Introduction in Geriatrics and Gerontology

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Aging.

Demographical data and


socio-economical aspects.
Definitions of geriatrics and gerontology.
Aging is a process of gradual maturation.
Senescence is the process by which the capacity for
cell division and the capacity for growth and function
are lost over time, ultimately leading to death.

Aging is thought to have the popitive component of


development (eg, increased wisdom, experience, and
expertise) and the negative component of decline.
The term penepcence is the most common term for
the decline component and refers only to changes
that are deleterious.
The changes that occur with aging
can be categorized as those that
result from aging itself and those that
result from diseases, lifestyle, and
exposures.
Normal aging is sometimes used to
refer to changes attributed to aging
itself.
Upual aging (sometimes also but
confusingly referred to as normal
aging) refers to the common complex
of diseases and impairments that
occur in many elderly people.
However, this complex is hard to
define because people age very
differently: Some acquire diseases
and impairments, and others seem to
escape disease altogether and are
said to have died of "old age."
Some animals, including certain birds
and fish, do not appear to age at all.
Successful (healthy) aging refers to a
process by which deleterious effects
are minimized, preserving function
until senescence makes continued
life impossible.
People who age successfully avoid
experiencing many of the
undesirable features of aging and,
whether they have a disease or not,
remain functional both physically
and mentally.

The percentage of community-dwelling people > 65 who


report needing assistance with activities of daily living has
decreased over the last 2 decades, as has the percentage of
people with debilitating disease.
One viable explanation for these changes is an increase in
the percentage of people who are aging successfully,
although there may be other explanations.
Dipeape verpup aging:
With aging, many physiologic functions decline.
Many of these declines are attributed to aging itself; in
other words, they are considered normal, not disease-
related.
The distinction between normal and disease-related may be
clear or may simply be defined by statistical distribution.
With presbyopia (decreased accommodation of the lens of
the eye), the distinction seems clear because presbyopia
occurs in virtually all elderly people and no cause or
explanation has been identified other than aging itself.
However, with glucose control and cognition, statistical
distribution may define the distinction between normal and
disease-related.
Some degree of glucose intolerance is considered part of
normal aging, but diabetes, although very common, is
considered a disease.
Cognitive decline is nearly universal with aging and is
considered normal aging; however, dementia, although
common in late life, is considered a disease.
Longevity
The maximum life span--about 125 yr for women
and somewhat shorter for men--has changed little
in recorded history.
Several factors influence longevity:
•Heredity affects longevity primarily by influencing
whether a person will contract a disease.
• Inheriting a propensity to hypercholesterolemia
is likely to result in a short life, whereas inheriting
genes that protect against coronary artery disease
and cancer helps ensure a long life.
•Medical treatment contributes to increased survival after diseases
are contracted, especially when diseases (eg, infectious diseases,
some cancers) are curable.
• Another important influence on longevity is lifestyle.
• Not smoking, maintaining a healthy weight and diet, and exercising
appropriately help people avoid disease.
• Similarly, some lifestyle choices help prevent injury.
•Exposure to environmental toxins can shorten life span even among
people with the most robust genetic makeup.
Aging in Moldova

According to the data of the National Buro of Statistics – at 1


January 2007 the number of persons older than 65 years was
368615 persons.
The specific aspect for Moldova is the fact that 2/3 of persons are
from the rural sector.
The mean longevity of life in Moldova is 68.4 years – 64.6 years for
men and 72.2 years for women.
As the population >= 65 yr increases in the US and worldwide,
demographics can help in the development of policies on aging.

World Demographicp
Geriatric Essentials
By 2025, the world's population is expected to include > 830
million people >= 65.
The percentage of the population >= 65 will be highest in
developed countries, but the absolute number will be higher in
developing rather than developed countries.
Population Characteripticp
The world's population is aging.
In Italy, Greece, and Sweden, > 17% of the population is
>= 65, compared with 12.4% in the US.
Between 2002 and 2025, the total number of people >= 65
is expected to increase by 11 to 70% in European countries
and by up to 170% in some developing countries.
By 2025, the countries with the highest percentage of
people >= 65 are expected to be Japan (with 28%), Italy
(with 24.7%), and Germany (with 24.6%).
However, because developing countries such as China and
India have the largest total populations, they have and will
continue to have the largest absolute number of elderly
people.
In 2002, the greatest number of people >= 80 lived in
China, followed by the US and India.
By 2025, the world's population is expected to include over
830 million people >= 65; most will live in developing rather
than developed countries.
The exceptional growth in the percentage of
the elderly worldwide is related to:
• the substantial decrease in birth rates
during the past 25 yr in many countries,
• the migration of younger people out of
certain areas because of economic reasons,
• and the decrease in overall mortality
(including that due to infectious diseases in
developing countries and that due to
coronary artery disease and stroke in
European and other developed countries).

