observational studies examining the relationship between early life circumstances (including adverse childhood experiences, childhood socio-economic status,...
Handgrip Strength Asymmetry Predicts Mortality Risk: A Prospective Cohort Study From the UK Biobank
CONCLUSIONS AND IMPLICATIONS: HGS asymmetry was associated with an increased risk of frailty, comorbidities, and mortality in subsequent years. More attention should be paid to dominant HGS asymmetry when predicting adverse health conditions and mortality.
A scalable step count-based predictor of biological age: development and validation of MoveIt! Age in community-dwelling adults and geriatric rehabilitation inpatients
Measuring biological age typically requires invasive and costly procedures. To address this, the MoveIt! Age Score was developed: a simple, scalable, and interpretable aging clock that predicts biological age using only wearable-derived steps data. MoveIt! Age was trained on steps data from the United States National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES), using chronological age, maximum step count, and step count variability to predict PhenoAge, a blood biochemistry biological age...
Aging and Longevity: Latest results from PubMed
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