Are Your Organs Ageing Well? This Blood Test Can Tell
Researchers suggest that blood tests could
be used to determine the biological age of a person's organs, which
would allow them to address health issues before they manifest.
According to a study undertaken by US scientists, the method could also
be utilized to predict the progression of illnesses such as Alzheimer's
disease. Research suggests that individuals whose organs age faster than
the rest of their bodies are at an increased risk of developing
organ-specific diseases within 15 years.
The team, led by researchers from Stanford
University in California, used machine learning to analyze protein
levels in human blood. The study focused on 11 organs, organ systems, or
tissues, including the brain, heart, lungs, kidneys, liver, pancreas,
and intestines, as well as the immune system, muscles, fat, and
vasculature.
To develop their algorithm, the researchers
looked at the protein levels in the blood of 1,398 healthy people at
the Knight Alzheimer's Disease Research Center, ranging in age from 20
to 90, with a concentration on the middle to late stages of life.
The researchers identified 858 organ-specific proteins by analyzing
nearly 5,000 proteins and pinpointing those with genes that displayed a
fourfold increase in activation in one organ as compared to another
organ. Subsequently, the algorithm was trained to estimate a person's
age using these specific proteins.
The study’s senior author, Tony Wyss-Coray, a professor of neurology and
the DH Chen Professor II at Stanford University, said: “We can estimate
the biological age of an organ in an apparently healthy person. That,
in turn, predicts a person’s risk for disease related to that organ.”
The researchers tested their technique on a
total of 5,676 patients from five separate cohorts. The findings,
published in Nature, revealed that roughly 20% of the patients had a
significant acceleration of aging in a specific organ, with 1.7% having
aging effects in several organs.
They also discovered that accelerated organ
aging was associated with a 20% to 50% increase in mortality risk.
Individuals with accelerated heart aging were 250% more likely to
develop heart failure, but rapid aging in the brain and vascular system
outperformed the most effective available blood-based biomarker in
predicting Alzheimer's progression.
In the future, Professor Wyss-Coray believes the finding may help us
identify organs undergoing rapid aging in people's bodies and treat them
before they become ill if it can be replicated in a larger sample of
50,000 to 100,000 people.
The development of more accurate and less intrusive methods for
detecting signals of age-related disorders, such as the early symptoms
and progression of Alzheimer's, is an essential step toward curing them.
Continuous research is needed to enhance and evaluate tools of this
type, putting us ahead in the fight against these diseases.
This is only for your information, kindly take the advice of your doctor for medicines, exercises and so on.
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https://gseasyrecipes.blogspot.com. feel free to view for easy, simple and healthy recipes
https://kneereplacement-stickclub.blogspot.com. for info on knee replacement
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Labels: Alzheimer's, blood test, blood=based biomarker, brain n vascular system, deducts, defects in organ failure earlier
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