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Signs of Normal Aging: Memory, Eyes, Ears, Bones, Digestion

normal aging

What is normal aging?

You might wonder if your older adult is aging “normally” or if there are things you should be worried about – like Alzheimer’s. Knowing about natural changes that happen to most people will help you understand the aging process and hopefully ease your mind.

Common aging changes

Age-related changes happen everywhere in the body. Here are 4 areas where you’ll be able to notice obvious changes.

1. Memory and thinking Although the risks of Alzheimer’s increases with age, dementia is not a normal part of aging. What is normal is memory changes like being slower at remembering names and details and having less recall of short-term memories.

2. Eyes and ears For both eyes and ears, getting older means that these senses need more input before the nerves respond. That means that it has to be brighter before the eyes can “see” the light. Or someone has to speak louder before their ears can “hear” the sound.

Around age 60, people might get cataracts, glaucoma, diabetic retinopathy, or macular degeneration. These eye problems are common in older adults. Regular eye exams with dilation can catch these conditions early. Night vision also gets worse and glare becomes a bigger problem. These changes in vision can affect seniors’ ability to drive safely, especially after dusk.

With age, hearing high-pitched sounds is more difficult. This also makes words harder to understand because consonants (like k, t, s, p) are actually high-pitched. Vowels are lower-pitched and easier to hear, but the consonants help people identify words.

DailyCaring Tip: If your older adult tells you to “stop mumbling!,” it’s because of age-related hearing loss. There’s no need to yell, just pronounce your consonants more clearly.

3. Bones and joints Our bones and joints take a beating over the years. After 65 or more years of wear and tear, it’s natural for them to weaken, become chronically inflamed, or have cartilage get worn away. The most common age-related conditions are osteoporosis, arthritis, and rheumatoid arthritis.

The spine also becomes compressed with age because the cushions between vertebrae get thinner. This makes people seem to shrink with age. Ligaments and tendons that attach joints together lose elasticity, making joints stiff and tight. That’s why older adults are less flexible.

4. Digestion and metabolism Digestion doesn’t usually change much because of aging. Food might move a little more slowly through the digestive system. This might cause some people to become constipated. But older people are more likely to be lactose intolerant because of changes in enzymes.

As we all know too well (argh!), metabolism slows down with age and with muscle loss. That means seniors have more body fat and less muscle. That’s why exercise is important at every age. It helps maintain or slow the decrease of muscle.

The liver doesn’t work as efficiently, which means that drugs can stick around longer in the body and have longer-lasting effects.

By DailyCaring Editorial Staff Image: Senior Care Corner Sources: NIH Medline Plus, WebMD, Merck Manuals

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