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Profiles of digital disability among Chinese older adults and its association with cognitive function: a latent profile analysis
CONCLUSION: Targeted digital literacy programs and age-friendly technology designs are essential for maintaining cognitive health in older populations.
Biological brain aging, cognitive-motor decline and vascular risk: a multivariate imaging analysis of 40,579 individuals
INTRODUCTION: Age-related declines in cognitive and motor functions show highly variable trajectories. To better understand the underlying mechanisms, we investigated multivariate associative effects between modifiable vascular risk factors, biological brain aging, cognitive, and motor performance in 40,579 individuals from the population-based UK Biobank and Hamburg City Health Study.
Cerebrovascular-CSF coupling measured by broadband near-infrared spectroscopy as a physiological marker of brain aging and Alzheimer's disease
INTRODUCTION: Alzheimer's disease (AD) is strongly associated with cerebrovascular dysfunction and impaired glymphatic clearance. These dysfunctions may precede, contribute to, and interact bidirectionally with AD pathology, highlighting the importance of identifying physiological markers for the early detection of AD. Noninvasive approaches for assessing these processes and identifying early biomarkers remain limited. Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) plays a central role in clearing neurotoxins from...
Transcriptional Profiling at Single-Cell Resolution Reveals Diversity and Regulatory Networks of Primary and Secondary Senescent Cells
Senescent cells accumulate with age following stress-induced cell cycle arrest triggered by DNA damage, oncogene activation, and replicative exhaustion. While they contribute to tissue repair and tumor suppression, their persistent senescence-associated secretory phenotypes (SASPs) drive age-related diseases. The heterogeneity of senescent cell populations, particularly the distinction between primary and secondary senescence, remains incompletely understood at single-cell resolution. Here, we...
Identification of a conserved receptor for degrading ribosomes through autophagy
Ribosomes consist of approximately 80 distinct ribosomal proteins and rRNA. The genes encoding these ribosomal components are among the most highly expressed in growing cells. Changes in ribosome composition, such as those induced by oxidative stress, may compromise ribosome function. Such ribosomes are subsequently targeted for degradation. Additionally, under stress, both protein synthesis and ribosome biogenesis are downregulated. Under starvation stress, excess ribosomes are degraded through...
Development of 5-year risk prediction models for incident dementia and mortality in a community-dwelling older Japanese population: The Japan Prospective Studies Collaboration for Aging and Dementia (JPSC-AD)
Improving cognitively healthy survival is important for achieving healthy aging. Therefore, it would be valuable to estimate the future risk of either incident dementia or death in community-dwelling older adults. This study aimed to develop a set of risk prediction models for either incident dementia or death that can be applied according to data availability across diverse clinical settings, using longitudinal data from community-dwelling older Japanese adults. A total of 8,334 participants...
Speech as a dynamic biomarker of physical aging: a longitudinal study
Geroscience needs biomarkers that capture the progressive decline of integrated biological systems with age. Physical capacity, a direct manifestation of systemic integrity, is a core pillar of biological aging but is typically assessed through discrete clinical tests. Speech production, a complex motor act requiring coordinated respiratory, laryngeal, and articulatory control, shares fundamental physiological pathways with global physical function and may therefore serve as an accessible...
This popular fermented food may help flush microplastics from the body
Scientists in South Korea have discovered that a probiotic bacterium found in kimchi may help the body flush out tiny plastic particles before they can build up in organs. In lab tests, the kimchi-derived microbe clung tightly to nanoplastics even under conditions designed to mimic the human intestine, where other bacteria quickly lost their grip.
Scientists think they’ve cracked the mystery of human right-handedness
A new study suggests humans became overwhelmingly right-handed because of two major evolutionary shifts: walking on two legs and developing much larger brains. Researchers found that as human ancestors evolved, their right-hand preference steadily intensified — transforming a mild tendency into one of humanity’s most distinctive traits.
¿Este científico fue demasiado lejos en su intento por salvar la vida silvestre de Ecuador?
Los esfuerzos de Alejandro Arteaga por identificar y proteger reptiles y anfibios tropicales lo han envuelto en controversia