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Inflammaging as a target for healthy ageing

Ben Dugan, Jessica Conway, Niharika A. Duggal

Age and Ageing · 2023 · ▲ 121 citations

Abstract

Life expectancy has been on the rise for the past few decades, but healthy life expectancy has not kept pace, leading to a global burden of age-associated disorders. Advancing age is accompanied by a chronic increase in basal systemic inflammation, termed inflammaging(definition), contributing towards an increased risk of developing chronic diseases in old age. This article reviews the recent literature to formulate hypotheses regarding how age-associated inflammaging plays a crucial role in driving chronic diseases and ill health in older adults. Here, we discuss how non-pharmacological intervention strategies (diet, nutraceutical supplements, phytochemicals, physical activity, microbiome-based therapies) targeting inflammaging restore health in older adults. We also consider alternative existing pharmacological interventions (Caloric restriction(definition) mimetics, p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase inhibitors) and explore novel targets (senolytics(definition)) aimed at combating inflammaging and optimising the ageing process to increase healthy lifespan.

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Provenance

Source
OpenAlex
DOI
10.1093/ageing/afac328
Canonical
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Fetched
2026-06-12 MST

Cite this

APA
Dugan, B., Conway, J., &amp; Duggal, N.A. (2023). Inflammaging as a target for healthy ageing. <em>Age and Ageing</em>. https://doi.org/10.1093/ageing/afac328
Vancouver
Dugan B, Conway J, Duggal NA. Inflammaging as a target for healthy ageing. Age and Ageing. 2023. doi:10.1093/ageing/afac328.
BibTeX
@article{ben2023Inflam, title = {Inflammaging as a target for healthy ageing}, author = {Ben Dugan and Jessica Conway and Niharika A. Duggal}, journal = {Age and Ageing}, year = {2023}, doi = {10.1093/ageing/afac328}, }

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