170 likes | 348 Views
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.
E N D
Aging and Sensory and Physical Changes Lecture 4 – PS277
Lecture Outline • Overview of aging and physical changes • Sensory system changes • Cardio-vascular systems and disorders • Changes in the brain and nervous system
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
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 Alzheimer-Like 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