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Why Do Older People Heal More Slowly?

a person holding another person's bandaged hand
This article was written by Matthew Steinhauser, an associate professor of medicine at 51精品视频,聽for The Conversation. Faculty members and researchers who want to learn more about publishing in The Conversation can聽.

I recently visited an 83-year-old patient in the hospital after EMTs rushed her to the ER with an infected leg wound. Her ordeal started inconspicuously when she bumped into the sharp edge of a table and developed a small cut. The patient鈥檚 wound didn鈥檛 close, but she ignored it until she woke up in pain one morning two weeks after first injuring her leg. Her daughter called 911 after noticing angry, red skin discoloration and pus鈥攂oth signs of an infection. Our medical team treated her with IV antibiotics and cleared up the infection, but the wound did not fully close until at least a month later, well after she was discharged from the hospital.

How different the story is when children get a cut. They may scream initially, but within days, the scab falls off, revealing new skin. Why was healing so delayed in my 83-year-old patient compared to a healthy child?

The answer is age. Decades of life slow down healing for most tissues, and wounds in skin can offer a window into why this slowdown occurs.

Three stages of wound healing

I am physician who like diabetes and whether behavioral changes such as intermittent fasting may slow down aging. In order to understand why the skin wound in my older patient healed so slowly, it is important to first understand how wounds heal under the ideal conditions of youth.

Steinhauser in a blue shirt
The wound healing process is classically .

The first stage is inflammation, essentially the body鈥檚 attempt to clean the wound. During the inflammatory phase, move into the wound, kill any contaminating bacteria, and ingest and dispose of dead cells and debris.

Inflammation sets the stage for the regenerative phase, where several processes work in concert to regrow damaged skin. Replacement skin cells are born when cells at the edge of the wound divide, while lay down a supportive scaffolding called . This holds the new cells together. Any damaged supporting structures of the skin, such as the blood vessels that supply critical oxygen and nutrients, also need to regrow. The second stage effectively closes the wound and restores a protective barrier against bacteria.

The regenerative phase is a relatively quick, but tenuous fix鈥攏ew skin is fragile. The final remodeling phase plays out over a couple of years as the new skin is progressively strengthened by several parallel processes. The extracellular matrix, which was initially laid down in a haphazard fashion, is broken down and replaced in a more durable way. Any residual cells from prior phases that are no longer needed鈥攕uch as immune cells or fibroblasts鈥攂ecome inactive or die. In addition to strengthening the new skin, these collective actions also account for the tendency of scars to visibly fade with time.

Diseases disrupt the healing process

One major way aging can derail the orderly and efficient progression through the stages of healing is through the health problems that stem from diseases of old age.

Diabetes is one example of a disease that is . One of the many ways that diabetes negatively affects healing is by causing blood vessels to narrow. As a consequence of inadequate circulation, crucial nutrients and oxygen do not reach the wound in sufficient quantities .

Diabetes is just one of many age-related diseases that disrupts normal processes in the body such as wound healing.

Cells age too

Aside from the negative impacts of age-associated diseases, cells themselves age. In an extreme sign of aging called cellular senescence, cells . Senescent cells and as people age and cause a host of problems.

When cells divide more slowly鈥攐r when they stop dividing altogether due to senescence鈥攕kin becomes thinner. The replacement of fat cells, which form a cushioning layer under the skin, also . The skin of older patients is therefore more prone to injury in the first place.

Once an older person鈥檚 skin is injured, the skin has a harder time healing properly as well. Aging and senescent immune cells , and the risk of serious skin infection rises. Then in the regenerative stage, slow rates of cell division translate into slow skin regrowth. My patient exhibited all of these negative effects of age鈥攈er thin, almost translucent skin ruptured from a minor bump, became infected and took nearly two months to fully regrow.

But senescent cells are more than just dysfunctional bystanders. For reasons that are not yet fully understood, senescent cells that damage surrounding tissue and drive inflammation鈥攅ven when there鈥檚 no bacterial threat present. Some of these byproducts can even . This suggests that intrinsic aging of cells is in essence contagious and senescent cells actively fuel an uncontrolled cycle of inflammation and tissue damage that further impedes successful regeneration and healing.

A whole body problem

As the most outwardly visible tissue of the body, the skin provides a window into why people heal more slowly with age, but all tissues can be injured and are susceptible to the effects of aging. Injuries may be small, repetitive and build up over time鈥攍ike the effect of smoking on the lungs. Or they may be discrete and dramatic鈥攕uch as the death of heart cells with a heart attack. Different tissues may heal in different ways. Yet all tissues share a sensitivity to the repercussions of an aging immune system and a decline in the ability to regrow dead or damaged cells.

Understanding why healing slows down with age is important, but my patient asked a very practical question that physicians often face in one form or another: 鈥淒octor, what can you do for me?鈥

Unfortunately, current treatment of wounds is fairly old-fashioned and often ineffective. Some of the options available include wound dressing changes, antibiotics when the wound is infected or treatment in a high oxygen chamber when circulation is bad due to diabetes.

There is hope, though, that medicine can do better and that progress in understanding the aging process will lead to new therapies. Neutralizing senescent cells in mice, for example, of . While it is way too early to say that researchers have discovered the fountain of youth, I am optimistic for a future when physicians will bend the aging curve and make skin and other organs heal faster and better.The Conversation