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Home >> Theories of Aging

Theories of Aging

Index of Theories

The "Wear and Tear" Theory  

Dr. August Weismann, a German biologist, first introduced this theory in 1882. He believed that the body and its cells were damaged by overuse and abuse. The organs, liver, stomach, kidneys, skin and so on are worn down by toxins in our diet and in the environment; by the excessive consumption of fat, sugar, caffeine, alcohol and nicotine; by the ultra-violet rays of the sun and by the many other physical and emotional stresses to which we subject our bodies. Wear and tear is not confined to our organs, however; it also takes place on the cellular level.

course even if you've never touched a cigarette or had a glass of wine, stayed out of the sun and eaten only natural foods, simply using the organs that nature endowed you is going to wear them out. Abuse will only wear them out more quickly. Likewise as the body ages our very cells feel the effect, no matter how healthy our life style.

By the same token nutritional supplements and other treatments covered in this book can help reverse the aging process by stimulating the body's own ability to repair and maintain its organs and cells.

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The Neuroendocrine Theory

This theory developed by Vladimir Dilman, Ph.D., elaborates on the wear and tear theory by focusing on the neuroendocrine system, the complicated network of biochemicals that governs the release of our hormones and other vital bodily elements. When we are young, our hormones work together to regulate many bodily functions, including our responses to heat and cold, our life experiences and our sexual activity. Different organs release various hormones all under the governance of the hypothalamus, a walnut-sized gland located within the brain.

The hypothalamus sets off various chain reactions whereby an organ releases a hormone which in turn stimulates the release of another hormone, which in turn stimulates yet another bodily response. The hypothalamus responds to the body's hormone levels as its guide to regulating hormonal activity.

When we're young hormone levels tend to be high, accounting for among other things, menstruation in women and high libido in both sexes. As we age the body produces lower levels of hormones which can have disastrous effects on our functioning. The growth hormones that help us form muscle mass, hGH, testosterone and thyroid, for example, drop dramatically as we age so that even if an elderly person has not gained weight, he or she has undoubtedly increased the ratio of fat-to-muscle.

Hormones are vital for repairing and regulating our bodily functions, and when aging causes a drop in hormone production, it causes a decline in our body's ability to repair and regulate itself as well. Moreover hormone production is highly interactive. The drop in production of any one hormone is likely to have a feedback effect on the whole mechanism, signaling other organs to release lower levels of other hormones which will cause other body parts to release lower levels of yet other hormones.

Thus hormone replacement therapy, a frequent component of any anti-aging treatment, helps to reset the body's hormonal clock and so can reverse or delay the effects of aging. If our hormones are being produced at youthful levels in a very real sense the cells of our bodies are stimulated to be metabolically active and thus we stay young.

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The Genetic Control Theory

This planned-obsolescence theory focuses on the genetic programming encoded within our DNA. We are born with a unique genetic code, a predetermined tendency to certain types of physical and mental functioning, and that genetic inheritance has a great deal to say about how quickly we age and how long we live. To use a macabre analogy it's as though each of us comes into the world as a machine that is preprogrammed to self-destruct. Each of us has a biological clock ticking away set to go off at a particular time, give or take a few years. When that clock goes off it signals our bodies first to age and then to die.

However, as with all aspects of our genetic inheritance the timing on this genetic clock is subject to enormous variation, depending on what happens to us as we grow up and on how we actually live (the old "nature versus nurture" debate).

Anti-aging medicine addresses this issue by augmenting the basic building blocks of DNA within each of our cells, preventing damage to and increasing repair of DNA. In this way we believe anti-aging treatment can help us escape our genetic destinies, at least to some extent.

 

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The Free Radical Theory

This exciting development in anti-aging research was first introduced by R. Gerschman in 1954, but was developed by Dr. Denham Harman of the University of Nebraska, College of Medicine. "Free radical" is a term used to describe any molecule that differs from conventional molecules in that it possesses a free electron, a property that makes it react with other molecules in highly volatile and destructive ways.

In a conventional molecule the electrical charge is balanced. Electrons come in pairs so that their electrical energies cancel each other out. Atoms that are missing electrons combine with atoms that have extra electrons, creating a stable molecule with evenly paired electrons and a neutral electrical charge.

