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- Volume 5, Issue 2, 2012
Current Aging Science - Volume 5, Issue 2, 2012
Volume 5, Issue 2, 2012
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Longevity Pathways: HSF1 and FoxO Pathways, a New Therapeutic Target to Prevent Age-Related Diseases
Modern medicine is directed towards the prevention, detection and cure of individual diseases. Yet, current medical models inadequately describe aging-associated diseases. We now know that failure in longevity pathways including oxidative stress, multisystem dysregulation, inflammation, sarcopenia, protein deposition and atherosclerosis are associated with age-related diseases. Such longevity pathways are potential targ Read More
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Epidermal Cell Proliferation in Calorie-Restricted Aging Rats
Authors: Tapan Kumar Bhattacharyya, Paula Jackson, Minu Kumar Patel and James Regan ThomasCalorie restriction (CR) has been known to produce many beneficial health effects, and lowered cell proliferation from CR has been shown to produce anti-cancer effects in some tissues. In this study the rate of epidermal cell proliferation in aging Fischer 344 rats from ad libitum fed (AL) and CR colonies was assessed in relation to changes in epidermal thickness with age. Proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) was detec Read More
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Two Age-Related Accumulation Profiles of Toxic Metals
Authors: Hiroshi Yasuda, Kazuya Yoshida, Yuichi Yasuda and Toyoharu TsutsuiIn order to investigate the body burden levels of toxic metals in Japanese, five toxic metal concentrations in scalp hair samples from 28,424 subjects from infant to elderly were determined with inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS). The geometric mean of hair mercury concentrations showed a high-significant age-correlated increase (r = 0.341, p < 0.0001) with a peak at the 6th decade of life and then Read More
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Influence of Essential Trace Minerals and Micronutrient Insufficiencies on Harmful Metal Overload in a Mongolian Patient with Multiple Sclerosis
Parkinson’s disease and other neurological disorders are prevalent in Mongolia. Our previous studies revealed a significant correlation of these diseases with high oxidative stress due to a high body burden of harmful metals, such as manganese, iron, lead, cadmium, and aluminum. This report describes a 37-year-old male Mongolian patient with multiple sclerosis and essential micronutrient deficiency. This patient demon Read More
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Aging and Regenerative Capacity of Skeletal Muscle in Rats
Authors: Priit Kaasik, Maire Aru, Karin Alev and Teet SeeneThe objective of the study was to examine skeletal muscle regeneration capacity of young and very old rats during autotransplantation. In 3.5 and 30 month-old Wistar rats, gastrocnemius muscle was removed and grafted back to its original bed. Incorporation of 3H leucine into myofibrillar and sarcoplasmic protein fractions, their relative contents in autografts and synthesis rate of MyHC and actin were recorded. The relative m Read More
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Cognition in Non-Demented Diabetic Older Adults
Authors: Sirisha Nandipati, Xiaodong Luo, Corbett Schimming, Hillel T. Grossman and Mary SanoEvidence links diabetes mellitus to cognitive impairment and increased risk of Alzheimer's disease (AD) and suggests that insulin therapy improves cognition. With an increasing percentage of the US elderly population at high risk for diabetes and AD, the evidence of an association between diabetes and poor cognition in non-demented elderly may have implications for diagnosis, prevention and treatment of cognitive decline Read More
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Mini-Mental Parkinson (MMP) as a Dementia Screening Test: Comparison with the Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE)
More LessBackground: As populations age, screening instruments for cognitive impairment and dementia will become of increasing importance in clinical practice. Mini-Mental Parkinson (MMP), a derivative of the Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE), was originally described as a cognitive screening instrument for use in Parkinson’s disease. Its item content addresses some of the acknowledged shortcomings of the MMSE. Pragmatic Read More
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Influence of Genetic Factors on the Development of Breast Cancer in the Older Woman
Although the major part of the burden of disease for female breast cancer occurs at older age, less is known about the development and progression in this age group than in women under 60 years of age. As the world population continues to age, the percentage of elderly is increasing in all communities and the incidence of breast cancer will rise accordingly. Improving detection and diagnosis, and a better u Read More
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High Doses of In vitro Beta-carotene, Alpha-Tocopherol and Ascorbic Acid Induce Oxidative Stress and Secretion of IL-6 in Peripheral Blood Mononuclear Cells from Healthy Donors
Background: Oxidative stress represents an imbalance between the production and manifestation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and a biological system's ability to readily detoxify the reactive intermediates or repair the resulting damage. Our objective was to verify the existence of an in vitro dual effect of alpha-tocopherol, beta-carotene and ascorbic acid in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMNC) of healthy donors and t Read More
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Cerebral Vascular Aging: Extending the Concept of Pulse Wave Encephalopathy Through Capillaries to the Cerebral Veins
Authors: Marie Cecile Henry-Feugeas and Pierre KoskasThe recent concept of pulse wave encephalopathy helps understanding the cerebral venous remodeling in aging. This so-called periventricular venous collagenosis is an expected mechanical consequence of the age-related changes in arterial pulsations and the mechanical fatigue of vascular smooth muscles. Unlike arteriolar mechanical stress, venular mechanical stress depends on both the blood pulse wave amplitu Read More
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Polyphenols and Aging
Authors: Brannon L. Queen and Trygve O. Tollefsbol
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