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Determinants of spiritual well-being in older adults: the role of geriatric assessment domains and religious coping

5 hours 13 minutes ago
CONCLUSIONS: Depressive symptoms appear to be the dominant negative correlate of spiritual well-being in geriatric outpatients, while religious coping shows an independent positive link. The attenuation of functional measures after accounting for depressive symptoms may align with gerotranscendence theory or simply reflect ceiling effects in this functionally well-preserved outpatient sample. Either way, these data underscore the relevance of addressing depressive symptoms and acknowledging...
Rıdvan Erten

Social participation and subjective well-being among older adults: item-level evidence and screening potential in an East Asian aging society

5 hours 13 minutes ago
CONCLUSION: Higher social participation is strongly associated with better subjective well-being in older adults, particularly through relational and health-oriented activities. Social participation scores may serve as a useful community-based indicator for detecting low well-being. Culturally sensitive interventions that promote meaningful, voluntary, and inclusive participation-alongside structural supports such as transportation and social prescribing-may help enhance psychological well-being...
Kai-Lin Liang

Patient-reported measures of physical activity level for older adults in the home care setting: a systematic review and assessment of psychometric properties

5 hours 13 minutes ago
CONCLUSIONS: CHAMPS, PASE, and LAPAQ showed the most acceptable psychometric properties. Most PROMs had limited responsiveness and inconsistencies. Implementation should focus on robust PROMs, while research should enhance measurement quality, validate tools in home care settings, and standardize measurement methods.
Roger Martí-Tarradell

Determinants of medical students' perceptions of older people: a cross-sectional study

5 hours 13 minutes ago
CONCLUSIONS: Medical students mostly demonstrated positive attitudes towards older people, particularly in terms of respect and willingness to provide support. Regular contact with older people and appropriately designed gerontological education may contribute to more positive attitudes towards older adults and help counteract ageism among future healthcare professionals.
Sylwia Kocur

Age-Associated Senescence of Decidual Macrophages: A Key Mediator of Adverse Pregnancy Outcomes in Advanced Maternal Age

5 hours 13 minutes ago
Senescence of immune cells can drive senescence of solid organs, and reversing immune cell senescence ameliorates organismal senescence phenotypes. As the second largest subset of decidual immune cells, macrophages play a critical role in pregnancy. However, whether decidual macrophages (DM) exhibit senescence in advanced maternal age (AMA) pregnancies (≥ 35 years old) and their involvement in AMA-related adverse outcomes remain undefined. This study elucidates the phenotypic and functional...
Yujing Zhang

Nearly half of kidney transplant patients never even get started

19 hours 2 minutes ago
A massive national study found that nearly half of Americans with kidney failure who are referred for a transplant never even begin the evaluation process, and only 19% make it onto the transplant waitlist. Researchers discovered that factors such as where a person lives, whether they are married, their income level, language, age, and even which transplant center they use can dramatically affect their chances of moving forward.

A surprising brain discovery is forcing scientists to rethink movement disorders

20 hours 3 minutes ago
A surprising discovery is overturning a long-held assumption about how the brain’s movement center works. Researchers found that two key cerebellar cell types—thought to be tightly linked—often don’t behave in predictable ways, even though one directly influences the other. The finding suggests scientists may have been relying on the wrong signals when studying disorders such as dystonia, ataxia, and tremor.

Recurrent patterns of TOP1-mediated neuronal genomic damage shared by major neurodegenerative disorders

1 day 5 hours ago
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), frontotemporal dementia (FTD), and Alzheimer's disease (AD) represent two major categories of neurodegenerative disorders-TAR DNA-binding protein 43 (TDP-43) and tau proteinopathies-for which the mechanisms driving neuronal death remain unclear. Single-cell whole-genome sequencing of 469 neurons from C9ORF72 ALS, C9ORF72 FTD, AD, and control brains revealed increased somatic single-nucleotide variants (sSNVs) and insertions/deletions (sIndels) in all three...
Zinan Zhou

