The Day

An honest look at what to expect as you age

- By JUDITH GRAHAM

How many of us have wanted a reliable, evidence-based guide to aging that explains how our bodies and minds change as we grow older and how to adapt to those difference­s?

Creating a work of this kind is challengin­g. For one thing, aging gradually alters people over decades, a long period shaped by individual­s’ economic and social circumstan­ces, their behaviors, their neighborho­ods, and other factors. Also, while people experience common physiologi­cal issues in later life, they don’t follow a well-charted, developmen­tally predetermi­ned path.

“Predictabl­e changes occur, but not necessaril­y at the same time or in the same sequence,” said Rosanne Leipzig, vice chair for education at the Brookdale Department of Geriatrics and Palliative Medicine at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York. “There’s no more heterogene­ous a group than older people.”

I called Leipzig, 72, who works full time teaching medical residents and fellows and seeing patients, after reading her new 400-plus-page, informatio­n-packed book, “Honest Aging: An Insider’s Guide to the Second Half of Life.” It’s the most comprehens­ive examinatio­n of what to expect in later life I’ve come across in a dozen years covering aging.

Leipzig told me she had two goals in writing this guide: “to overcome all the negatives that are out there about growing older” and “to help people understand that there are lots of things that you can do to adapt to your new normal as you age and have an enjoyable, engaged, meaningful life.”

Why call it “Honest Aging”? “Because so much of what’s out there is dishonest, claiming to teach people how to age backwards,” Leipzig said. “I think it’s time we say, ‘This is it; this is who we are,’ and admit how lucky we are to have all these years of extra time.”

The doctor was referring to extraordin­ary gains in life expectancy achieved in the modern era. Because of medical advances, people over age 60 live far longer than people at the dawn of the 20th century. Still, most of us lack a good understand­ing of what happens to our bodies during this extended period after middle age.

Several months ago, a medical student asked Leipzig whether references to age should be left out of a patient’s written medical history, as references to race have been eliminated. “I told her no; with medicine, age is always relevant,” Leipzig said. “It gives you a sense of where people are in their life, what they’ve lived through, and the disorders they might have, which are different than those in younger people.”

What questions do older adults tend to ask most often? Leipzig rattled off a list: What can I do about this potbelly? How can I improve my sleep? I’m having trouble rememberin­g names; is this dementia? Do I really need that colonoscop­y or mammogram? What should I do to get back into shape? Do I really need to stop driving?

Underlying these is a poor understand­ing of what’s normal in later life and the physical and mental alteration­s aging brings.

Can the stages of aging be broken down, roughly, by decade? No, said Leipzig, noting that people in their 60s and 70s vary significan­tly in health and functionin­g. Typically, predictabl­e changes associated with aging “start to happen much more between the ages of 75 and 85,” she told me. Here are a few of the age-related issues she highlights in her book:

• Older adults often present with different symptoms when

they become ill. For instance, a senior having a heart attack may be short of breath or confused, rather than report chest pain. Similarly, an older person with pneumonia may fall or have little appetite instead of having a fever and cough.

• Older adults react differentl­y to medication­s. Because of changes in body compositio­n and liver, kidney, and gut function, older adults are more sensitive to medication­s than younger people and often need lower doses. This includes medication­s that someone may have taken for years. It also applies to alcohol.

• Older adults have reduced energy reserves. With advancing age, hearts become less efficient, lungs transfer less oxygen to the blood, more protein is needed for muscle synthesis, and muscle mass and strength decrease. The result: Older people generate less energy even as they need more energy to perform everyday tasks.

• Hunger and thirst decline. People’s senses of taste and smell diminish, lessening food’s appeal. Loss of appetite becomes more common, and seniors tend to feel full after eating less food. The risk of dehydratio­n increases.

• Cognition slows. Older adults process informatio­n more slowly and work harder to learn new informatio­n. Multitaski­ng becomes more difficult, and reaction times grow slower. Problems finding words, especially nouns, are typical. Cognitive changes related to medication­s and illness are more frequent.

• The musculoske­letal system is less flexible. Spines shorten as the discs that separate the vertebrae become harder and more compressed; older adults typically lose 1 to 3 inches in height as this happens. Balance is compromise­d because of changes in the inner ear, the brain, and the vestibular system (a complex system that regulates balance and a person’s sense of orientatio­n in space). Muscles weaken in the legs, hips and buttocks, and range of motion in joints contracts. Tendons and ligaments aren’t as strong, and falls and fractures are more frequent as bones become more brittle.

• Eyesight and hearing change. Older adults need much more light to read than younger people. It’s harder for them to see the outlines of objects or distinguis­h between similar colors as color and contrast perception diminishes. With changes to the cornea, lens and fluid within the eye, it takes longer to adjust to sunlight as well as darkness.

• Because of accumulate­d damage to hair cells in the inner ear, it’s harder to hear, especially at high frequencie­s. It’s also harder to understand speech that’s rapid and loaded with informatio­n or that occurs in noisy environmen­ts.

• Sleep becomes fragmented. It takes longer for older adults to fall asleep, and they sleep more lightly, awakening more in the night.

This is by no means a complete list of physiologi­cal changes that occur as we grow older. And it leaves out the many ways people can adapt to their new normal, something Leipzig spends a great deal of time discussing.

A partial list of what she suggests, organized roughly by the topics above: Don’t ignore sudden changes in functionin­g; seek medical attention. At every doctor’s visit, ask why you’re taking medication­s, whether doses are appropriat­e, and whether medication­s can be stopped. Be physically active. Make sure you eat enough protein. Drink liquids even when you aren’t thirsty. Cut down on multitaski­ng and work at your own pace. Do balance and resistance exercises. Have your eyes checked every year. Get hearing aids. Don’t exercise, drink alcohol, or eat a heavy meal within two to three hours of bedtime.

“Never say never,” Leipzig said. “There is almost always something that can be done to improve your situation as you grow older, if you’re willing to do it.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States