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Late Adulthood

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Leisure time -- vacations. 12,338 men between 35 57 years. 21% less likely to die over 9 years ... Cheap available drugs for treatment. Risk factors. Obesity ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Late Adulthood


1
Late Adulthood
  • Ch 23-25
  • Developmental Psychology
  • Jen Wright

2
Health and aging
  • Positives
  • Less susceptibility to colds and allergies
  • Frequency of accidental deaths drops dramatically
  • Negatives
  • Natural aging process
  • Increased disability
  • Increased vulnerability to disease
  • Decreased capacity to respond to stress
  • And, even in the absence of these things, death.

3
The aging process
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what ages?
  • Sense organs
  • All internal systems
  • Cardiovascular, respiratory, etc.
  • Immune system
  • Muscles, joints, bones
  • Sleep
  • Brain
  • Sexual reproductive system
  • Physical appearance
  • Attitudes

6

Aging can be beautiful!
7
different kinds of aging
  • Universal aging
  • Primary aging
  • Probabilistic aging
  • Secondary aging
  • Chronological aging
  • Biological aging
  • Social aging
  • Ageism
  • Population aging

8
universal/biological aging
  • Senesence
  • The universal biological processes of a living
    organism approaching an advanced age.
  • Oganismal senescence
  • Increasing homeostatic instability
  • Declining ability to respond to stress
  • Increasing risk of disease, dysfunction,
    disability

9
  • Cellular senescence
  • Once believed that normal cells were in principle
    immortal
  • Environmental factors responsible for cell death
  • Now we know that most (but not all) cells die
  • Hayflick limit
  • Number of times a cell will divide before dying
  • 52 times in 20 oxygen (normal air)
  • 70 times in 3 oxygen (human internal conditions)

10
What controls cell division?
  • Cells possess molecular clocks
  • Telomeres
  • Non-coding appendix on ends of DNA
  • Shortened by mitosis
  • At certain length, cell will no longer divide
  • Protective mechanism against chromosome
    destruction, mutation, and cancer
  • Other forms of programmed cell death
  • E.g. apoptosis
  • Triggered by mitochondria

11
Biological theories of aging
  • Aging clock theory
  • Telomere theory
  • Wear and tear theory
  • Evolutionary theory
  • Late-acting deleterious mutations not selected
    against
  • Somatic mutation theory
  • Error accumulation theory
  • Free-radical theory
  • Mitochondrial hormesis
  • Accumulative waste theory

12
  • How long is a normal life?
  • maximum life span
  • the oldest possible age that members of a species
    can live
  • under ideal circumstances for humans
  • approximately 122 years
  • average life expectancy
  • the number of years the average newborn in a
    particular population group is likely to live

13
aging prevention
  • Artificial extension of telomeres
  • Trade-off between aging and cancer
  • Vitamin D naturally lengthens
  • Increased sirtuins repair damage to DNA
  • Caloric restriction
  • Intermittent fasting
  • Organ/tissue repair and rejuvenation
  • Free-radical therapy
  • Stem cells
  • Organ/tissue replacement
  • Artificial and cloned organs/tissue

14
  • Increasing morbidity (disease)
  • Increasing mortality (death)
  • Top 4 disease-related deaths
  • Cancer
  • Heart disease
  • Cerebrovascular disease
  • Pulmonary disease
  • Effects of gender?
  • Effects of SES?

15
  • Other diseases that occurs with increasing
    frequency with age
  • Arthritis
  • Cataracts
  • Osteoporosis
  • Type 2 diabetes
  • Hypertension
  • Alzheimers disease

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  • Distinguish between normal aging and pathology
  • Identify risks
  • Increased complications for minor illnesses and
    accidents
  • Vulnerability to major diseases
  • Healthy vs. unhealthy lifestyles
  • Diet
  • Exercise
  • Preventative care
  • Other habits

19
poor health habits tobacco
  • in all its forms contains harmful drugs
  • nicotine is the most addictive
  • Dramatically decreases lung capacity
  • death from lung cancer is down by 20 from 1980
    1995
  • Still in top 10 killers

20
poor health habits alcohol
  • In moderation (no more than two moderate-sized
    drinks a day) can increase lifespan
  • reduction in coronary heart disease
  • alcohol increases high-density lipoprotein (HDL),
    the good cholesterol and reduces low-density
    lipoprotein (LDL), the bad cholesterol that
    causes clogged arteries and blood clots
  • Heavy drinking increases risk of death
  • 27,000 death from liver disease/year
  • Increased risk from many other diseases
  • Brain damage, decreases fertility, osteoperosis
  • Associated with other bad habits overeating,
    smoking
  • Increased risk of other forms of death suicide,
    homocide, accidental

21
poor health habits inactivity
  • Lack of exercise

22
good health habits
  • Leisure time -- vacations
  • 12,338 men between 35 57 years
  • 21 less likely to die over 9 years
  • 32 less likely to die of coronary heart disease
  • Social involvement
  • Engagement
  • Activity
  • Continuity

23
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24
Ericksons stages
  • Identity certainty
  • Developed network of intimacy
  • Generativity vs. stagnation (mid-life)
  • Integrity vs. despair (late life)

25
generativity
  • Feeling needed by people
  • Helping younger generation develop
  • Influence in community or area of interest
  • Productivity and effectiveness
  • Appreciation/awareness of older generation
  • Broader, more global perspective
  • Interest in things beyond family

26
integrity
  • Wisdom
  • Acceptance of life circumstances
  • Finding meaning
  • Dimensions of well-being
  • Self-acceptance
  • Purpose in life
  • Positive relationships
  • Environmental mastery
  • Personal growth
  • Autonomy

27
centenarians
  • People living to be 100 years old
  • 55,000 in US in 2005
  • 1 in 50 women, 1 in 200 men
  • 30,000 in Japan
  • Okinawans 5x more likely
  • 450,000 world-wide
  • Super-centenarians 110 years

28
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29
  • Reviewing lives of different centenarians
  • Many differences in lifestyles
  • Yet, they were similar in four ways
  • diet was moderate
  • work continued throughout life
  • family, friends, community ties were important
  • exercise and relaxation were part of daily
    routine

30
Social aging
  • Unlike gender/ethnicity
  • Doesnt apply for entire life.
  • (potentially) applies to everyone.
  • Ageism
  • Negative stereotypes associated with age
    negatively influence performance, function, and
    well-being.
  • Positive stereotypes associated with age
    positively influence performance, function, and
    well-being.

