Just had my scheduled eye exam  yesterday; seems as if (knock on wood)
all is well, or well  enough;  next eye exam at a normal interval.
 
While at the doctor's office, a snazzy  modern clinic, I was in the inner
waiting room and heard a conversation among  patients, and soon
joined in. Amazing, the lady across from me  was 101 years old.
Can't say she was fit as a fiddle, but she  was in good spirits
and was able to walk on her own. A little  shaky, but on her own.
Which is incredible.
 
The nurses / medical assistants at the  nearby desk also made comments when
the lady made her way to the exam office.  Other patients at the clinic
are also Very Old. They mentioned ages 102  and 104.
 
None of this made me feel like a kid again,  but, still...
 
Something to think about...
 
 
Billy
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
----------------------------------------------------
 
The Scientist 
 
 
Opinion: Aging, Just Another  Disease
No longer considered an inevitability,  growing older should be and is 
being treated like a chronic condition. 
By Mutaz  Musa | November 1,  2016
 
 
The concept of aging is undergoing a rapid  transformation in medicine. The 
question has long been asked: Is aging a natural  process that should be 
accepted as inevitable, or is it pathologic, a disease  that should be 
prevented and treated? For the vast majority of medicine’s  history, the former 
position was considered a self-evident truth. So futile was  any attempt to 
resist the ravages of aging that the matter was relegated to  works of fantasy 
and fiction. But today, the biomedical community is rethinking  its answer 
to this question. 
The controversy has been fanned, to a great  extent, by one Aubrey de?Grey, 
a Cambridge University–trained computer scientist  and a self-taught 
biologist and gerontologist. Over the past decade, de Grey has  undertaken an 
energetic campaign to reframe aging as a pathologic process, one  that merits 
the same level of attention as, say, cancer or diabetes. Although  many of de 
Grey’s claims remain controversial—notably, that the first person who  will 
live to 1,000 years old is already among us—I agree that we can and should  
pathologize aging. In fact, it seems we already have. 
“Aging” is a term we use to describe the  changes our bodies undergo over 
time. Colloquially, we tend to refer to early  changes, say from infancy to 
early adulthood, as maturation or development and  reserve “aging” for 
changes that occur thereafter. The early changes are  generally considered 
good: 
stronger muscles, wiser minds, and so on. The later  changes are far less 
popular: thinning skin and hair, weakening bones, and other  forms of 
decline. 
To complicate matters, the human body comprises  a number of different 
systems that each develop at its own pace. The nervous  system seems to reach 
full maturity in our 20s, for instance, while the skeletal  system may peak a 
decade later. Of course, this physiologic natural history is  subject to 
environmental influence. For example, a diet rich in calcium and  vitamin D, 
along with weight training, can increase bone density and strength.  
Nevertheless, these environmental factors ultimately act on a foundation that,  
beyond a certain age, is inexorably deteriorating. There is a finite limit  
beyond which environmental factors cannot save us. 
The changes of aging vary in their specifics  from one system to another, 
but common mechanisms are at work. For instance,  wear-and-tear of joints 
results from depletion of articular cartilage, just as  the thinning of skin is 
due to a loss of elastic connective tissue. Other  age-related changes 
arise from errors in cellular activity or the accumulation  of metabolic 
by-products, the probabilities of which rise over time. 
As these natural changes proceed, they lead to  readily recognizable 
disease. The accumulation of fat in blood vessel walls  provides a particularly 
good demonstration of this. Lipids are an essential part  of our diet, but as 
processed lipids continue to accumulate in vessel walls,  these vessels 
harden and narrow, eventually failing to supply the heart with  enough blood. 
If 
the narrowing blocks vessels entirely, the heart is starved of  blood, 
causing heart muscle death, or heart attack. 
This simplified example illustrates that  perfectly normal processes that 
are critical to survival will quite naturally  lead to disease. In a 
biological sense, the mere passage of time is  pathological. Importantly, most 
of 
the early changes in this progression, such  as high cholesterol, are 
symptomless. Yet they are precursors to  life-threatening illness and are 
therefore 
considered pathologic entities in  their own right, to be prevented and 
treated. The same can be argued of the more  subtle and gradual damages of 
aging. 
There are countless other conditions subject to  this dynamic. They include 
some of the most common and debilitating ailments,  such as osteoporosis, 
arthritis, stroke, diabetes, dementia, and even many forms  of cancer. Given 
enough time, myriad diseases will afflict us as a direct result  of the 
natural aging process. 
We can and should view these diseases, whose  prevention and treatment are 
standard medical practice, as the clinical  manifestations of natural 
age-related changes. Doctors have long targeted such  changes to prevent 
disease. 
For instance, by recommending their patients limit  the fat and carbohydrate 
content of their diets or take statin medications,  doctors have strived to 
stave off heart disease. In so doing they unknowingly  have been battling 
aging itself. 
Yet there are those who find this view of aging  contentious, a reaction 
that likely stems from the misperception that the terms  “natural” and “
pathologic” are conflicting. There’s a common yet unwarranted  sense that these 
two terms are mutually exclusive; that what is natural can only  be right, 
and what is pathologic cannot be natural. This is untrue. Because  “natural” 
typically describes what conforms to the usual course of events, and  “
pathologic” describes what is harmful, the question posed in the opening  
paragraph presents a false dichotomy. Both “natural” and “pathologic” describe  
aging fairly. 
Thus, the controversy is largely  semantic. If I were to replace the call 
for a “fight against aging” with an  invitation to “combat age-related 
changes,” I would expect a far more positive  response. A call to “prevent the 
early stages of disease” would surely receive  virtually unanimous support. I 
contend that the three phrasings are  synonymous. 

Mutaz Musa is a physician in the Department  of Emergency Medicine at 
Albert Einstein College of Medicine/Montefiore Medical  Cente

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