Dr. Jeffrey Laitman joins WIRED to break down how our organs and body parts age from head to toe. From hearing and hair loss to sagging skin and deteriorating joints, Dr. Laitman highlights the impact of aging on the human body—and what we can do about it.
Director: Lisandro Perez-Rey
Director of Photography: Francis Bernal
Editor: Matt Colby; Paul Tael
Talent: Dr. Jeffrey Laitman
Line Producer: Joseph Buscemi
Associate Producer: Paul Gulyas; Brandon White
Production Manager: D. Eric Martinez
Production Coordinator: Fernando Davila
Camera Operator: Brittany Berger
Gaffer: Mar Alfonso
Sound Mixer: Michael Guggino
Production Assistant: Albie Smith
Post Production Supervisor: Alexa Deutsch
Post Production Coordinator: Ian Bryant
Supervising Editor: Doug Larsen
Assistant Editor: Lauren Worona
Director: Lisandro Perez-Rey
Director of Photography: Francis Bernal
Editor: Matt Colby; Paul Tael
Talent: Dr. Jeffrey Laitman
Line Producer: Joseph Buscemi
Associate Producer: Paul Gulyas; Brandon White
Production Manager: D. Eric Martinez
Production Coordinator: Fernando Davila
Camera Operator: Brittany Berger
Gaffer: Mar Alfonso
Sound Mixer: Michael Guggino
Production Assistant: Albie Smith
Post Production Supervisor: Alexa Deutsch
Post Production Coordinator: Ian Bryant
Supervising Editor: Doug Larsen
Assistant Editor: Lauren Worona
Category
🤖
TechTranscript
00:00 Our organs were not built to go into our 70s or 80s.
00:05 By the time we're in our 40s to 50s, we run into problems.
00:11 Going from head to toe, I'd like to talk about how organs
00:15 and body parts age and what we can do about it.
00:18 Over the years, our cells, our organs,
00:23 suffer from gradual wear and tear.
00:26 We age, but we're not defenseless.
00:29 Let's start with our brain.
00:32 As we age, our brain atrophies.
00:35 It's not problematic unless things pop up
00:37 that become problematic.
00:39 Speech disorders, you've all heard of Alzheimer's.
00:42 Many of the causes of these are not particularly clear.
00:45 Our brain starts to lose about 5% of its volume per decade,
00:50 probably somewhere in the 30s.
00:54 It decreases because of loss of number of cells,
00:58 degeneration of the massive tracts and fibers.
01:02 Certain things can lead to brain atrophy.
01:05 One of them is vascular problems.
01:07 As we age, make sure we are on top of
01:10 and checking our vascular systems.
01:13 Our ears.
01:16 You probably think you have two of them.
01:18 In actuality, we have six ears,
01:21 three on one side, three on the others.
01:24 Outer, middle, and the inner ear.
01:26 We age in all of them.
01:28 In our outer ear, our cartilages
01:31 and our tissues start to droop.
01:33 It didn't devolve for hanging Christmas tree ornaments.
01:37 By the time you're well into your years,
01:39 you'll be able to wipe your chin with it.
01:41 The middle ear has tiny little bones.
01:44 Whenever you have bones, they come together at joints.
01:48 And you know what joints can get.
01:50 Can you say arthritis?
01:51 Presbycusis, or age-related hearing loss,
01:55 can be due to arthritis between your little ear bones.
01:59 We get to our inner ear.
02:01 We have specialized hair cells,
02:03 and they send signals to our vestibulocochlear nerve.
02:06 That's how we hear.
02:07 That's how we sense balance.
02:09 As we age, hearing loss can be due to death
02:13 of the hair cells, what we call sensory neural hearing loss.
02:17 We start to lose high frequency sounds,
02:21 probably around 30 plus.
02:22 We do retain most of all low frequency sounds.
02:26 (sad trombone music)
02:27 What'd you say?
02:28 I can't hear you.
02:30 (snaps fingers)
02:31 Eyes.
02:32 As we age, we start to get aspects
02:36 of what's called Crespiopia,
02:37 which is aging of aspects of vision.
02:41 The eye is largely a fluid sac.
02:45 When fluid vehicles are blocked, this is called glaucoma,
02:49 the fluids can become stiffer,
02:51 what we call a vitreous humor,
02:53 and start to harden, shift, pull away,
02:56 and you start to see floaters.
02:58 Oh, I'm seeing one now.
02:59 There's another one.
03:00 It really bothered me.
03:01 Yeah, I'm seeing that.
03:01 Whoa, there's, I got floaters.
03:03 They're usually harmless little things.
03:05 They don't cause any problems.
03:07 But if you see them, you should check them out.
