首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
Life Begins at 100 [A]This year, the number of pensioners in the UK exceeded the number of minors for the first time in history.
Life Begins at 100 [A]This year, the number of pensioners in the UK exceeded the number of minors for the first time in history.
admin
2014-05-30
31
问题
Life Begins at 100
[A]This year, the number of pensioners in the UK exceeded the number of minors for the first time in history. That’s remarkable in its own right, but the real "population explosion" has been among the oldest of the old—the centenarians(百岁老人). In fact, this is the fastest-growing group in much of the developed world. In the UK, their numbers have increased by a factor of 60 since the early 20th century. And their ranks are set to swell even further, thanks to the ageing baby-boomer generation: by 2030 there will be about a million worldwide.
[B]These trends raise social, ethical and economic dilemmas. Are medical advances artificially prolonging life with little regard for the quality of that life? Old age brings an increased risk of chronic disease and disability, and if growing numbers of elderly people become dependent on state or familial support, society faces soaring costs and commitments. This is the dark cloud outside the silver lining of increasing longevity(长寿). Yet researchers who study the oldest old have made a surprising discovery that presents a less bleak vision of the future than many anticipate.
[C]It is becoming clear that people who break through the 90-plus barrier represent a physical elite, markedly different from the elderly who typically die younger than them. Far from gaining a longer burden of disability, their extra years are often healthy ones. They have a remarkable ability to live through, delay or entirely escape a host of diseases that kill off most of their peers. Supercentenari-ans—people aged 110 or over—are even better examples of ageing gracefully. "According to the statistical study, they basically didn’t exist in the 1970s or 80s," says Craig Willcox of the Okinawa Centenarian Study in Japan. "They have some sort of genetic booster rocket and they seem to be functioning better for longer periods of time than centenarians." The average supercentenarian had freely gone about their daily life until the age of 105 or so, some five to 10 years longer even than centenarians, who are themselves the physical equivalent of people eight to 10 years their junior. This isn’t just good news for the oldest old and for society in general; it also provides clues about how more of us might achieve a long and healthy old age.
[D]One of the most comprehensive studies comes from Denmark. In 1998, Kaare Christensen at the University of Southern Denmark, in Odense, exploited the country’s exemplary registries to contact every single one of the 3,600 people born in 1905 who was still alive. Assessing their health over the subsequent decade, he found that the proportion of people who managed to remain independent throughout was constantly around one-third of the total: each individual risked becoming more infirm, but the unhealthiest ones passed away at earlier ages, leaving the strongest behind. In 2005, only 166 of the people in Christensen’s sample were alive, but one-third of those were still entirely self-sufficient. This is good news from both personal and societal perspectives, for it means that exceptional longevity does not necessarily lead to exceptional levels of disability.
[E]Christensen’s optimistic findings are echoed in studies all over the world. In the US, almost all of the 700-plus people recruited to the New England Centenarian Study since it began in 1994 had lived independently until the age of 90, and 40 per cent of supercentenarians in the study could still look after themselves. In the UK, Carol Brayne at the University of Cambridge studied 958 people aged over 90 and found that only one-quarter of them were living in institutions or nursing homes. Likewise, research in China reveals that before their deaths, centenarians and nonagenarians(九旬老人)spend fewer days ill than younger elderly groups, though the end comes quickly when it finally comes.
[F]Not all of the oldest old survive by delaying illness or disability, though—many soldier through it. Jessica Evert of Ohio State University in Columbus examined the medical histories of over 400 centenarians. She found that those who achieve extreme longevity tend to fall into three categories. About 40 per cent were "delayers", who avoided chronic diseases until after the age of 80. This "compression of illness", where chronic illness and disability are squeezed into ever-shorter periods at the end of life, is a recent trend among ageing populations. Another 40 per cent were "survivors", who suffered from chronic diseases before the age of 80 but lived longer to tell the tale. The final 20 per cent were "escapers", who hit their century with no sign of the most common chronic diseases, including heart disease, cancer, diabetes, hypertension and stroke. Intriguingly, one-third of male centenarians were in this category, compared with only 15 per cent of women.
[G]The "centenarian genome(基因组)" is a key resource in identifying longevity genes. Such genes have been found in abundance in other organisms. Unfortunately, it’s a different story in humans. While many candidate genes have been suggested to affect lifespan, very few have been consistently verified in multiple populations.
