77 results match your criteria: "The National Institute on Aging[Affiliation]"

Background: Poor muscle strength is a risk factor for disability; nonetheless its discriminative capacity in identifying people who will become disabled is poor. We evaluated whether muscle power, which also is a risk factor for disability, has better discriminative capacity compared to muscle strength.

Methods: We used data from the population based InCHIANTI study.

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Caloric restriction (CR) slows biological aging and prolongs healthy lifespan in model organisms. Findings from the CALERIE randomized, controlled trial of long-term CR in healthy, nonobese humans broadly supports a similar pattern of effects in humans. To expand our understanding of the molecular pathways and biological processes underpinning CR effects in humans, we generated a series of genomic datasets from stored biospecimens collected from n = 218 participants during the trial.

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Caloric restriction (CR) slows biological aging and prolongs healthy lifespan in model organisms. Findings from CALERIE-2 - the first ever randomized, controlled trial of long-term CR in healthy, non-obese humans - broadly supports a similar pattern of effects in humans. To expand our understanding of the molecular pathways and biological processes underpinning CR effects in humans, we generated a series of genomic datasets from stored biospecimens collected from n=218 participants during the trial.

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Findings from the Study of Muscle, Mobility and Aging (SOMMA) in this issue of Aging Cell show that several biological pathways in skeletal muscle cells play an important role in determining mobility in older adults. These are based on assays in skeletal muscle biopsies obtained from participants, aged 70 years and older in SOMMA tested for association with assessments related to mobility, including muscle mass, strength, power, cardiopulmonary fitness, and 400 m walking speed. The papers show that, using mass spectrometry, oxidative modifications of proteins essential to myocellular function are associated with poorer mobility.

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Geroscience poses that core biological mechanisms of aging contribute to chronic diseases and disabilities in late life and that health span and longevity can be modulated by pharmacological and behavioral interventions. Despite strong evidence from studies in model organisms and great potentials for translation, most geriatricians remain skeptical that geroscience will help them in the day-by-day battle with the consequences of aging in their patients. We believe that a closer collaboration between gerontologists and geriatricians is the key to overcome this impasse.

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Article Synopsis
  • Abnormal regulation of blood pressure (BP) when standing up can lead to reduced blood flow to the brain and may increase the risk of dementia, which could serve as an early indicator of neurodegenerative processes.
  • A study analyzed BP changes and reports of dizziness related to standing in a large cohort over nearly 26 years, finding that significant drops in systolic BP shortly after standing were linked to a higher likelihood of developing dementia.
  • Results suggest that monitoring sudden drops in BP upon standing might be important in identifying individuals at risk of dementia, indicating a need for increased clinical awareness regarding transient orthostatic hypotension.
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A complex systems approach to aging biology.

Nat Aging

July 2022

Department of Oncology, Quantitative Sciences Division, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, USA.

Having made substantial progress understanding molecules, cells, genes and pathways, aging biology research is now moving toward integration of these parts, attempting to understand how their joint dynamics may contribute to aging. Such a shift of perspective requires the adoption of a formal complex systems framework, a transition being facilitated by large-scale data collection and new analytical tools. Here, we provide a theoretical framework to orient researchers around key concepts for this transition, notably emergence, interaction networks and resilience.

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Order of Onset of Physical Frailty and Cognitive Impairment and Risk of Repeated Falls in Community-Dwelling Older Adults.

J Am Med Dir Assoc

April 2023

Center on Aging and Health, Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions, Baltimore, MD, USA; Division of Geriatric Medicine and Gerontology, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA. Electronic address:

Objectives: To examine whether physical frailty onset before, after, or in concert with cognitive impairment is differentially associated with fall incidence in community-dwelling older adults.

Design: A longitudinal observational study.

Setting And Participants: Data from 1337 older adults age ≥65 years and free of physical frailty or cognitive impairment at baseline were obtained from the National Health Aging Trends Study (2011‒2017), a nationally representative cohort study of US older adult Medicare beneficiaries.

