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[Stress-age syndrome].

V V Frolkis

    Fiziologicheskii Zhurnal
    |May 1, 1991
    PubMed
    Summary
    This summary is machine-generated.

    Aging involves stress-age syndrome, a mix of adaptive and damaging changes. These complex changes vary individually and don't fully explain all aging symptoms.

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    Area of Science:

    • Gerontology
    • Neuroendocrinology
    • Cellular Biology

    Context:

    • Aging is a complex biological process characterized by a decline in physiological functions.
    • The stress-age syndrome encompasses various physiological changes occurring with advancing age.

    Purpose:

    • To define and characterize the stress-age syndrome.
    • To differentiate between adaptive and damaging components of the stress-age syndrome.
    • To acknowledge the limitations in explaining the full complexity of aging through this syndrome.

    Summary:

    • Aging is associated with a series of neurohormonal, tissue, and cellular alterations, collectively termed the stress-age syndrome.
    • This syndrome includes components that are both adaptive, aiding the organism, and damaging, contributing to decline.

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  • Individual variations in stress-age syndrome symptoms are significant and do not encompass the entirety of organismal aging.
  • Impact:

    • Provides a framework for understanding age-related physiological changes.
    • Highlights the dual nature of stress responses in aging.
    • Emphasizes the need for multifaceted approaches to study and address aging.