The free radical on the other hand has an extra negative charge. This unbalanced electrical energy tends to make the free radical attach itself to other molecules as it tries to steal a matching electron to attain electrical equilibrium. Some scientist speak of these free radicals as "promiscuous," breaking up the happy marriages of paired electrons in neighboring molecules in order to steal an electron "partner" for themselves. In doing so they create free radicals and extensive bodily damage.

Free-radical activity within the body is not only or even primarily negative. Without free-radical activity, that is without biochemical electricity, we would not be able to produce energy, maintain immunity, transmit nerve impulses, synthesize hormones or even contract our muscles. The body's electricity enables us to perform these functions and that electricity comes from the unbalanced electron activity of free radicals.

But free radicals also attack the structure of our cell membranes, creating metabolic waste products, including substances known as lipofuscins. An excess of lipofuscins in the body is shown as a darkening of the skin in certain areas, so-called "aging spots." Lipofuscins in turn interfere with the cells ability to repair and reproduce themselves. They disturb DNA and RNA synthesis, interfere with synthesis of protein, lower our energy levels, prevent the body from building muscle mass and destroy cellular enzymes, which are needed for vital chemical processes.

This type of free-radical damage begins at birth and continue until we die. In our youth its effects are relatively minor since the body has extensive repair and replacement mechanisms that in healthy young people function to keep cells and organs in working order. With age however the accumulated effects of free-radical damage begin to take their toll. Free-radical disruption of cell metabolism is part of what ages our cells; it may also create mutant cells leading ultimately to cancer and death.

Free radicals attack collagen and elastin, the substances that keep our skin moist, smooth, flexible and elastic. These vital tissues fray and break under the assaults of free radicals, a process particularly noticeable in the face, where folds of skin and deep-cut wrinkles are testaments to the long-term effect of free-radical damage.

Another way of looking at free-radical changes is to think of its as oxidation, the process of adding oxygen to a substance. Another word for oxidation is rust and in a sense our aging process is analogous to the rusting away of a once-intact piece of metal. Because forms of oxygen itself are free radicals, our very breathing and our otherwise healthy aerobic exercise generate free radicals that help along the aging process.

Substances that prevent the harmful effects of oxidation are known as antioxidants. Natural antioxidants include vitamin C, vitamin E and beta carotene, the substance that our body uses to produce vitamin A. Specialists in anti-aging medicine prescribe a host of natural and manufactured antioxidants to help combat the effects of aging.

Another substance that combats free-radical damage is known as a free-radical scavenger. Free-radical scavengers actually seek out free radicals and harmlessly bind them before they can attach themselves to other molecules and/or cause cross-linking. As we'll see in subsequent chapters many vitamins and minerals and other substances fight aging by acting as free-radical scavengers.

Other theories of aging that have been proposed throughout the years are:


Waste Accumulation Theory

In the course of their life spans cells produce more waste than they can properly eliminate. This waste can include various toxins which when accumulated to a certain level, can interfere with normal cell function, ultimately killing the cell.

Evidence supporting this theory is the presence of a waste product called lipofuscin leading to age pigment. The cells most commonly found to contain lipofuscin are nerve and heart muscle cells, both critical to life. Lipofuscin is formed by a complex reaction that binds fat in the cells to proteins. This waste accumulates in the cells as small granules and increases in size as a person ages. Because lipofuscin builds up over time, it has been described as "the ashes of our dwindling metabolic fires"

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Limited Number of Cell Divisions Theory

The number of cell divisions is directly affected by the accumulations of the cell's waste products. The more wastes we are accumulate over time the faster cells degenerate. Although an ordinary chicken does not live anywhere near 20 years, French surgeon Dr. Alexis Carrel was able to keep pieces of a chicken heart alive in a saline solution which contained minerals in the same proportion as chicken blood for 28 years. He believed that he had achieved this by disposing off the waste products daily. Although Carrel's theory was eventually overturned by Dr. Leonard Hayflick when it was found that fresh cells had been inadvertently added to the cultures making the chicken cells seem "immortal," the experiment helped explain why cells from older people with more waste divided fewer times than cells from embryos which divided the most.

