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"Inflammaging" and Estradiol among Older U.S. Women: A Nationally Representative Longitudinal Study.
Despite accumulating small-sample and clinical evidence on "inflammaging," no population-representative longitudinal studies have specifically examined women's late-life inflammation trends. While a range of studies indicates estradiol's immunomodulation role, evidence is contradictory on whether its effects are pro- or antiinflammatory among older women. Using longitudinal data from the first two waves of the National Social Life, Health and Aging Project-a national probability sample of older U.S. adults aged 57 to 85 years at baseline-this study began to fill these gaps. Findings suggested rather than being a lifelong process, older women's inflammaging may have a biological window that closes with senescence. Moreover, their endogenous estradiol plays a proinflammatory rather than immunoprotective role. Nor does this sex steroid modulate age effects on women's inflammation. More sex-specific basic research is needed on causal mechanisms underlying women's late-life inflammaging patterns.
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