Slow Aging | Healthy living, healthy aging

How Oxidative Stress Contributes to Our Aging

Oxidative Stress and its Impact upon Aging

Oxidative Stress and its Impact upon Aging

Oxidative Stress and its Impact upon Aging

When metal parts, like the hinge on your door or nails in the fence, become old, they usually become rusty. This change alters their properties so that instead of being sturdy and smooth, rusted metal is weakened, fragile and flaky. Ultimately, rust means that these objects don’t work as they should, the door creaks and the fence pails fall down with every puff of wind. Although we are not make out of iron, we can certainly get rusty as we get older.

Oxygen is the problem. Oxygen is the essence of the air we breathe. It is vital for the creation of energy. Without it, we would die. But this dependence comes at a cost. As our body uses oxygen as fuel to do the things that need to be done, a very small proportion is converted into toxic products collectively known as Reactive Oxygen Species (ROS or free radicals).

As their name suggests, Reactive Oxygen Species are highly reactive. In fact, they can react with almost anything with which they come in contact. If the working bits of the body, like its proteins, DNA and lipids are attached by free radicals, eventually they become so modified that they don’t work as they should. Just like with a rusty nail, the cumulative burden of these modifications is one of the most important elements in the ageing process.

The most common victims of free radicals are those things that live closest to where free radicals are generated in the cell’s powerhouse – the mitochondria. Unfortunately, damage to mitochondria means less efficient use of oxygen for energy production, which further increase in production of free radicals in a vicious cycle. This is one reason why the production of free radicals increases gradually as we get older. If the production of free radicals outstrips our antioxidant defense mechanisms, a state of oxidative stress is said to exist. And slowing ageing is all about reducing oxidative stress.

Each cell and each tissue in our bodies has its own antioxidant defence systems to remove free radicals before they can do damage. These include enzymes that catalyse the destruction of free radicals, as well as antioxidant decoys that prevent damage by ‘taking the bullet’ themselves, thereby preventing other more important targets from becoming modified. There is good evidence that the effectiveness of these antioxidant defences correlates with lifespan. In general, the body’s production of endogenous antioxidants declines as we grow older, while production of free radicals increases, leading to oxidative stress, as well as aging itself.

When attacked by free radicals, proteins, DNA and lipids don’t work as they should, and as with rusty metal, function declines. If the production of free radicals outstrips our (antioxidant) defense mechanisms, a state of oxidative stress is said to exist. Oxidative stress is one of the most important elements of the aging process. There is a lot we can do to bolster our antioxidant defenses, as well as erode them prematurely. Unequivocally, diets naturally high in antioxidants can improve health and prolong life and have done so for centuries.

Options for increasing your intake of antioxidants

 

Last Reviewed: 27-Jan-2014

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