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Hayflick Limit Theory

In 1962 two cell biologists, Dr. Hayflick and Dr. Moorehead, made one of the greatest contributions to the history of cellular biology by demonstrating the senescence of cultured human cells. Hayflick theorized that the aging process was controlled by a biological clock contained within each living cell. The 1961 studies concluded that human fibroblast cells (lung, skin, muscle, heart) have a limited life span. They divided approximately 50 times over a period of years and then suddenly stopped. Nutrition seemed to have an effect on the rate of cell division: overfed cells made up to 50 divisions in a year, while underfed cells took up to three times as long as normal cells to make divisions. Alterations and degenerations occurred within some cells before they reached their growth limit. The most evident changes took place in the cell organelles, membranes and genetic material. This improper functioning of cells and loss of cells in organs and tissues may be responsible for the effects of aging.

 

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Death Hormone Theory (DECO)

Unlike other cells brain cells or neurons do not replicate. We are born with roughly 12 billion of them and over a life time about 10 percent perish. Dr. Donner Denckle, an endocrinologist formerly at Harvard University, was convinced that the "death hormone" or DECO (decreasing oxygen consumption hormone) released by the pituitary glands of rats their immune systems revitalized, the rate of cross-linking in cells reduced and cardiovascular function was restored to the levels of youth. Denckle speculated that as we age the pituitary begins to release DECO which inhibits the ability of cells to use thyroxine, a hormone produced by the thyroid-governing basal metabolism, the rate at which cells convert food to energy. The metabolic rate bring on and accelerate the process of aging.

 


Thymic-Stimulating Theory

"The thymus is the master gland of the immune systems," says Dr. Alan Goldstein, chairman of the biochemistry department at George Washington University. The size of this gland reduces from 200 to 250 grams at birth and then shrinks to around three grams by age 60. Scientists are investigating whether the disappearance of the thymus contributes to the aging process by weakening the body's immune system.

Studies have shown that thymic factors are helpful in restoring the immune systems of children born without them as well as rejuvenating the poorly functioning immune systems of the elderly. Thymic hormones may also play a role in stimulating and controlling the production of neurotransmitters and brain and endocrine system hormones which means they may be the pacemakers of aging itself, as well as key regulators responsible for immunity.

 


Mitochondrial Theory

The free radical theory is supported by directed experimental observations of Mitochondrial aging. Mitochondria are the energy-producing organelles in the cells that are responsible for producing ATP, our primary source of energy. They produce cell energy by a process that leads to the formation of potentially damaging free radicals. Mitochondria are also one of the easiest targets of free-radical injury because they lack most of the defenses found in other parts of the cell. Evidence points to various kinds of accumulated DNA damage over time to be a contributing factor to disease, and new research in Mitochondrial repair could play an important part in the fight against aging.

 


Errors and Repairs Theory

In 1963 Dr. Leslie Orgel of the Salk Institute suggested that because the "machinery for making protein in cells is so essential, an error in that machinery could be catastrophic." The production of proteins and the reproduction of DNA sometimes is not carried out with accuracy. The body's DNA is so vital that natural repair processes kick in when an error is made. But the system is incapable of making perfect repairs on these molecules every time, therefore the accumulation of these flawed molecules can cause diseases and other age changes to occur. If DNA repair processes did not exist, scientists estimate that enough damage would accumulate in cells in one year to make them nonfunctional.

 
 

Redundant DNA Theory

Like the error-and-repairs theory the redundant-DNA theory blames errors accumulating in genes for age changes. But as these errors accumulate this theory also blames reserve genetic sequences of identical DNA that take over until the system is worn out. Dr. Zhores Medvedev of the National Institute of Medical Research in London proposed that different species life spans may be a function of the degree of these repeated gene sequences.

 


Cross-Linkage Theory

Developmental aging and cross-linking were first proposed in 1942 by Johan Bjorksten. He applied this theory to aging diseases such as sclerosis, a declining immune system and the most obvious example of cross-linking, loss of elasticity in the skin. Collagen is one of the most common proteins found in the skin, tendons, ligaments, bone and cartilage. Collagen protein can be compared to the legs of a ladder with very few rungs. Each protein is connected to its neighbors by other rungs forming a cross-link. In young people there are few cross-links and the ladders are free to move up and down. The collagen stays soft and pliable. With age however the number of cross-links increases, causing the skin to shrink and become less soft and pliable. It is thought that these cross-links increases, causing the skin to shrink and become less soft and pliable. It is thought that these cross-links begin to obstruct the passage of nutrients and waste between cells.