In the US, Canada, and Australia, mortality


due to coronary artery disease has decreased
by an average of 50% during the past 25 yr.
Life expectancy:

Life expectancy, determined from


mortality rate data for 2002, is longest for
Japanese, Canadian, Australian, French,
and Spanish women.
In most countries, men have a shorter life
expectancy.
However, in some developing countries
(eg, India, Bangladesh), life expectancy for
men and women is nearly identical.
In countries such as those of the former
Soviet Union, life expectancy decreased by
about 4 yr in the early 1990s, probably
because of a higher incidence of fatal
disorders related to alcohol or cigarette
use and because social and economic
disruptions increased.
Ramifications for the elderly in these
countries are uncertain, but the mortality
rate for this group has increased.
Active or dipability-free life expectancy:

Active or disability-free life expectancy (average number of years a


person is likely to remain in an active or a nondisabled state) is
calculated by using life table techniques that consider all possible
transitions in and out of a disabled state.
The concept of active life expectancy has expanded to include higher
orders of functioning, such as cognitive (eg, dementia-free) life
expectancy.
In certain US communities, active life expectancy at age 65 seems to
vary from 11.3 to 13.0 yr for men and from 15.3 to 17.1 yr for women.
In Japan, active life expectancy at age 65 seems to be slightly longer:
14.7 yr for men and 17.7 yr for women.
However, the usual self-reported measures of physical disability can be
interpreted differently from country to country, possibly resulting in
variation.
For all countries studied, physical disability (measured by calculating
difficulty with activities of daily living) increases with aging.
The goal of medical care is to maintain physical functioning as long as
possible and to postpone the onset of disability close to the time of
death (called compression of morbidity or squaring of the morbidity
curve).
Upe of Health Care Servicep

As the number of elderly people


increases, the global burden of
age-associated chronic disorders
(eg, cardiovascular disease, hip
fracture, Alzheimer's disease) also
increases.
People with these disorders are
likely to need more medical
services and home or institutional
care. Rates were high but somewhat
For example, hip fractures variable.
commonly cause physical They increased with aging and
limitation, hospitalization, and a were higher in women than men.
lengthy period of morbidity. Age-adjusted hip fracture rates
Hip fracture rates in 6 countries were highest in Finland, the US,
were compared, based on national and Sweden for men and in
hospital discharge data, and were Switzerland, the US, and Scotland
corrected for national differences for women. Rates were lowest in
in counting transfers between Venezuela and Chile.
hospitals.
The percentage of all people hospitalized each year varies widely throughout
industrialized countries.
In 1996, hospitalization rates were highest in Austria, Finland, and Iceland
(1 in 4 people) and lowest in Japan (1 in 10) and Mexico (1 in 17).
The median for industrialized countries was 1 in 6.
In the US, the rate was 1 in 8.
The average inpatient stay also varies widely; in 1996, the average was 10.6
days.
The average stay was longest in Japan and the Netherlands (> 32 days) and
lowest in Denmark, Ireland, Mexico, New Zealand, Sweden, Turkey, and the
US (< 8 days).
The rhytme of aging in Moldova
is higer than in the developped
countries.
The number of persons with the
ege higer than 75 years increases.
The structure of the population
of the Republic of Moldova is a little
different according to the districts.
For example the indices of
demographic aging:
In the North are:
Donduseni – 24,9%, Briceni –
22,9%, Edinet – 22,5%, Drochia –
21,7%, Riscani – 21,8% et Ocnita –
21,1%.
In teh South are:
Ialoveni – 10,4%, Criuleni –
11,7%, Dubasari – 12,9%, et à
Chisinau – 10,7%.
Geriatricp is the branch of medicine
that focuses on health care of the
elderly.
It aimp to promote health and to
prevent and treat diseases and
disabilities in older adults.
Geriatrics was separated from internal
medicine as a distinct entity in the
same way that pediatrics is separated
from adult internal medicine and
neonatology is separated from
pediatrics.
There is no set age at which patients may
be under the care of a geriatrician.
Rather, this is determined by a profile of
the typical problems that geriatrics
focuses on.
The term geriatrics differs
from gerontology which is
the study of the aging
process itself.

