Exponential increase in mortality with age is a generic property of a simple model system of damage accumulation and death.

The risk of dying increases exponentially with age, in humans as well as in many other species. This increase is often attributed to the "accumulation of damage" known to occur in many biological structures and systems. The aim of this paper is to describe a generic model of damage accumul...

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Main Author: Anders Ledberg
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2020-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0233384
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spelling doaj-9b5ce8e8f512481db9fec44933f2c7662021-03-03T21:48:55ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032020-01-01156e023338410.1371/journal.pone.0233384Exponential increase in mortality with age is a generic property of a simple model system of damage accumulation and death.Anders LedbergThe risk of dying increases exponentially with age, in humans as well as in many other species. This increase is often attributed to the "accumulation of damage" known to occur in many biological structures and systems. The aim of this paper is to describe a generic model of damage accumulation and death in which mortality increases exponentially with age. The damage-accumulation process is modeled by a stochastic process know as a queue, and risk of dying is a function of the accumulated damage, i.e., length of the queue. The model has four parameters and the main characteristics of the model are: (i) damage occurs at random times with a constant high rate; (ii) the damage is repaired at a limited rate, and consequently damage can accumulate; (iii) the efficiency of the repair mechanism decays linearly with age; (iv) the risk of dying is a function of the accumulated damage. Using standard results from the mathematical theory of queues it is shown that there is an exponential dependence between risk of dying and age in these models, and that this dependency holds irrespective of how the damage-accumulation process is modeled. Furthermore, the ways in which this exponential dependence is shaped by the model parameters are also independent of the details of the damage accumulation process. These generic features suggest that the model could be useful when interpreting changes in the relation between age and mortality in real data. To exemplify, historical mortality data from Sweden are interpreted in the light of the model. The decrease in mortality seen between cohorts born in 1905, compared to those born in 1885, can be accounted for by higher threshold to damage. This fits well with the many advances made in public health during the 20th century.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0233384
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anders Ledberg
spellingShingle Anders Ledberg
Exponential increase in mortality with age is a generic property of a simple model system of damage accumulation and death.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Anders Ledberg
author_sort Anders Ledberg
title Exponential increase in mortality with age is a generic property of a simple model system of damage accumulation and death.
title_short Exponential increase in mortality with age is a generic property of a simple model system of damage accumulation and death.
title_full Exponential increase in mortality with age is a generic property of a simple model system of damage accumulation and death.
title_fullStr Exponential increase in mortality with age is a generic property of a simple model system of damage accumulation and death.
title_full_unstemmed Exponential increase in mortality with age is a generic property of a simple model system of damage accumulation and death.
title_sort exponential increase in mortality with age is a generic property of a simple model system of damage accumulation and death.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2020-01-01
description The risk of dying increases exponentially with age, in humans as well as in many other species. This increase is often attributed to the "accumulation of damage" known to occur in many biological structures and systems. The aim of this paper is to describe a generic model of damage accumulation and death in which mortality increases exponentially with age. The damage-accumulation process is modeled by a stochastic process know as a queue, and risk of dying is a function of the accumulated damage, i.e., length of the queue. The model has four parameters and the main characteristics of the model are: (i) damage occurs at random times with a constant high rate; (ii) the damage is repaired at a limited rate, and consequently damage can accumulate; (iii) the efficiency of the repair mechanism decays linearly with age; (iv) the risk of dying is a function of the accumulated damage. Using standard results from the mathematical theory of queues it is shown that there is an exponential dependence between risk of dying and age in these models, and that this dependency holds irrespective of how the damage-accumulation process is modeled. Furthermore, the ways in which this exponential dependence is shaped by the model parameters are also independent of the details of the damage accumulation process. These generic features suggest that the model could be useful when interpreting changes in the relation between age and mortality in real data. To exemplify, historical mortality data from Sweden are interpreted in the light of the model. The decrease in mortality seen between cohorts born in 1905, compared to those born in 1885, can be accounted for by higher threshold to damage. This fits well with the many advances made in public health during the 20th century.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0233384
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