Journal article

Dismantling Anti-Ageing Medicine: Why Age-Relatedness of Cardiovascular Disease is Proof of Robustness Rather Than of Ageing-Associated Vulnerability


Authors listKraushaar, Lutz E.; Bauer, Pascal

Publication year2021

Pages1702-1709

JournalHeart, Lung and Circulation

Volume number30

Issue number11

ISSN1443-9506

eISSN1444-2892

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1016/j.hlc.2021.05.105

PublisherElsevier


Abstract
Ageing is perceived to be the common culprit behind the most prevalent noncommunicable chronic diseases (NCD) such as cardiovascular disease (CVD). Treating ageing as a means to prevent its downstream pathologies has become the logical extension of this idea, and the defining criterion of anti-ageing medicine (evidence-based early detection, prevention, and treatment of age-related diseases). Challenging the underlying rationale, we here argue that the disease's late-in-life occurrence is proof of a genetically conserved robustness that helps us resist disease long enough for it to masquerade as a consequence of living long rather than of living wrong. Robustness is an acknowledged hallmark phenomenon of all complex systems (while there exists no universally adopted definition, a hallmark of complex systems is that they consist of many networked components whose interactions may give rise to system behaviours which cannot be derived or predicted from a reductionist knowledge of the interacting parts, even if this knowledge is complete) and a key concept in the complexity sciences (a relatively new branch of science that attempts to find and understand the common mechanisms and patterns shared by all complex systems). To reconceptualise the age-relatedness of chronic diseases in this sense has important implications for medical research and practice. The goal of our essay is to open a discussion that may enhance the overall understanding of robustness and prevent a misguided redirection of funding away from established disease specific research and towards anti-ageing medicine. This essay is timely, as the forthcoming 11th version of the International Classification of Diseases (ICD) will be the first to recognise ageing as a condition, thereby legitimising anti-ageing medical research. On a more pragmatic note, and for the benefit of people alive today, we propose a practical strategy to remedy the mismatch between heritable robustness and the lifestyle challenges that gradually overwhelm it.



Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleKraushaar, L. and Bauer, P. (2021) Dismantling Anti-Ageing Medicine: Why Age-Relatedness of Cardiovascular Disease is Proof of Robustness Rather Than of Ageing-Associated Vulnerability, Heart, Lung and Circulation, 30(11), pp. 1702-1709. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.hlc.2021.05.105

APA Citation styleKraushaar, L., & Bauer, P. (2021). Dismantling Anti-Ageing Medicine: Why Age-Relatedness of Cardiovascular Disease is Proof of Robustness Rather Than of Ageing-Associated Vulnerability. Heart, Lung and Circulation. 30(11), 1702-1709. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.hlc.2021.05.105



Keywords


Anti-Ageing medicineComplexityDEGENERACYHEAT-SHOCK-PROTEIN-60HUNTER-GATHERERSrobustness

Last updated on 2025-21-05 at 18:18