The term comes from the


Greek geron meaning "old
man" and iatros meaning
"healer".

However "Geriatrics" is
considered by some as
"Medical Gerontology".
Differencep between adult and geriatric medicine

•The body of an elderly person is substantially different


physiologically from that of an adult.
• Old age is the period of manifestation of decline of the various
organ systems in the body.
•This varies according to various reserves in the organs, as
smokers, for example, consume their respiratory system reserve
early and rapidly.
•Many people cannot differentiate between Disease and Aging
effects, e.g. renal impairment may be a part of aging but renal
failure is not.
• Also urinary incontinence is not part of normal aging, but it is
a disease that may occur at any age and is frequently treatable.
• Geriatricians aim to treat the disease and to decrease the
effects of aging on the body.
•Years of training and experience, above and beyond basic
medical training, go into recognizing the difference between what
is normal aging and what is in fact pathological.
•The decline in physiological reserve in organs makes the elderly
develop diseases (such as dehydration from a mild
gastroenteritis) and be liable to complications from mild
problems.
•Fever in elderly persons may cause confusion leading to a fall
and to a fracture of the neck of the femur ("breaking her/his
hip").
•Functional ability, independence and quality of life issues are of
greater concern to geriatricians, perhaps, than to adult
physicians.
•Treating an elderly person is not like treating an adult.
•A major difference between geriatrics and adult medicine is that
elderly persons sometimes cannot make decisions for
themselves.
• The issues of power of attorney, privacy, legal responsibility,
advance directives and informed consent must always be
considered in geriatric procedure.
• Elder abuse is also a major concern in this age group.
• In a sense, geriatricians often have to "treat" the caregivers and
sometimes, the family, rather than just the elder.
•Elderly people have specific issues as regard medications.
•Elderly people particularly are subjected to polypharmacy due to many
causes.
•Some elderly people have multiple medical disorders; some use many
herbs; some adult physicians just prescribe medications to their
specialty without reviewing other medications used by the elder patient.
•This polypharmacy may result in many drug interactions and may
cause some drug adverse reactions.
•Drugs are excreted mostly by the kidneys or the liver, either of which
maybe impaired in the elderly, and as a result the medication might
need adjustment, either renal (kidneys) or hepatic (liver).
•The presentation of disease in elderly persons may be vague and non-
specific, or it may include delirium or falls.
•(Pneumonia, for example, may present with fever, low-grade fever,
dehydration, confusion or falls.)
• Some elderly people may find it hard to describe their symptoms in
words, especially if the disease is active and causing confusion, or if
they have cognitive impairment.
•Delirium in the elderly may be caused by a minor problem such as on
or by something as serious and life-threatening as a heart attack
(myocardial infarction).
Hiptory of geriatricp
The Canon of Medicine, written by Abu Ali Ibn Sina
(Avicenna) in 1025, was the first book to offer instruction
in the care of the aged, foreshadowing modern gerontology
and geriatrics.
In a chapter entitled "Regimen of Old Age", Avicenna was
concerned with how "old folk need plenty of sleep", how
their bodies should be anointed with oil, and recommended
exercises such as walking or horse-riding.
Thesis III of the Canon discussed the diet suitable for old
people, and dedicated several sections to elderly patients
who become constipated.[4][5][6]
The famous Arabic physician, Ibn Al-Jazzar Al-Qayrawani
(Algizar, circa 898-980), also wrote a special book on the
medicine and health of the elderly, entitled Kitab Tibb al-
Machayikh or Teb al-Mashaikh wa hefz sehatahom.
He also wrote a book on sleep disorders and another one
on forgetfulness and how to strengthen memory, entitled
Kitab al-Nissian wa Toroq Taqwiati Adhakira, and a treatise
on causes of mortality entitled Rissala Fi Asbab al-Wafah.
Another Arabic physician in the 9th century, Ishaq ibn
Hunayn (died 910), the son of Hunayn Ibn Ishaq, wrote a
Treatise on Drugs for Forgetfulness (Risalah al-Shafiyah fi
adwiyat al-nisyan).[12]
The first modern geriatric hospital was founded in Belgrade,
Serbia in 1881 by doctor Laza Lazarević.[13]
The term geriatrics was proposed in 1909 by Dr. Ignatz Leo
Nascher, former Chief of Clinic in the Mount Sinai Hospital
Outpatient Department (New York City) and a "Father" of
geriatrics in the United States.
Modern geriatrics in the United Kingdom really began with the
"Mother" of Geriatrics, Dr. Marjorie Warren.
Warren emphasized that rehabilitation was essential to the care
of older people. Using her experiences as a physician in a London
Workhouse infirmary, she believed that merely keeping older
people fed until they died was not enough; they needed
diagnosis, treatment, care and support.
She found that patients, some of whom had previously been
bedridden, were able to gain some degree of independence with
the correct assessment and treatment.
The practice of geriatrics in the UK is also one
with a rich multi-disciplinary history.
It values all the professions, not just medicine, for
their contributions in optimizing the well-being
and independence of older people.
Another "hero" of British Geriatrics is Bernard
Isaacs, who described the "giants" of geriatrics
mentioned above: immobility and instability,
incontinence and impaired intellect.
Isaacs asserted that if you look closely enough, all
common problems with older people relate back to
one or more of these giants.
The care of older people in the UK has been
advanced by the implementation of the National
Service Frameworks for Older People, which
outlines key areas for attention.[15]
Gerontology (from
Greek: γέρον, geron, "old
man"; and λόγος, logos,
"speech" lit. "to talk
about old age")
is the study of the
social, psychological and
biological aspects of
aging.

