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Concepts & theories

Oldest-old (85+ age group)

DEHochbetagte (Altersgruppe 85+)

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The oldest-old is a demographic and gerontological term for individuals aged 85 and above, the fastest-growing segment of most high-income country populations. This group shows heterogeneous functional and cognitive trajectories; a substantial minority maintains high functional capacity into the late eighties and beyond, a phenomenon sometimes termed successful aging. Compared with younger old adults (65–84), the oldest-old display distinct epidemiology: traditional cardiovascular risk factors such as hypertension and elevated LDL-C lose predictive power, while markers of physical function, nutritional status, and resilience become stronger mortality predictors. Studying this group is methodologically complicated by survival bias — those who reach 85 are a selected population — which may inflate associations between traits observed at that age and longevity.

Sources

  1. Barnett K, Mercer SW, Norbury M, Watt G, Wyke S, Guthrie B. (2012). Epidemiology of multimorbidity and implications for health care, research, and medical education: a cross-sectional study. *Lancet*doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(12)60240-2