Anemia and aging: an overview of clinical, diagnostic and biological issues

Authors
Citation
R. Carmel, Anemia and aging: an overview of clinical, diagnostic and biological issues, BLOOD REV, 15(1), 2001, pp. 9-18
Citations number
91
Categorie Soggetti
Cardiovascular & Hematology Research
Journal title
BLOOD REVIEWS
ISSN journal
0268960X → ACNP
Volume
15
Issue
1
Year of publication
2001
Pages
9 - 18
Database
ISI
SICI code
0268-960X(200103)15:1<9:AAAAOO>2.0.ZU;2-E
Abstract
Anemia, usually mild, is one of the more common problems of the aged, espec ially in men. Although the anemia is often multifactorial, the specific ent ities can be grouped into three broad categories: (a) anemias due to causes more common in the elderly; (b) anemias without special predilection for t he elderly; (c) anemias of unknown cause. The major biological questions co ncern the third category, which accounts for 14-17% of the anemias, and whe ther senescence itself contributes to anemia. Current opinion favors a dimi nished erythropoietic reserve with aging, but the data are inconsistent and the mechanism has not been established. It may be that cytokine modulation of erythropoiesis is abnormal. Some findings in unexplained anemia bear pa rtial resemblance to the changes of anemia of chronic disease, suggesting t he possibility that subtle unidentified inflammatory responses of unknown o rigin may be operative in many elderly people. Of the anemias of known caus e that are especially common in the elderly, anemia of chronic disease is a n important entity but is sometimes obscured or overlooked and its diagnosi s rests on crude tests. Cobalamin deficiency is very common also, although most cases are mild and not accompanied by anemia. Because the basic diagno stic approach to anemia is neither complex nor very invasive and anemia may be a marker of poor prognosis, attribution of anemia to senescence is not advisable until other causes have been ruled out. (C) 2001 Harcourt Publish ers Ltd.