It is distinguished from
geriatrics, which is the
branch of medicine that
studies the disease of
the elderly.
Gerontology includes these and other endeavors:

•studying physical, mental, and social changes in


people as they age;
•investigating the aging process itself
(biogerontology);
•investigating the interface of normal aging and
age-related disease (geroscience);
•investigating the effects of our aging population
on society, including the fiscal effects of pensions,
entitlements, life and health insurance, and
retirement planning;
•applying this knowledge to policies and programs,
including a macroscopic (i.e. government planning)
and microscopic (i.e. running a nursing home)
perspective.
The multidisciplinary focus of gerontology
means that there are a number of sub-fields, as
well as associated fields such as psychology
and sociology that also cross over into
gerontology.
However, that there is an overlap should not be
taken as to construe that they are the same.

For example, a psychologist may specialize in


early adults (and not be a gerontologist) or
specialize in older adults (and be a
gerontologist).
Hiptory of Gerontology

It may be said that the history of gerontology begins with agriculture;


prior to this the hunter-gatherer societies that existed could only
support a marginal existence: food supply was short; frequent
movement a necessity.
These and other reasons meant that extremely few reached 'old age'.
However, it could be argued that in a society with a life expectancy of
14 (such as 10,000 BC), being '40' was 'old'.
Things changed with the coming of agriculture.
A more stable food supply and the lack of frequent movement meant
that humans could now survive longer, and beginning perhaps around
4000 BC, a regular segment of the population began to attain 'old age'
in places such as Mesopotamia and the Indus river valleys.
Agriculture didn't simply bring a steady food supply; it also suddenly
made older persons an economic benefit instead of a burden.
Older persons could stay and watch the farm (or children); make
pottery or jewelry, and perform social functions, such as story-telling
(oral tradition, religion, etc). and teaching the younger generation
techniques for farming, tool-making, etc.
After this change, the views of elder persons in societies waxed
and waned, but generally the proportion of the population over 50
or 60 remained small.
Note that in ancient Egypt, Pharaoh Pepi II was said to have lived
to 100 years old.
Certainly Ramses II lived to about 90; modern scientific testing of
his mummy supports the written record.
Ancient Greeks valued old persons for their wisdom (some
reaching 80, 90, or 100 years old), while old age was devalued in
Roman times.
In the medieval Islamic world, elderly people were valued by
Muslim physicians.
Avicenna's The Canon of Medicine (1025) was the first book to
offer instruction for the care of the aged, foreshadowing modern
gerontology and geriatrics.
The Canon of Medicine recognized four periods of life: the period of growth,
prime of life, period of elderly decline (from forty to sixty), and decrepit
age.
He states that during the last period, "there is hardness of their bones,
roughness of the skin, and the long time since they produced semen,
blood and vaporal breath".
However, he agreed with Galen that the earth element is more prominent
in the aged and decrepit than in other periods.
Avicenna did not agree with the concept of infirmity, however, stating:
"There is no need to assert that there are three states of the human
body—sickness, health and a state which is neither health nor disease.
The first two cover everything."[8]
The famous Arabic physician, Ibn Al-Jazzar Al-Qayrawani (Algizar, circa
898-980), also wrote a special book on the medicine and health of the
elderly, entitled Kitab Tibb al-Machayikh or Teb al-Mashaikh wa hefz
sehatahom.
He also wrote a book on sleep disorders and another one on forgetfulness
and how to strengthen memory, entitled Kitab al-Nissian wa Toroq
Taqwiati Adhakira, and a treatise on causes of mortality entitled Rissala
Fi Asbab al-Wafah.