03:09 Maybe it's a tear in the retina.
03:11 The eye is a direct window onto the brain.
03:15 (snaps fingers)
03:17 Nose.
03:18 These are little bones that come off the nose.
03:21 They're called turbinates,
03:22 lined with specialized sensory epithelium.
03:25 As we age, we're losing many of those cells
03:29 in our olfactory nerve.
03:31 We lose the smaller cells in the covering of the mucosa.
03:35 We do produce less mucus.
03:37 It's there to catch odorants.
03:39 Less mucus, less cells, altered smells.
03:43 As our smell decreases,
03:45 think of what happens when you have a nose cold
03:48 and both your nostrils are blocked.
03:50 A potato and an apple will taste the same.
03:53 What happens if you can't appreciate the flavor of food?
03:58 We try to pour more stuff onto it.
04:00 More salt, oh God, you don't want to put more salt on things.
04:03 That's throwing off all your vascular systems.
04:06 If you don't eat, you start losing weight.
04:09 That's a dangerous thing for many of the elderly.
04:12 You stop wanting to go out to dinners.
04:15 You don't socialize as much.
04:16 Removing that can lead to loneliness
04:19 and can lead to depression.
04:21 By the way, many medications can change your smell.
04:26 If you're noticing that the pizza
04:29 doesn't taste like the pizza, don't be passive.
04:32 Skin.
04:35 Skin is our biggest organ.
04:38 We have proteins in the skin that are called collagen
04:42 and elastin, giving structure to aspects in our skin.
04:45 Elastin gives us the ability to move.
04:48 What happens when we age?
04:50 These proteins start to decrease.
04:53 Skin all over the body starts to sag.
04:56 Underneath your arms, breast issues,
04:58 your scrotum starts to sag.
05:00 What is that?
05:01 What's happening?
05:02 Skin starts to sag on features of our face.
05:06 We get a down turning.
05:08 We get the sad face.
05:11 This is giving signals to our other primates
05:14 that say, whoa, distance, unhappy, angry, sad, bad.
05:19 They are negative clues.
05:21 If I knew stuff when I was 25,
05:24 I wouldn't have sat there and baked in the sun for hours.
05:26 Now we know.
05:27 Moisturize, use blockers.
05:30 Hair.
05:32 Starting in the late 30s, we lose our follicles
05:36 and hair starts to become thinner.
05:39 This bone, the side of my head,
05:41 is called a temporal bone.
05:43 Temporal means time.
05:45 When you look on the side of your head,
05:48 that's where you can first see hair color starts to change.
05:52 The gray comes because we lose melanin.
05:56 That's a major signal to some 20-year-old that I'm old.
06:00 You can knock me over and you can take my piece of dinner
06:04 to eat, male pattern baldness.
06:07 As our androgen starts to go down,
06:10 we're losing the top, we're gaining it elsewhere.
06:13 On our ears and our beard and our nose hairs,
06:17 some of us start looking like Chia Pets.
06:19 It's called the androgen paradox.
06:22 It's a multi-billion dollar business
06:23 to figure out how to save the follicle.
06:26 It's not the easiest thing to do.
06:28 This is really a natural part of life.
06:31 You don't have to have the same hair you had
06:33 when you were 18, but be careful
06:35 about lots of potentially dangerous chemicals.
06:40 Teeth.
06:40 So it's in our oral cavity, our tongue,
06:44 and also lots of glands.
06:46 These glands are producing things that kill bad bacteria.
06:49 As we age, submandibular, sublingual glands,
06:53 parotid glands start to decrease their secretions.
06:56 When bacteria is allowed to spread,
06:58 it starts to affect the gums.
07:01 They start to recede.
07:02 We lose the enamel of teeth.
07:04 What happens when teeth are removed?
07:06 The bone disappears.
07:08 If you have problems with your upper dentition,
07:11 you can get a sinus infection.
07:13 Don't disregard your teeth.
07:15 Next, the larynx.
07:18 The joints of the larynx can age.
07:21 The muscles become thinner.
07:23 The vocal folds start to shrink,
07:25 and the mucus coverings start to desiccate.
07:28 We can have arthritis in some of them.
07:31 Vocal folds, when they're closed together,
07:34 they create an ability to stabilize our diaphragm.
07:38 When you're constipated,
07:39 what you do is close your vocal folds.
07:41 They enable you to use the muscles of your abdominal wall
07:45 to help nature do its duty.
07:47 If these age and the muscles weaken,
07:49 we get problems lifting heavy objects,
07:52 and we start to have problems with phonation and voice.
07:56 This is known as presbyphonia.