Cross-linking also appears to occur when older immune systems are incapable of cleaning out excess glucose molecules in the blood. These sugar molecules react with proteins causing cross-links and the formation of destructive free radicals. Scientists once thought inflexibility of the body with age was due to cross-linking of tendon, bone and muscle tissue. However, people who lead a more active life style and follow a good diet seem to inhibit or delay the cross-linking process.


Autoimmune Theory

The immune system is the most important line of defense against foreign substances that enter the body. With age the system's ability to produce necessary antibodies that fight disease declines, as does its ability to distinguish between antibodies and proteins. In a sense the immune system becomes self-destructive and reacts against itself. Examples of autoimmune disease are lupus, scleroderma and adult-onset diabetes.


Caloric Restriction Theory

Calorie restriction or energy restriction is a theory proposed by respected gerontologist, Dr. Roy Walford of the UCLA Medical School. After years of animal experiments and research on longevity, Dr. Walford has developed a high nutrient low-calorie diet demonstrating that "under nutrition with malnutrition" can dramatically retard the functional, if not the chronological aging process. An individual on this program would lose weight gradually until a point of metabolic efficiency was reached for maximum health and life span. Walford stresses the importance of not only the high-low diet but also moderate vitamin and mineral supplements coupled with regular exercise.


Gene Mutation Theory

In the 1940s scientists investigated the role of mutations in aging. Mutations are changes that occur in the genes which are fundamental to life. Evidence supporting this idea came from experiments with radiation. It was observed that radiation not only increased animal's gene mutation but it also accelerated their aging process as well. However later studies showed the radiation-induced changes were only mimicking age changes. This hypothesis further diminished in validity when experiments with moderate amounts of radiation actually increased the life span of rats!


The Rate of Living Theory

German physiologist Max Rubner who discovered the relationship among metabolic rate, body size and longevity first introduced this theory in 1908. It simply states that we are each born with a limited amount of energy. If we use this energy slowly then our rate of aging is slowed. If the energy is consumed quickly aging is hastened. Other rate-of-living theories focus on limiting factors such as amount of oxygen inhaled or number of heartbeats spent.


Order to Disorder Theory

From the time of conception to sexual maturation,our bodies are undergoing a system of orderliness. We are as Dr. Leonard Hayflick states, "Directing most of our energies to fulfilling a genetically determined plan for the orderly production and arrangement of an enormous number and variety of molecules." After sexual maturation however these same energies start to diminish en efficiency. Disorder occurs in molecules in turn causing other molecules to produce errors and so on. These chaotic changes in our cells, tissues and organs is what causes aging. Disorderliness varies from individual and this may be the reason why our tissues and organs deteriorate at different rates.


The Telomerase Theory of Aging

A new theory of aging that holds many promising possibilities for the field of anti-aging medicine is the telomerase theory of aging. This theory was born from the surge of technological breakthroughs in genetics and genetic engineering. First discovered by a group of scientists at the Geron Corporation in Menlo Park, California, telomeres are sequences of nucleic acids extending from the ends of chromosomes. Telomeres act to maintain the integrity of our chromosomes. Every time our cells divide telomeres are shortened, leading to cellular damage and cellular death associated with aging.

Scientists discovered that the key element in rebuilding our disappearing telomeres is the "immortalizing" enzyme telomerase, an enzyme found only in germ cells and cancer cells. Telomerase appears to repair and replace telomeres manipulating the "clocking" mechanism that controls the life span of dividing cells. Future development of telomerase inhibitor may be able to stop cancer cells from dividing and presumably may convert them back into normal cells.

Despite the monumental progress in aging research these has yet to be a unanimous vote on one specific theory of aging, Most of these theories have been disputed by scientists over and over again and many of them, as Dr. Hans Kugler editor of the Journal of Longevity Research, said, "...are dying of old age." Age-related changes do not occur uniformly in individuals; rather they are controlled jointly by genetic and environmental factors which further heightens the difficulty of finding a universal theory. What is universal is that we are all involved in a global-aging phenomenon. Through theoretical gerontology and anti-aging medicine we may eventually discover there is no limit to human life span.

 

Reprinted with permission From "Stopping the Clock" by Dr. Ronald Klatz and Dr. Robert Goldman
(Keats Publishing, New Canaan, CT © 1997)