If ageing is a disease, then life is also a disease

Ageing is distinct from a disease. Sound arguments have been adduced to explain that senescence cannot be understood as a pathological process. Nevertheless, this distinction is believed to be artificial (Holliday 1995), and other eminent researchers argue that the senescence-pathology dichotomy is...

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Main Authors: Chmielewski Piotr Paweł, Strzelec Bartłomiej
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2020-09-01
Series:Anthropological Review
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.2478/anre-2020-0017
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spelling doaj-964f9cfd155745519da840ed8b535dfc2021-09-06T19:41:13ZengSciendoAnthropological Review2083-45942020-09-0183330731510.2478/anre-2020-0017anre-2020-0017If ageing is a disease, then life is also a diseaseChmielewski Piotr Paweł0Strzelec Bartłomiej1Division of Anatomy, Department of Human Morphology and Embryology, Faculty of Medicine, Wroclaw Medical University, Wrocław, PolandDepartment and Clinic of Gastrointestinal and General Surgery, Wroclaw Medical University, Wroclaw, PolandAgeing is distinct from a disease. Sound arguments have been adduced to explain that senescence cannot be understood as a pathological process. Nevertheless, this distinction is believed to be artificial (Holliday 1995), and other eminent researchers argue that the senescence-pathology dichotomy is also misleading. Recently, it has been suggested that ageing should be classified as a complex pathological syndrome or a ‘pre-disease’ that is treatable. Proponents of this new paradigm argue that: (i) modern evolutionary theory predicts that ‘although organismal senescence is not an adaptation, it is genetically programmed’, (ii) ‘insofar as it is genetically determined, organismal senescence is a form of genetic disease’ (Janac et al. 2017) and (iii) ‘ageing is something very much like a genetic disease: it is a set of pathologies resulting from the action of pleiotropic gene mutations’ (Gems 2015). Also new generations of researchers, free of these traditional shackles, come with the belief that it is time to classify ageing as a disease, as the distinction between normal dysfunction and abnormal dysfunction is not completely clear and should be abandoned. Although they marshal their arguments in a convincing manner, persuasive counterarguments can be mounted. Here, the senescence-pathology dichotomy is critically discussed. A deeper analysis of this subject reveals the underlying problem of undefined terminology in science.https://doi.org/10.2478/anre-2020-0017ageingdiseasehealthhomeostasismedical terminologynosologysenescence
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Chmielewski Piotr Paweł
Strzelec Bartłomiej
spellingShingle Chmielewski Piotr Paweł
Strzelec Bartłomiej
If ageing is a disease, then life is also a disease
Anthropological Review
ageing
disease
health
homeostasis
medical terminology
nosology
senescence
author_facet Chmielewski Piotr Paweł
Strzelec Bartłomiej
author_sort Chmielewski Piotr Paweł
title If ageing is a disease, then life is also a disease
title_short If ageing is a disease, then life is also a disease
title_full If ageing is a disease, then life is also a disease
title_fullStr If ageing is a disease, then life is also a disease
title_full_unstemmed If ageing is a disease, then life is also a disease
title_sort if ageing is a disease, then life is also a disease
publisher Sciendo
series Anthropological Review
issn 2083-4594
publishDate 2020-09-01
description Ageing is distinct from a disease. Sound arguments have been adduced to explain that senescence cannot be understood as a pathological process. Nevertheless, this distinction is believed to be artificial (Holliday 1995), and other eminent researchers argue that the senescence-pathology dichotomy is also misleading. Recently, it has been suggested that ageing should be classified as a complex pathological syndrome or a ‘pre-disease’ that is treatable. Proponents of this new paradigm argue that: (i) modern evolutionary theory predicts that ‘although organismal senescence is not an adaptation, it is genetically programmed’, (ii) ‘insofar as it is genetically determined, organismal senescence is a form of genetic disease’ (Janac et al. 2017) and (iii) ‘ageing is something very much like a genetic disease: it is a set of pathologies resulting from the action of pleiotropic gene mutations’ (Gems 2015). Also new generations of researchers, free of these traditional shackles, come with the belief that it is time to classify ageing as a disease, as the distinction between normal dysfunction and abnormal dysfunction is not completely clear and should be abandoned. Although they marshal their arguments in a convincing manner, persuasive counterarguments can be mounted. Here, the senescence-pathology dichotomy is critically discussed. A deeper analysis of this subject reveals the underlying problem of undefined terminology in science.
topic ageing
disease
health
homeostasis
medical terminology
nosology
senescence
url https://doi.org/10.2478/anre-2020-0017
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