[H]Until recently, the only exception was ApoE, and in particular a variant of this gene known as e4, which gives carriers a much higher than average risk of developing Alzheimer’s and heart disease. Across the world, this unfortunate version of ApoE is about half as common in centenarians as in younger adults. Last year, a second promising candidate emerged—a variant of a gene called FOX03A. At the University of Hawaii, a team led by Bradley Willcox, Craig’s identical twin, found that people who carried two copies of a particular form of the gene were almost three times as likely to make it to 100 than those without the variation, and also tended to start their journey into old age with better health and lower levels of stroke, heart disease and cancer. "There are so many false positives in this field that FOX03A is very exciting," says Bradley Willcox.
[I]FOX03A is involved in several signalling pathways that are conserved across animal species. It controls the insulin/IGF-1 pathway, which influences how our bodies process food. It also controls genes that protect cells from highly reactive oxygen radicals—molecules often thought to drive human ageing through the cumulative damage they work on DNA. FOX03A could even protect against cancer by encouraging apoptosis(细胞凋亡), whereby compromised cells commit suicide. The variant of FOX03A associated with longevity is much more prevalent in 100-year-olds even than in 95-year-olds, which clearly demonstrates the value of studying the centenarian genome.[J]So far the search for longevity genes in humans has been extremely difficult, but prospects brighten as genomic technologies become faster and there are more centenarians to study. Only a lucky few win the genetic lottery of longevity, but if we understand what sets them apart, we may be able to make the rest of us more like them by using lifestyle or therapeutic interventions to manipulate physiological pathways. Such medical advances will not only extend our lives, but also help us remain healthy and independent for as long as possible.
According to an analysis, one fifth of centenarians didn’t develop any chronic illness even when they reached the age of 100.
选项
答案
F
解析
根据chronic illness定位于F段。倒数第2旬指出,有20%的老人活到百岁也未得过最普通的慢性病。本题的one fifth对应20%,chronic illness对应chronic diseases。
转载请注明原文地址:https://jikaoti.com/ti/kQqFFFFM
0
大学英语六级
相关试题推荐
Everylivingthinghaswhatscientistscallabiologicalclockthatcontrolsbehavior.Ittellsplantswhento【C1】______flowers
Everylivingthinghaswhatscientistscallabiologicalclockthatcontrolsbehavior.Ittellsplantswhento【C1】______flowers
Isyourfamilyinterestedinbuyingadog?Adogcanbeahappy【B1】______toyourfamily,butifyouchoosethewrongkindofdog
A、Thewomanwillputoffherdecisiontostudy.B、Thewomanwilljuststudyratherthangoout.C、Thewomanwillgooutbecause
A、HeadmiresJean’sstraightforwardness.B、HethinksDr.Browndeservesthepraise.C、HebelievesJeanwasrudetoDr.Brown.D、
A、Massproduction.B、Medicalcare.C、Safetymeasures.D、Laborpractices.D短文开篇提到,Ford于1913年所引进的劳动惯例(laborpractices)即使现在看来也是先进的。
A、Africansarenotverybraveandresourceful.B、Thereisnotreatmentorhealthcarecenteratall.C、Therewerenoeffectivepr
Oneofthemostcontroversialissuesinthevastliteratureaboutalcoholconsumptionhasbeentheconsistentfindingthatthose
Americansusuallyconsiderthemselvesafriendlypeople.Theirfriendships,however,tendtobeshorterandmore【B1】______thanf
Today,moreandmorepeopleintheUnitedStatesareusingcreditcardsinsteadofmoneytobuythethingstheyneed.Almostany
随机试题
TheEnglishRomanticperiodproducedtwomajornovelists.Theyare______.
在认识活动中,主体和客体之间的关系是()
个人住房抵押消费贷款与企业抵押经营贷款的区别包括()。
噪声可造成对听觉影响、对生理的影响、对心理的影响和干扰语言通讯和听觉信号。以下非噪声源的是()。
某实施监理的工程,招标文件中工程量清单标明的混凝土工程量为2400m3,投标丈件综合单价分析表显示:人工单价100元/工日,人工消耗量0.40工日/m3;材料费单价275元,/m3;机械台班单价1200元/台班,机械台班消耗量0.025台班/m3。采用以直
关于完全竞争市场的说法,正确的有()。
中国人民银行是在()年成立的。
京城中轴线上的建筑物坐北朝南,只体现了面南称君的礼制思想,与我国中原地区的气候无关。()
英国20世纪第一个重要的教育法案,它的颁布标志着以地方教育当局为主体的英国育行政管理体制的形成。这部法案是()。
Expressionismisanartisticstyleinwhichtheartistseekstodepictnotobjectiverealitybutratherthesubjectiveemotions
最新回复
(
0
)