Amylin at the crossroads of type 2 diabetes and neurodegenerative diseases

1 day 5 hours ago
Type 2 diabetes (T2D) is traditionally viewed as a metabolic disease centered on insulin resistance and β-cell failure. However, growing evidence supports its reclassification as a systemic proteinopathy, in which the aggregation of amylin (islet amyloid polypeptide, IAPP) emerges as a key pathogenic event. In this review, we examine the shift toward an IAPP-centric model of disease, highlighting how IAPP misfolding and aggregation drive β-cell dysfunction independently of, and in parallel with,...
Inés López Del Castillo

Plasma proteomic profiles of Alzheimer's disease and neurodegeneration in African cohorts

1 day 5 hours ago
Alzheimer's disease and related dementia (ADRD) represents a growing public health burden, especially in low- and middle-income countries. Yet, most studies focus on Non-Hispanic white (NHW) populations from high-income countries. This study investigates plasma proteomic signatures associated with amyloid pathology in African populations. Nigerian older adults from the VALIANT study and participants from a Tanzanian study, with available biomarker quantification in plasma are employed. For...
Ilaria Pola

Blood-based circular RNAs for early diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease

1 day 5 hours ago
Detection of Alzheimer's disease (AD) before the development of clinical symptoms is critical for enabling the use of new treatments. Circular RNAs (circRNAs) are highly stable non-coding RNAs enriched in the brain that can cross the blood-brain barrier. Here, analyzing blood data from 1,221 individuals with AD and healthy individuals, we identified 34 circRNAs associated with AD status. A predictive model including these 34 circRNAs was comparable to plasma phosphorylated Tau-217 (pTau217) in...
Bridget Phillips

TGF-beta1-induced endothelial transcytosis drives blood-brain barrier leakage during aging

1 day 5 hours ago
Age-related breakdown of the blood-brain barrier (BBB) is associated with cerebrovascular and neurodegenerative diseases, yet its underlying mechanisms remain unclear. Here, we find that BBB leakage begins in midlife and is driven primarily by increased endothelial caveolar transcytosis rather than tight junction disruption. AAV-mediated knockdown of caveolin-1 or restoration of Mfsd2a expression reduces endothelial vesicle formation and BBB leakage in aged mice. Transforming growth factor...
Cheng Fang

Metabolomic and lifestyle profiles refine BMI-metabolic phenotypes in older adults

1 day 5 hours ago
Conventional BMI-based classifications, even when combined with traditional cardiometabolic risk factors, limit precision in aging-related risk assessment. Here, we perform metabolomic analysis in 13,202 older adults from the natural aging cohort (NCT04517513). Leveraging a panel of 39 core metabolites, we develop accurate and interpretable machine learning models to identify metabolic dysfunction across different BMI categories, achieving area under the receiver operating characteristic curve...
Yifan Chen

Impact of simultaneous motor-cognitive training on motor capacities in older adults: A quasi-randomized parallel controlled trial

1 day 5 hours ago
CONCLUSION: This study provides insights about the potential of simultaneous motor-cognitive training for improving motor capacities in older adults, even if its efficiency is not different to motor training. Furthermore, neither incorporated nor additional training seem to be the optimal modality. Future comparative studies are needed to draw firm conclusions.
Julien Godard

Multi-omics profiling reveals systemic rejuvenation of the aged kidney through senolytic therapy

1 day 5 hours ago
Cellular senescence is a key driver of kidney aging, leading to functional decline and increased susceptibility to chronic kidney disease. While the senolytic combination of dasatinib and quercetin (D + Q) has shown promise in mitigating age-related pathologies, its long-term effects and underlying multi-level systemic mechanisms in the aging kidney remain poorly defined. Here, we systematically evaluated the long-term effects of D + Q in naturally aged mice using multi-omics approaches. We show...
Shilin Chen

Longitudinal lipidomic markers of cardiac aging and risk of coronary heart disease in American Indians: the Strong Heart Family Study

1 day 5 hours ago
Age-related decline in left ventricular (LV) diastolic function is a hallmark of cardiac aging and an early precursor to cardiovascular disease. While dyslipidemia is a known driver of coronary heart disease (CHD), the molecular pathways linking lipid metabolism to cardiac aging and subsequent CHD risk remain poorly understood. Furthermore, longitudinal lipidomic profiling of cardiac aging in large human populations has not been systematically conducted. Using an untargeted LC-MS, we repeatedly...
Mingjing Chen