×
GreekEnglish

×
  • Politics
  • Diaspora
  • World
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Cooking
Monday
12
Jan 2026
weather symbol
Athens 4°C
  • Home
  • Politics
  • Economy
  • World
  • Diaspora
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Mediterranean Cooking
  • Weather
Contact follow Protothema:
Powered by Cloudevo
> World

What it actually means to die “of old age” – and what that means for staying young!

If we could figure out how & why humans begin to age we might be able to change how we experience aging

Newsroom July 25 09:08

Ever heard someone say their family member “died of old age”?

That’s almost never what actually happened, at least from a medical perspective. Aging in and of itself is not a cause of death. When most of us say that someone died of old age, we usually mean they succumbed to an illness that a younger, healthy person would likely have survived, such as pneumonia or a heart attack.

In humans, the probability that one of these events will happen increases as we age. This is what we mean when we talk about mortality.

But not all animals get more likely to die as they get older, according to the book “Cracking the Aging Code: The New Science of Growing Old and What it Means for Staying Young,” by theoretical biologist Josh Mitteldorf and ecological philosopher Dorion Sagan. The authors write that some creatures, such as the desert tortoise, actually get less and less likely to succumb to mortality the older they get, while others enter a period of aging and then come out of it.

All of this suggests that aging is genetic, write Mitteldorf and Sagan. That means that in order to counter aging, we need to rethink how we live.

Cracking the aging code: There are no constraints

“Aging is not [always] a relentless process that leads to death,” Michael R. Rose, an evolutionary biologist at the University of California at Irvine, told Business Insider in 2015.

Indeed for some organisms, aging simply “is a transitional phase of life between being amazingly healthy and stabilizing,” Rose said. In other words, the period in which they’re most at risk of death doesn’t necessarily coincide with their later years.

Mitteldorf and Sagan emphasize this point as well, and suggest that humans may not be obligated to experience aging the way we currently do.

They point to a study published in the journal Nature that compares how 46 different species live and die. Some organisms, the research found, don’t age — their mortality rates stay constant from around the time they’re born until the time they die. Other creatures enter a period of aging — when they are the most likely to die — and then come out of it, continuing their lives.

Here’s a chart from that study comparing what aging looks like in a modern-day human, a human living in the 1800s, and other organisms. (Mortality rates are in red, fertility rates are in blue.)

(Click to enlarge)

aging_1

See that sharp rise in the modern Japanese person’s thin red line? Humans have an incredibly long aging period.

But lots of other creatures’ life spans look nothing like this, as illustrated by the chart below. The “immortal” hydra, a tiny freshwater animal that lives to be 1,400 years old (left arrow), is just as likely to die at age 10 as it is at age 1,000.

The desert tortoise (right arrow) has a high rate of mortality in early life, but that rate actually declines as it ages. This means that the critters lucky enough to survive their early years will likely live out their remaining (healthy) years. Biology determines how many of those years they have.

aging chart

>Related articles

How public health is changing in 2026: The five defining shifts and improvements

Seven nuts highest in iron – How to combine and what to avoid

Research: The BBC’s “first Black Briton” from the Roman era was ultimately…white and originated from southern England

If we could figure out how and why humans begin to age — something Mitteldorf and Sagan believe will require a much deeper understanding of our genetics — we might be able to change how we experience aging.

“Nature can do whatever she wishes with aging (or non-aging). Any time scale is possible, and any shape is possible,” write Mitteldorf and Sagan. “There are no constraints.”

Source

Ask me anything

Explore related questions

#age#aging#health#humans#science
> More World

Follow en.protothema.gr on Google News and be the first to know all the news

See all the latest News from Greece and the World, the moment they happen, at en.protothema.gr

> Latest Stories

Motorcycle rider arrested in Thessaloniki for driving 128 km/h in residential area

January 12, 2026

Mattel releases the first Barbie with autism, watch video

January 12, 2026

Farmers’ unions cancel meeting with Mitsotakis, plan escalation with new roadblocks

January 12, 2026

Shark attack on woman in Brazil: ‘I knew it had bitten me’, watch video

January 12, 2026

The 15 Greek islands that stand out for holidays in 2026, according to Conde Nast Traveller

January 12, 2026

Agatha Christie’s 1958 visit to the Acropolis captured in unpublished photo

January 12, 2026

Russia declares war on the Ecumenical Patriarch: “He is dismantling the Body of the Church, has nationalist and neo-nazi allies”

January 12, 2026

Video: The “battle” of the Skopelitis with the waves in the Aegean

January 12, 2026
All News

> Culture

Agatha Christie’s 1958 visit to the Acropolis captured in unpublished photo

The Kleisthenis Studio brought to light a black-and-white photograph on the occasion of the 50th anniversary of the author’s death

January 12, 2026

Erich von Däniken, Swiss bestselling author who linked ancient civilizations to extraterrestrials, dies at 90

January 12, 2026

Golden Globes: Paul Thomas Anderson’s ‘One Battle After Another’ and Netflix’s ‘Adolescence’ dominate the awards

January 12, 2026

Bob Weir, co-founder of the Grateful Dead, dies at 78

January 11, 2026

How the “civilized” Americans exterminated the “barbarian” Apache Indians:The ten-year war that began with a misunderstanding

January 11, 2026
Homepage
PERSONAL DATA PROTECTION POLICY COOKIES POLICY TERM OF USE
Powered by Cloudevo
Copyright © 2026 Πρώτο Θέμα