Ageing Disease
Not Limited To Elderly Population
The
incidence
and risk of disease and disability increases with age, but they do not
have to be an inevitable end to an otherwise productive life. While
some ailments are more common for people as they grow old, they may be
considered an ageing disease, such as Alzheimer’s Disease or
those suffering arthritis and depression.
Individual
ailments may be responsible for many problems in an elderly population,
they are not necessarily limited to the elderly, rather they have a
higher impact on the person’s quality of life as they age.
They
may be considered an ageing disease due to the tolls they can place on
elderly folks that may not be as damageing to a younger person. There
are more ailments considered as ageing disease than there are as young
diseases, mostly because of the treatment methods used on the young may
not be appropriate for the elderly.
With
many
diseases there appears to be no established relationship with ageing
before the onset of the illness, although as many elderly suffer
weakened immune systems it is believed that possibly the illness fought
by younger people are attracted to the weaker of the elderly. Although
not everyone who grows old contracts a so-called ageing disease, and
there are some who are considerably younger who prove susceptible.
Agreement
Lacking On Disease That Causes Ageing
While
Werner
Syndrome has been referred to as the ageing disease, there is much
dispute about a single illness that can cause a person to age any
faster than others. There is evidence that suggests this syndrome,
caused by genetic problems, may be precipitated by other illness that
could have affected the gene.
Other
researchers contend it is a single illness and the cause of people
reach puberty and then rapidly going through middle age and by the time
they their 40’s or 50’s may seem in many aspects to
be much
older. They can suffer other ailments considered ageing disease
throughout their body, but their mind remains on the ageing track. The
fact that sufferers maintain their mental faculties has them convinced
that the disease in not responsible for all of the rapid ageing.
The
argument
persists that the syndrome may spark the onset of many different
ailments making it appear to be an ageing disease in and of itself,
when in reality it begins other degenerations to begin and to run their
course faster. Few people who contract the syndrome live beyond their
mid-50’s.
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