"We are on the verge of a revolution in medicine: understanding, treating, and ultimately preventing the causes of degenerative aging. But medical revolutions only happen if we all stand up in support of funding and research. We did it for cancer. We're doing it for Alzheimer's. We can do it for aging - and create an era of longer, healthier lives!"

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  • Tuesday, February 5, 2008

    Inflammation and the Damage of Aging

    As I might have mentioned once or twice, chronic inflammation stretched over the years causes damage, suffering and death. It's a significant component of the processes of degeneration that accompany aging.

    Inflammatory mechanisms: the molecular basis of inflammation and disease

    Inflammation participates importantly in host defenses against infectious agents and injury, but it also contributes to the pathophysiology of many chronic diseases. Interactions of cells in the innate immune system, adaptive immune system, and inflammatory mediators orchestrate aspects of the acute and chronic inflammation that underlie diseases of many organs. A coordinated series of common effector mechanisms of inflammation contribute to tissue injury, oxidative stress, remodeling of the extracellular matrix, angiogenesis, and fibrosis in diverse target tissues.

    Atherosclerosis provides an example of a chronic disease that involves inflammatory mechanisms. Recruitment of blood leukocytes characterizes the initiation of this disease. Its progression involves many inflammatory mediators, modulated by cells of both innate and adaptive immunity. The complications of established atheroma, including plaque disruption and thrombosis, also intimately involve inflammation.

    Inflammatory biomarkers and risks of myocardial infarction, stroke, diabetes, and total mortality: implications for longevity

    Inflammation is recognized as a major etiologic determinant of multiple disease states including myocardial infarction, stroke, diabetes, and metabolic syndrome, and individuals with elevated levels of the inflammatory biomarker high-sensitivity C-reactive protein (hsCRP) are at increased risk of mortality and morbidity from these conditions.

    So inflammation is not something you want too much of. But it does serve a purpose, as noted in this position paper.

    Inflammation and the aging process: devil or angel

    Inflammation is often viewed as a pathologic mechanism leading to tissue damage and interference with function, such as the process of chronic tissue scarring or fibrosis. However, it is important to note that inflammation is a crucial component of normal tissue repair as well as being fundamental to the body's defense against infection. Considering inflammation as a "causative agent in aging" belies the underlying mechanisms whereby the acute inflammatory response is necessary for survival, and efforts to reduce and control the inflammatory response leave the host susceptible to infectious agents and improper healing.

    Chronic inflammation inevitably has initiating mechanisms that include immune, autoimmune, and metabolic pathways, leading to the activation and presence of the host-protective response. It is more appropriate to target the underlying initiating conditions than the inflammatory process that ensues and treat the basic mechanisms of disease rather than interfere in a very important protective mechanism of the host.

    Which is a good point, and very SENS-like thinking. Follow the biochemical chain of age-related changes until you find the largest lever you can move with the biotechnology of today or tomorrow, and thus shut down all the undesirable changes downstream from that lever. What are these underlying conditions that lead to runaway inflammation?

    Inflammaging as a major characteristic of old people: can it be prevented or cured?

    Inflammation is necessary to cope with damaging agents and is crucial for survival, particularly to cope with acute inflammation during our reproductive years. But chronic exposure to a variety of antigens, especially to some viruses such as cytomegalovirus, for a period much longer than that predicted by evolution, induces a chronic low-grade inflammatory status that contributes to age-associated morbidity and mortality. This condition carries the proposed name "inflammaging". Centenarians are unique in that, despite high levels of pro-inflammatory markers, they also exhibit anti-inflammatory markers that may delay disease onset. The key to successful aging and longevity is to decrease chronic inflammation without compromising an acute response when exposed to pathogens.

    So one might view an increase of chronic inflammation with age as a slow failure of the immune system under accumulated load, operating far past its point of evolutionary optimization. It is promising that cytomegalovirus - and very similar viruses - contribute so greatly to this failure, given that inroads are already being made into dealing with this root cause of immune system aging:

    Posted by Reason

     
    Share |

    Posted by: Dick at February 6, 2008 8:13 PM

    RE: CMV management.

    Monolaurin and Lysine anyone?

    From literature I have read these two work quite effectively at suppressing CMV and other "herpes" viruses. Then keep HMP shunt and nonspecific immune system reved up with some ascorbate to take burden off specific immune system. I haven't seen this protocol discussed on your sight or found any specific studies combining them, but looking at individual studies they seem like a logical combination if we want to deal with chronic immune overload by CMV.

    Dick

    [Posted by: Dick at February 6, 2008 8:13 PM]

    Posted by: Judith at February 7, 2008 10:38 AM

    I have wondered for a while whether food is imflammatory and whether this may be part of the reason that calorie restriction and periodic fasting seem to be beneficial.

    [Posted by: Judith at February 7, 2008 10:38 AM]

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