07:57 You can hear somebody,
07:59 and you can gauge whether they're elderly
08:02 just by the sounds coming from their voice.
08:06 Heart.
08:09 As we get into our 50s and our 60s,
08:12 the heart muscles, what we call our myocardium,
08:15 start to lose oxygen.
08:17 It's usually because of problems with the arteries.
08:20 We get a hardening of the arteries.
08:22 They become narrowed.
08:23 As they narrow, we have less oxygen going to the heart.
08:27 We have a feature in our body
08:29 that's called collateral blood flow.
08:32 Where a structure or an organ
08:34 gets blood from various sources.
08:37 This is to make sure that the structure
08:40 is getting sufficiently nourished.
08:42 Our heart does not have a lot of collateral flow.
08:46 If we have the depth of tissue of the heart,
08:49 the overlap of blood supply to the heart
08:52 is usually not sufficient to help that heart muscle.
08:56 Why not?
08:56 How come evolution glitched?
08:58 Our species, Homo sapiens,
09:01 came about a quarter of a million years ago.
09:03 Life expectancy for our earliest ancestors,
09:07 even of our species, 40 plus years,
09:10 would have been maxing out.
09:11 Our heart seems to run into problems in the 50s and 60s.
09:16 As anybody who's built a house can tell you,
09:19 you don't put in extra plumbing if you don't need it.
09:22 Uterus.
09:25 A female has to carry with her uterus, ovaries,
09:29 connecting uterine tubes.
09:31 When females age, past childbearing years,
09:36 hormones are going to change.
09:38 Estrogen is going to shift.
09:40 The cells are continuing to grow in abnormal ways.
09:44 The ovaries become dangerous.
09:47 You can't assess ovarian cancers that easily.
09:51 Prostate.
09:54 The prostate is extremely important early on
09:57 in giving help in fluid to sperm.
10:00 As you get older, now it blossoms.
10:02 And as it grows,
10:04 the urethra that goes through it becomes blocked.
10:07 This starts to happen well into the 30s, into the 40s.
10:11 Those of us that are older,
10:12 we know what it is to get up three, four times a night
10:15 to pee.
10:16 That's because this prostate is not allowing urine
10:19 to have a healthy flow.
10:21 This is normal aging.
10:23 Prostate exams, I can tell you, are not the most fun to do.
10:27 Doc is trying to feel hardness,
10:30 which is an indication of cancer.
10:32 Joints.
10:35 These are beautiful structures.
10:37 Here's a patella, here's a femur, here's a tibia,
10:39 here's a fibula.
10:40 Along these areas are magnificent structures
10:43 called articular cartilage.
10:46 When we lose it, we can't replace it.
10:48 Joint deterioration can begin in your 30s and 40s.
10:53 If you have abused your joints, stuff will start earlier.
10:57 Running is a very, very important part of our evolution.
11:01 To get away from some lion that wanted us for Sunday brunch
11:05 on the savannas of East Africa.
11:06 This didn't evolve for playing football.
11:09 It didn't evolve for pounding on concrete.
11:12 When we've lost our little discs inside
11:16 that are called menisci,
11:18 we develop all sorts of inflammation of joints.
11:22 That's called arthritis.
11:23 Wanna run?
11:24 Find a nice patch of grass.
11:26 Try swimming.
11:28 Get off the concrete.
11:29 Don't send me hate letters.
11:31 Foot.
11:33 Arguably the most important,
11:35 least appreciated part of the human body.
11:38 When you age, we start to have issues with vasculature.
11:43 The foot and the hands
11:44 are the most distal parts of our body.
11:47 Proper circulation is essential.
11:50 When I go visit my physician,
11:52 he would feel my feet to see if they were warm,
11:55 to see if there was good circulation.
11:58 Blood flow is a key to so much.
12:01 When we start to get reduced blood flow,
12:03 we start to get losses of sensation in the skin.
12:06 If that occurs, you can fall.
12:08 You often hear about people breaking their hip
12:11 because they lose sensation often on the bottom of the foot.
12:17 By the way, for some of you
12:19 that have worn high heeled shoes for years,
12:23 are you crazy?
12:24 'Cause the end product is gonna be pinched toes,
12:27 decreased blood supply, damaged nerves.
12:30 Remember your feet.
12:32 These are key puppies
12:33 if we're to remain healthy and alive.
12:37 Things change.
12:39 We have to deal with that.
12:40 I still have problems realizing the Dodgers left Brooklyn.
12:44 They're not coming back.
12:46 I'm old, I'm expensive,
12:47 but why do the species keep us around?
12:51 It's called wisdom.
12:53 And I'll trade in my knee
12:55 for the hug of one of my granddaughters any day.
12:58 (upbeat music)