31
  • cognitive decline is rooted not in the older
    persons body and brain but in the surrounding
    social context
  • cultural attitudes can lead directly to age
    differences in cognition
  • does most harm when individuals internalize other
    peoples prejudices and react with helplessness
  • if the elderly fear losing their minds because
    they have internalized the idea that old age
    always bring dementia, that fear may become a
    stereotype threat, undermining normal thinking

32
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33
  • Ageism among scientists
  • scientists measure age differences in memory in
    the same way they studied memory in generalin
    laboratories
  • these factors work against older adults, who tend
    to perform best in familiar settings

34
population aging
  • Increased age of population
  • Two causal factors
  • Rising life expectancy
  • Declining fertility
  • Asia/Europe face severe population aging
  • Average age approaching 50
  • Economic implications
  • More savings/less spending
  • Increased health care
  • Less education
  • Retirement/social security

35
Population aging
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40
Development of dementia
  • Loss of intellectual ability in elderly people
    has traditionally been called senility.
  • The pathological loss of brain function is known
    as dementialiterally, out of mind, referring
    to severely impaired judgment
  • dementia
  • irreversible loss of intellectual functioning
    caused by organic brain damage or disease
  • becomes more common with age, but it is abnormal
    and pathological even in the very old

41
Alzheimers disease
  • First described by German psychiatrist
  • Alois Alzheimer (1906)
  • Generally diagnosed in people over 65 years
  • Early-onset before 65 years
  • 5-10 of patients
  • Several genetic causes
  • 4.5 million American suffer from it
  • 5 of 65-74 years
  • Nearly 50 of 85
  • 1 in 6 women over 55 1 in 10 men over 55

42
  • http//www.alz.org/brain/01.asp

43
Symptoms of Pre-dementia
  • Early symptoms similar to age-related or
    stress-induced memory loss
  • Difficulty remembering recently learned facts
  • Subtle cognitive difficulties
  • Executive function of attentiveness
  • Planning, flexibility
  • Abstract thinking
  • Impairment in semantic memory
  • New memory formation
  • Mild confusion
  • Apathy
  • As early as 5-10 years (some say 20 years) before
    official diagnosis

44
Moderate stages
  • Hindering of independence
  • Paraphasias
  • Phonemic paraphasia - Mispronunciation, syllables
    out of sequence. e.g. "I slipped on the lice
    (ice) and broke my arm."
  • Verbal paraphasia - Substitution of words
  • Semantic paraphasia - The substituted word is
    related to the intended word. e.g. "I spent the
    whole day working on the television, I mean,
    computer."
  • Remote paraphasia - The substituted word is not
    really related to the intended word. e.g. "You
    forgot your lamp, I mean, umbrella."

45
  • Memory problems worsen
  • STM and LTM
  • Failure to recognize close relatives
  • Behavioral changes
  • Wandering
  • Sundowning
  • Irritability
  • Labile affect
  • Progression is typically 2-10 years

46
Advanced stages
  • Complete dependence
  • Significant language impairment
  • Eventual loss of speech
  • Apathy, exhaustion
  • Loss of mobility, ability to feed oneself
  • External causes of death
  • Progression is typically 1-5 years

47
Causes?
  • Several competing hypotheses
  • Cholingeric hypothesis
  • Caused by reduced synthesis of acetylcholine
  • Increase in acetylcholine doesnt cure dementia
  • Amyloid hypothesis
  • Caused by amyloid beta deposits caused by APP
    (chr21)
  • Universal development in Down Syndrome by 40
  • Transgenic mice
  • Weak correlation with neuron loss

48
  • Tau hypothesis
  • Caused by tau protein abnormalities
  • Formation of neurofibrillary tangles
  • Herpes simplex virus (HSV1) hypotheis
  • Cold sore virus
  • May be responsible for up to 60 of cases
  • Promotes formation of beta amyloid plaques
  • HSV1 found in brain cells of Alzheimers patients
  • Cheap available drugs for treatment

49
Risk factors
  • Obesity
  • High blood pressure
  • High cholesterol
  • Higher rates in
  • Japanese-Americans than Japanese
  • African-Americans than Africans
  • Depression
  • Lower rates in highly educated
  • Beneficial consequences of learning and memory

50
Other forms of dementia
  • The second most common cause of dementia is a
    stroke
  • Vascular dementia (VaD), also called
    multi-infarct dementia (MID)
  • a form of dementia characterized by sporadic, and
    progressive, loss of intellectual functioning
    caused by repeated infarcts, or temporary
    obstructions of blood vessels, which prevent
    sufficient blood from reaching the brain
  • Subcortical Dementias
  • Forms of dementia that begin with impairments in
    motor ability and produce cognitive impairment in
    later stages
  • Parkinsons disease, Huntingtons disease, and
    Multiple Sclerosis are subcortical dementias
  • Reversible Dementia
  • dementia caused by medication, inadequate
    nutrition, alcohol abuse, depression, or other
    mental illness can sometimes be reversed
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