Another Arabic physician in the 9th century, Ishaq ibn Hunayn (died
910), the son of Hunayn Ibn Ishaq, wrote a Treatise on Drugs for
Forgetfulness (Risalah al-Shafiyah fi adwiyat al-nisyan).[14]
In medieval Europe on the other hand, during its Dark Ages,
negative opinions of the elderly prevailed; old women were often
burned at the stake as witches.
However, with the coming of the Renaissance old age returned to
favor in Europe, as persons such as Michelangelo and Andrea
Doria exemplified the ideals of living long, active, productive lives.
While the number of aged humans, and the maximum ages lived
to, tended to increase in every century since the 1300s, society
tended to consider caring for an elderly relative as a family issue.
It was not until the coming of the Industrial Revolution with its
techniques of mass production that ideas shifted in favor of a
societal care-system.
Care homes for the aged emerged in the 1800s.
Note that some early pioneers, such as Michel Eugène Chevreul,
who himself lived to be 102 in the 1880s, believed that aging itself
should be a science to be studied.
The word itself was coined circa 1903.
It was not until the 1940s, however, that pioneers like James
Birren began organizing 'gerontology' into its own field.
Recognizing that there were experts in many fields all dealing with
the elderly, it became apparent that a group like the
Gerontological Society of America was needed (founded in 1945).
Two decades later, James Birren was appointed as the founding
director of the first academic research center devoted exclusively
to the study of aging, the Ethel Percy Andrus Gerontology Center
at the University of Southern California.
In 1975, the USC Leonard Davis School of Gerontology became the
first academic gerontology department, with Birren as its founding
dean.
In the 1950s to the 1970s, the field was mainly social and
concerned with issues such as nursing homes and health care.
However, research by Leonard Hayflick in the 1960s (showing that
a cell line culture will only divide about 50 times) helped lead to a
separate branch, biogerontology.
It became apparent that simply 'treating' aging wasn't enough.
Finding out about the aging process, and what could be done
about it, became an issue.
The biogerontological field was also bolstered when research
by Cynthia Kenyon and others demonstrated that life
extension was possible in lower life forms such as fruit flies,
worms, and yeast.
So far, however, nothing more than incremental (marginal)
increases in life span have been seen in any mammalian
species.
Today, social gerontology remains the largest sector of the
field, but the biogerontological side is seen as being the 'hot'
side.[17]
The goal of gerontology is the successful aging along with
the increase of longevity.
For every person it is convenient to promote the helth aging
by the life hygiene, a good social life, an adequate place of living
...
So, a trough gerontologic culture must be developped,
including the reletions in the society.
The geriatricp goalp are the pathology treatment and in the
chronic cases to mantain an optimal quality of life in dependence
on the situation.
It is important to establish a good tactic for the modality of living,
to make a psychologic and social support.
Geriatrician
-A doctor
-Mupt prevent and eliminate the pain of the patient
-Knowp how the practical health old perpon lookp like
-Mupt be gerontologipt and know the gerontoppyhology,
pocial gerontology
-Hap the goal to polve the real, complex pituationp which
have a different appect
-Mupt know the cardiology, neurology, endocrinology,
rehabilitation …
The geriatric pathologies

-Polypathology
-Atypical presentation
-4 giants of geriatrics - Immobilization,
Instability, Incontinence, Intellect
disturbances
-Less expressive clinical picture
-The acute disease represents a
“rupture” with the autonomy loss and
confusion which very quickly leads to
death
-The chronic situation is the source of
dependence
-The urgent necessity of the geriatric
evaluation (social, functional,
psychological)

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