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Aging and Sensory and Physical Changes Lecture 4 – PS277 Darwin in Youth and Later Life Lecture Outline Overview of aging and physical changes Sensory system changes Cardio-vascular systems and disorders Changes in the brain and nervous system I. Overview of Some Primary Changes Across Adulthood Function: Age of Change: Nature of Change Vision Mid-40’s Lens thickens, poorer near vision Hearing Mid-50’s Loss of high and low tones Smell About 40 Poorer detection and discrimination Heart & Lungs 35-40 Aerobic capacity during work Height 40 Compression of disks in spine Skin 40 Wrinkling, oil secretion poorer Bones 35 Loss of calcium, osteoporosis – increased porosity Some General Points on Physical Aging- Nuland (2007) Individual variability is great Systems generally maintain competence despite some losses at maximums Several factors: biological changes, disease, environment, personal attitudes all interact in predicting and explaining aging process These changes themselves are not diseases, but they predispose some people to certain diseases Physical changes have important implications for psychological functioning II. Sensory Predictors of Cognitive Functioning – Lindenberger & Baltes (1994) III. Cardiovascular Changes with Age Circulation of blood, heart, arteries, carries oxygen from lungs Deposits of fat in arteries of heart, stiffening of arteries with age (atherosclerosis) Heart must work harder with age, highest output declines Blood pressure gradually rises with age – hypertension can result None of these are diseases in themselves, just changes with age, but make disease more likely Chronic Conditions in Later Life Percentages Suffering From Each Type Canadian Adult Death Rates by Disease Type 35 30 25 20 15 Percent 10 5 0 CV Prob Cancer Accident Infect Disease Types of Cardiovascular Disease Heart problems – congestive heart failure, angina pectoris, myocardial infarction (heart attack) Atherosclerosis – restriction of blood flow in arteries due to fatty deposits Strokes (CVAs, TIAs) – blood flow interruptions to brain, paralysis, speech problems, risk factor for dementia Psychological consequences: Role of circulatory system in brain and cognitive function – quite a direct impact: jogging is good for health and for mind… IV. Changes in Brain - Major Components at Cellular Level Neurons: axons plus cell bodies – electrical pathways Synapses = 1,000,000,000,000,000 in brain Dendrites = connect to next neurons at synapses Neurotransmitters: chemical pathways that cross synapses Changes in Brain with Age Overall weight loss = 5% Some loss of neurons, but new ones can grow and new synapses can form too Substantial loss of dendrites leads to some slowing at synapses – one of the key markers of aging Changes in some neurotransmitters – loss in dopamine and acetylcholine, but some increases too Most of these changes more marked with disease! Some Modest Increases in AlzheimerLike Problems – Brain Sections Tangles: tadpoles, axon fibres twisted together Plaques: blobs, dying neurons coalesce around protein core If these are common enough, they can be used to indicate 6 stages of Alzheimer’s disease Psychological Implications of Changes: The Nun Study – Snowdon, 2001 Followed large sample of 700 nuns from convent in US Midwest into late adulthood Tested every year on cognitive function, brains were donated and studied after death Observed physiological levels of plaques and tangles don’t fully predict memory loss, decline into Alzheimer’s symptoms Some people resist expressing this behaviorally Patterns of stroke seem to interact with these biological markers, magnify problems Pictures of Centenarian Nuns