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Changes in old age that contribute to the complex issue of an increased metabolic cost of walking (mass-specific energy cost per unit distance traveled) in older adults appear to center at least in part on changes in gait biomechanics. However, age-related changes in energy metabolism, neuromuscular function and connective tissue properties also likely contribute to this problem, of which the consequences are poor mobility and increased risk of inactivity-related disease and disability. The U.

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Harnessing the Power of Community-Engaged Science to Facilitate Access and Uptake of COVID-19 Testing: RADx-UP.

Am J Public Health

November 2022

Monica Webb Hooper and Eliseo J. Pérez-Stable are with the National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities, National Institutes of Health (NIH), Bethesda, MD. Wilson M. Compton is with the National Institute on Drug Abuse, NIH. Elizabeth R. Walsh is with the Office of the Director, NIH. Richard J. Hodes is with the National Institute on Aging, NIH.

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Preface: Expert Advice to Enhance Aging Research and the Health and Retirement Study.

Forum Health Econ Policy

December 2022

Health and Retirement Study Program Official and Chief of the Population and Social Processes branch in the Division of Behavioral and Social Research at the National Institute on Aging, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, USA.

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Biologic aging reflects the genetic, molecular, and cellular changes underlying the development of morbidity and mortality with advancing chronological age. As several potential mechanisms have been identified, there is a growing interest in developing robust measures of biologic age that can better reflect the underlying biology of aging and predict age-related outcomes. To support this endeavor, the Research Centers Collaborative Network (RCCN) conducted a workshop in January 2022 to discuss emerging concepts in the field and identify opportunities to move the science forward.

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A Health System That Won't Learn From Its Mistakes.

Health Aff (Millwood)

September 2022

Chandra Keller is a lead social science analyst in the Division of Behavioral and Social Research at the National Institute on Aging, in Bethesda, Maryland, and a current student in the School of Public Health at the University of Michigan. The opinions expressed in this essay are the author's own and should not be interpreted as representing the official viewpoint of the US Department of Health and Human Services, the National Institutes of Health, or the National Institute on Aging. The author thanks her colleague Elena Fazio for her review and comments on an earlier draft of this essay.

When a patient dies from a medical error, there often is no recourse for the family.

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Depressive symptoms before and after Parkinson's diagnosis-A longitudinal analysis.

PLoS One

August 2022

Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, College of Human Medicine, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI, United States of America.

Background: Depression is common in Parkinson's disease (PD). It is however unclear when and how depressive symptoms develop and progress in the course of PD development.

Objective: To assess how depressive symptoms evolve in PD, using repeated measures.

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Aging is characterized by the accumulation of damage to macromolecules and cell architecture that triggers a proinflammatory state in blood and solid tissues, termed inflammaging. Inflammaging has been implicated in the pathogenesis of many age-associated chronic diseases as well as loss of physical and cognitive function. The search for mechanisms that underlie inflammaging focused initially on the hallmarks of aging, but it is rapidly expanding in multiple directions.

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Post-Hospital Availability of Instrumental Support May Influence Patients' Readiness for Discharge.

Prof Case Manag

May 2022

Beth E. Schultz, PhD, DNP, RN, is a recent PhD graduate and her research activities focus on instrumental support related to home recovery and health care in the camp setting. She is currently working on research related to fatigue for camp staff and the impact of COVID-19 in the camp setting.

Purpose Of Study: Evaluate the relationship between unplanned acute care utilization after discharge from an index hospital admission and registered nurse and patient perceptions of available instrumental support the patient would have after discharge.

Primary Practice Setting: Three hospitals in a large regional hospital system in the southeastern United States.

Methodology And Sample: Retrospective, secondary quantitative analysis of 13,361 patient records (mean age 58.

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Diet-induced obesity is a major risk factor for metabolic syndrome, diabetes and cardiovascular disease. Here, we show that a 5-d fasting-mimicking diet (FMD), administered every 4 weeks for a period of 2 years, ameliorates the detrimental changes caused by consumption of a high-fat, high-calorie diet (HFCD) in female mice. We demonstrate that monthly FMD cycles inhibit HFCD-mediated obesity by reducing the accumulation of visceral and subcutaneous fat without causing loss of lean body mass.

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