San Diego Union-Tribune

SOME FOLKS REALLY DO AGE MORE SLOWLY THAN OTHERS

- BY AMY NORTON Norton writes for HealthDay News.

By age 45, rapid biological agers were already showing some health indicators normally associated with old age.

People really do vary in how fast they age, and the divergence starts in young adulthood, a new study suggests.

The researcher­s found that by age 45, people with a faster pace of “biological aging” were more likely to feel, function and look far older than they actually were. And that relative sprint toward old age began in their 20s.

The findings, the study authors said, suggest we need to take a different view of aging.

“Aging is a lifelong process. It doesn’t suddenly begin at the age of 60,” said lead investigat­or Maxwell Elliott, a doctoral student at Duke University in Durham, N.C.

Anyone who has ever known a spry, sharp-as-atack 80-year-old — or a 50-year-old burdened with health problems and disabiliti­es — knows that chronologi­cal age does not tell the whole story.

The concept of biological aging — or the speed at which body systems decline over time — acknowledg­es that. But it’s unclear exactly when people begin to diverge in their rate of biological aging, Elliott said.

The new findings suggest that split happens fairly early in life.

For the study, Elliott and his colleagues used data on more than 1,000 New Zealanders who have been followed since birth, in the 1970s, to age 45. The pace of their biological aging was tracked starting at age 26, based on measures such as body fat, heart fitness, lung capacity, markers of inflammati­on in the blood, and even cavities.

It turned out that, indeed, people varied widely in biological aging: The slowest ager gained only 0.4 “biological

years” for each chronologi­cal year in age; the fastest-aging participan­t gained nearly 2.5 biological years for every chronologi­cal year.

And by age 45, rapid biological agers were already showing some health indicators normally associated with old age. Compared with their peers, they moved more slowly, had weaker grip strength and more problems with balance, vision and hearing.

Difference­s in mental sharpness were clear, too, the researcher­s found. On average, rapid agers scored lower on tests of memory performanc­e, and they generally reported more forgetfuln­ess in daily life. Meanwhile, MRI scans showed they typically had more signs of brain-tissue thinning.

The findings were published online last week in the journal Nature Aging.

Elliott said he was surprised by the extent of the aging difference­s at the relatively young age of 45, and, he said, they were significan­t enough to notice in daily life. Rapid agers typically said they felt older than they were, for example, and doubted they would live to 75.

They also looked older than their age, based on independen­t raters who viewed study participan­ts’ facial images.

Dr. Sofiya Milman is director of human longevity studies at Albert Einstein College of Medicine’s Institute for Aging Research, in New York City.

Like Elliott, she noted that aging does not “magically start at age 60.”

“Aging is a continuum,” said Milman, who reviewed the findings. “And it probably starts even earlier than we’ve recognized.”

As for what determines a person’s rate of biological aging, Milman said genes play a role. There are certain “longevity genes” that can help shield people from environmen­tal stressors, to a degree.

But aging is not set in stone. Both Milman and Elliott said environmen­t matters, from lifestyle choices to exposures to chronic stress and poverty.

It’s clear that regular exercise, a healthy diet and not smoking can reduce the risks of various diseases. And those are things people can do now, Milman said. In the future, though, she said researcher­s also want to translate what they’re learning about the aging process into medication­s that can be given to the right people at the right time.

For some people, Milman said, a healthy lifestyle, on its own, is not enough.

Both researcher­s stressed that it’s never too late to get a checkup, rein in your blood pressure, or start exercising and eating better.

“Midlife is a great time to address these things,” Elliott said. “We can’t change the past, but there’s still a lot of time to intervene.”

The U.S. National Institute on Aging has more informatio­n on the biology of aging at www.nia.nih.gov.

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