2018
DOI: 10.3389/fmed.2018.00061
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The Continuum of Aging and Age-Related Diseases: Common Mechanisms but Different Rates

Abstract: Geroscience, the new interdisciplinary field that aims to understand the relationship between aging and chronic age-related diseases (ARDs) and geriatric syndromes (GSs), is based on epidemiological evidence and experimental data that aging is the major risk factor for such pathologies and assumes that aging and ARDs/GSs share a common set of basic biological mechanisms. A consequence is that the primary target of medicine is to combat aging instead of any single ARD/GSs one by one, as favored by the fragmenta… Show more

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Cited by 637 publications
(478 citation statements)
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References 293 publications
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“…4h-i). The fact that the proteome defining these two diseases also changed in old individuals of a separate disease-free cohort supports the notion of accelerated aging in DS and AD 32,33 . Altogether, these results show that the waves of proteomic aging are differentially linked to the genomic and proteomic traits of various diseases.…”
Section: Proteins Linked To Age-related Diseases Are Enriched In Distsupporting
confidence: 57%
“…4h-i). The fact that the proteome defining these two diseases also changed in old individuals of a separate disease-free cohort supports the notion of accelerated aging in DS and AD 32,33 . Altogether, these results show that the waves of proteomic aging are differentially linked to the genomic and proteomic traits of various diseases.…”
Section: Proteins Linked To Age-related Diseases Are Enriched In Distsupporting
confidence: 57%
“…Age-related degenerative diseases, however, share several physiopathologic pathways,93 so that a role of gut microbiota in the development and clinical course of AD is highly plausible, even if not yet comprehensively investigated. In fact, studies exploring the possible contribution of infective agents in AD onset have mainly focused on the central nervous system or systemic infections, but not on microbiota 94.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As mentioned, these phenomena have also been associated with neurobiology of normal ageing . The neurobiological overlap between ageing and disease is paralleled outside the brain, with mechanistic commonalities observed in other bodily systems (see Franceschi and colleagues for review) …”
Section: Neurobiological Commonalities Are Seen In Ageing and Diseasementioning
confidence: 94%