The future of ageing
- 1 November 2000
- journal article
- editorial
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature
- Vol. 408 (6809) , 267-269
- https://doi.org/10.1038/35041709
Abstract
Advances in our knowledge of age-associated diseases have far outpaced advances in our understanding of the fundamental ageing processes that underlie the vulnerability to these pathologies. If we are to increase human life expectancy beyond the fifteen-year limit that would result if today's leading causes of death were resolved, more attention must be paid to basic research on ageing. Determination of longevity must be distinguished from ageing to take us from the common question of why we age to a more revealing question that is rarely posed: why do we live as long as we do? But if the ability to intervene in ageing ever becomes a reality, it will be rife with unintended and undesirable consequences.Keywords
This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- The illusion of cell immortalityBritish Journal of Cancer, 2000
- A universal pattern of mortality decline in the G7 countriesNature, 2000
- New approaches to old ageNature, 2000
- Calorie Restriction in Primates: Will It Work and How Will We Know?Journal of the American Geriatrics Society, 1999
- Longevity of lobsters is linked to ubiquitous telomerase expressionFEBS Letters, 1998
- How and why we ageExperimental Gerontology, 1998
- Telomerase activity in ‘immortal’ fish1FEBS Letters, 1998
- Changing Mortality and Morbidity Rates and the Health Status and Life Expectancy of the Older PopulationDemography, 1994