AnthropologicAl review • Vol. 78 (3), 317–336 (2015)
Longitudinal and cross-sectional changes with
age in selected anthropometric and physiological
traits in hospitalized adults: an insight from the
Polish Longitudinal Study of Aging (PLSA)
Piotr Chmielewski
1
, Krzysztof Borysławski
2
, Krzysztof Chmielowiec
3
,
Jolanta Chmielowiec
4
1
Department of Anatomy, Faculty of Medicine, Wrocław Medical University
2
Department of Anthropology, Institute of Biology, Wrocław University of Environmental
and Life Sciences
3
Regional Psychiatric Hospital for People with Mental Disorders, Cibórz, Lubuskie Province,
Poland
4
Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, University of Zielona Góra
AbstrAct: Longitudinal studies of aging concerning individuals with comparable lifestyle, diet, health profle,
socioeconomic status, and income remain extraordinarily rare. The purposes of our ongoing project are as
follows: (i) to collect extensive data on biological and medical aspects of aging in the Polish population, (ii)
to determine factors affecting the rate and course of aging, (iii) to understand how aging unfolds as a dy-
namic and malleable process in ontogeny, and (iv) to fnd novel predictors of longevity. Our investigation
followed 142 physically healthy asylum inmates, including 68 males and 74 females, for at least 25 years
from the age of 45 years onward. Cross-sectional assessment involved 225 inmates, including 113 males and
112 females. All the patients lived for a very long time under similar and good environmental conditions at
the hospital in Cibórz, Lubuskie Province. They maintained virtually the same daily schedule and lifestyle.
The rate and direction of changes with age in selected anthropometric and physiological traits were deter-
mined using ANOVA, t-test, and regression analysis. There were sex differences in the rate and pattern of
age-related changes in certain characteristics such as relative weight, red blood cell count, monocyte count,
thymol turbidity value, systolic blood pressure, and body temperature. Body weight, the body mass index
(BMI), and total bilirubin level increased with advancing age, while body height decreased with age in both
sexes. In conclusion, the aging process was associated with many regressive alterations in biological traits
in both sexes but the rate and pattern of these changes depended on biological factors such as age and sex.
There were only few characteristics which did not change signifcantly during the period under study. On
the basis of comparison between the pattern of longitudinal changes with aging and the pattern of cross-sec-
tional changes with age in the analyzed traits, we were able to predict which pattern of changes is associated
with longer lifespan.
Key words: aging, senescence, changes with age, longitudinal study, cross-sectional study, lifespan, longevity
Changes with age in biological traits in older adults
Piotr Chmielewski et al.
Original Article Received: June 6, 2015; Accepted for publication: October 12, 2015
DOI: 10.1515/anre-2015-0025
© 2015 Polish Anthropological Society
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