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Effects of simulated increased gravity on the rate of aging of rats - Implications for the rate of living theory of aging
- Publication Year :
- 1982
- Publisher :
- United States: NASA Center for Aerospace Information (CASI), 1982.
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Abstract
- It was found that the rate of aging of 17 month old rats which had been exposed to 3.14 times normal gravity in an animal centrifuge for 8 months was larger than that of the controls as determined by the apparently elevated lipofuscin content in heart and kidney, reduced numbers and increased size of mitochondria of heart tissue, and inferior liver mitochondria respiration. Steady-state food intake per day per kg body weight, which is presumably proportional to rate of living or specific basal metabolic expenditure, was found to be about 18 percent higher than in the controls after an initial 2 month adaptation period. Although half of the centrifuged animals lived only a little shorter than the controls (average about 343 vs. 364 days on the average, statistically nonsignificant), the remaining half (longest survivors) lived on the centrifuge an average of 520 days (range 483-572) compared to an average of 574 days (range 502-615) for the controls, computed from the onset of centrifugation, or 11 percent shorter. These findings indicate that a moderate increase of the level of basal metabolism of young adult rats adapted to hypergravity compared to controls in normal gravity is accompanied by a roughly similar increase in the rate of organ aging and reduction of survival, in agreement with Pearl's (1928) rate of living theory of aging, previously experimentally demonstrated only in poikilotherms.
- Subjects :
- Life Sciences (General)
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 01674943
- Database :
- NASA Technical Reports
- Publication Type :
- Report
- Accession number :
- edsnas.19830063357
- Document Type :
- Report
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1016/0167-4943(82)90035-8