Living Longer: The
State Of The Art
We know we
will never know all the answers, but it’s not for want of trying. We still have
Ebola, we have COVID, new viruses appear all the time. We still have some
resurgent measles because some people won’t vaccinate their kids. We still have
Cancer, so complex with many avenues to explore. Illnesses can rebound on us
because these plagues learn to develop resistances to the tools we have discovered
to fight them. We may always face that.
Although we don’t have all the answers, our
wise and devoted researchers, examining the very nature of what makes for life
within us, are learning to change our individual insides, down to the level of
our DNA, to give us the answers we seek to defeat disease and even ageing. And
AI is helping us speed up getting some answers.
Part of the
answer has been our increasing capacity to process quantities of data that we
could never have handled in the past. This increased computing capacity is
enabling us to do the research our discoveries require much more rapidly. Some
solutions that used to decades are being answered, through AI, in weeks and
months.
Mutations,
or changes, in the nature of diseases can defeat our treatments as they adapt
to the treatment we have found. Vaccines specific to our own personal version
of a cancer are being designed to match those mutations. Our own immune systems
can be educated so that our cancer can be destroyed leaving no surviving malicious
cells. Our bodies can be taught to outsmart the diseases that plague us.
Surgery and chemotherapy, still often in general use, can become a thing of the
past.
We have
fought most communicable diseases to a standstill over the last hundred years.
Since 1964, it has been estimated that life expectancy has been increasing by
one day every week. Old age is a by-product of staying healthy.
Extending
healthy lives is the central challenge we face as we confront aging. Much of
the work in this area is done with mice, or using living human tissue, because
of time lapse required to arrive at answers to these matters. Given the
complexity of our bodies, the wonder is how much goes right most of the time.
Data from the U.S indicates tell us there were
fifty million people over the age of sixty-five in 2016 and that the figure
will reach seventy-eight million by 2035. Health costs will rise along with these
numbers. We need approaches that will lower costs.
The secret
to our functioning lies with the proteins arrayed on the chromosomes (there are
23) present in each cell of our bodies. Their proper functioning essentially
dictates the state of our health. As we age these proteins begin to perform
their assigned tasks less efficiently.
The
Telomeres, or the ends of our chromosomes, become shorter with age after
multi-millions of cell divisions. When they are lost, our chromosomes begin to
fray. Some of the proteins on our chromosomes, the message-carriers dictating
our body functions, may become less effective at doing their jobs. As a result,
our immune systems in charge of the body’s housekeeping, do not do the full job
assigned. Old cells which should be removed, live on, cause inflammation and
cancers, and among other things, or block communication between cells. Stem
cells, creating new cells and doing cell repair fail to perform as they should,
fats and sugars are improperly digested and accumulate, and so on. Alzheimer’s,
diabetes, osteoporosis and cardiac damage, can be some of the results. And, of
course, also death.
Our
scientists are working to decipher the aging process at the cellular level. Two
particular lines of attack have been identified as a consequence of
experimentation with mice and on human tissue. Human trials have begun in 2019,
using Synolytics. These are drugs which target senescent cells in the body, that
is, “old” cells, which have not been eliminated by the body as they should have
been. These senescent cells have been associated with osteoporosis.
There are
also trials targeting the “energy pathway”. In this case, the drugs restrict
caloric intake from food inputs. Experiments have shown that this approach
improves the body’s immune response to threats.
There are
also tests being carried out with infusion of blood plasma from young donors
into older patients with Alzheimer’s. Experiments have shown that blood from
young subjects appear to rejuvenate older brains. It is felt that soluble
factors, or proteins, in the plasma of the young provide elements no longer
available in the blood of an older person. The challenge will be to identify
those elements.
How wondrous
are the bodies we inhabit. It is only natural that we would like to inhabit
them as long as we can in a healthy state. Almost every day we see something in
the news that speaks to advances being made to counter threats to our health
and safety.
Some of
these innovations include smart inhalers to treat the 50% of asthma sufferers
whose condition is not under control, robotic surgery to add precision for
difficult procedures, wireless brain sensors which dissolve when no longer
needed, 3D-printed organs, precision medicines tailored to the individual,
developing technology delivering medical care through digital devices and
gene-editing to treat conditions involving defective DNA strands. I’ve read
about work to break through the blood-brain barrier to correct pin-pint areas
in our brains to alleviate addiction, Alzheimer’s, obesity, Parkinson’s, etc.
Those of us
getting on in years, who want to stay on, need to survive just a little longer
to get more of the benefits that are still on the drawing board. If only we
could afford them!
Hold on
tight!
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