Longevity and Osteoarthritis Cytogenetic Trends and Clinical Features in Older Adult Patients

Introduction

Understanding the Study Population and Research Significance

Study Overview and Methodology

This retrospective study analyzed 369 long-lived patients aged 90–102 years between 1998 and 2014. Participants were grouped into:

  • Patients with both osteoarthritis and hypertension
  • Patients with osteoarthritis only
  • A control group without osteoarthritis

Key Clinical Findings (Simplified Summary)

  • Most patients developed osteoarthritis symptoms between ages 75–89
  • Women represented a higher proportion of long-lived OA patients
  • Chromosomal analysis suggested a tendency toward increased aberrations in certain patient groups
  • Functional longevity was maintained despite long-term disease progression

These insights highlight how osteoarthritis interacts with aging biology and chronic comorbidities, guiding future research into healthy longevity.

Broader Medical and Public Health Context

Further Reading and Resources

To support reader navigation and topic continuity:

  • Read more articles in our Orthopaedic Research collection
  • Explore related studies on degenerative joint disease and aging biology within our clinical research sections.

The full research document provides deeper interpretation of methodology and outcomes, and a comprehensive discussion is available within the main journal publication at the DOI-referenced page above.

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