Since the publication of the third edition of Geriatric
Medicine,extraordinary advances have occurred in the science of aging
and the potential for biomedical research to give us answers to many,
if not most, of the age-related disorders that threaten the quality of
life in older years. At the most basic level, the successful mapping
of the human genome was declared complete in the fall of 2000.
Understanding the map of the human genome is as important as
understanding the map of genomes of important laboratory species,
ranging from the microscopic worms and fruit?ies used in most classic
genetic studies to rodents such as laboratory mice, and eventually to
primates, on which much of the research on the aging human brain is
done. The genetic maps of all of these species,including our own,does
not answer clinical questions,but it does open the door to dramatic,
rapid, and ef?cient answers to questions about the genetic
polymorphisms related to diseases in humans. The telomerase story also
unfolded since the third edition. Telomerase is an enzyme responsible
for maintaining the telomeres—the redundant DNA portions at the end
of chromosomes—whose shortening seems to be linked directly to cell
senescence,ap- tosis,and the control over cell death,which,at the
level of the individual cell,seems to be linked to the decline of
organ function and eventually aging and death within the org- ism.
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An Evidence-Based Approach
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780387226217
Publisert
2020
Utgave
4. utgave
Utgiver
Vendor
Springer
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok