Scientists reveal
true causes of death.
Story by
Cassidy Morrison Senior Health Reporter for Dailymail.Com
Scientists
have determined that nobody, not even a centenarian, dies of old age.
The
traditional view is that ‘old age’ is a cause of death; that as a person gets
older, their systems gradually decline and they die.
But new research from the German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases posits that old age isn't actually a true cause of death; it is just a time on a biological clock when specific diseases overwhelm the system and a person dies.
Researchers
propose that the famous 'Hallmarks of Aging,' like lingering dead cells,
damaged DNA, and worn out chromosome caps might not be the direct killers, but
rather the symptoms of the deeper aging process and a state of increased
vulnerability to deadly diseases like heart failure.
An analysis
of 2,410 human autopsy reports identified the circulatory system as the body's
primary point of failure. The
overwhelming cause of death was cardiovascular disease, heart attacks
specifically, often undiagnosed until autopsy, accounting for 39 percent of all
cases.
Even among
centenarians, people 100 years and older, seen overall as healthy; autopsies
revealed that they didn't die of 'old age'. Nearly 70 percent died from cardiovascular
causes, a quarter from respiratory failure, and smaller percentages from other
specific organ failures.
This theory
deals a major blow to the longevity industry, arguing that increasingly popular
‘anti-aging’ drugs do not slow aging; rather, they merely delay one particular
disease.
While heart
attacks caused 39 percent of deaths, general heart or lung failure was behind
38 percent of deaths, stroke nearly 18 percent and blood clots in the lungs
caused 10 percent. A major artery rupture accounted for just under 10 percent
of deaths.
These
percentages add up to more than 100 percent because many people had a
combination of these issues; a heart attack led to heart failure, for instance.
When the
body stops, its energy disperses rather than vanishing. For humans, the Achilles' heel isn't aging;
it's the failure of the circulatory system.
The
hallmarks are not the direct cause of death on a death certificate. Instead, they are indicators of a body in a
weakened state, which is then more likely to succumb to a diagnosable fatal
disease like a heart attack, stroke, or organ failure.
The
researchers said: ‘Aging research has long been shaped by assumptions that may
not fully account for the complexity of the aging process. One of the most persistent assumptions is that
extending lifespan equates to slowing aging.
‘However…
age-related mortality is often determined by a narrow set of life-limiting
pathologies rather than by a generalized, systemic aging process.
'As a
result, lifespan extension frequently reflects the delayed onset of specific
diseases rather than a slowing of aging per se.’
The
researchers argued that the foundation of anti-aging science is built on flawed
logic.
When they
reviewed the key studies used to validate the 'Hallmarks of Aging,' they found
that 57 percent to 100 percent of the experiments had only been tested in
already-old animals, leaving a major gap in proof about whether targeting these
hallmarks can actually slow aging from the start.
Scientists,
they argued, cannot tell if something slows aging or just treats symptoms in
the already-old. Most studies only treat
old animals, conflating disease treatment with aging modification.
In the few
studies that included young animals, the treatment helped both young and old
animals equally 72 percent of the time. This
means it was just a general health boost, not something that changed the rate
of aging.
For
instance, one major hallmark is ‘zombie cells,’ which refer to damaged cells
that stop dividing but do not die and instead linger in the body and release
inflammatory chemicals, contributing to aging and diseases like Alzheimer's,
arthritis, cancer, and diabetes.
The claim
is that these cells are a primary driver of aging itself. If true, removing them should not just make
old bodies less sick, it should fundamentally slow down the rate at which
multiple organs deteriorate over time.
To
effectively study these interventions’ ability to slow the systemic
deterioration that leads to disease-related deaths, the researchers argue that
scientists should give experimental treatments to animals in middle age so that
they can track decline as they age, not just when they’re already old and
frail.
‘Biological
clocks’ have emerged from this space, promising to predict people’s biological
age and mortality risk based on data patterns, like DNA changes that turn
certain genes on and off, that correlate with age.
But the
researchers say that these clocks track biomarkers that change alongside aging,
not necessarily ones that drive it. Changing
one’s clock score might mean they have altered a sign of aging, but not
necessarily the underlying process.
Note: There
is a method of measuring your “Biological Age” which can be very different from
your age in years.
Here is a free biological age calculator:
Here is the ending song for our DSU presentation:
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