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[Anemia in the aged - a geriatric syndrome? : Second position paper on anemia in the aged by the working group anemia of the German Geriatric Society].

Geriatric syndromes are the pathognomonic columns of geriatric medicine. In contrast to many syndromes in younger people, in geriatric patients, the chief complaint does not typically represent the specific pathological condition underlying the change in health status. Geriatric syndromes are usually highly prevalent, multicausal and share a number of common risk factors. In recent years, scientific controversy over anemia in the aged has revealed a high prevalence in geriatric patients, which prompted the "working group on anemia" to publish its first position paper at a European level. The development of anemia is multicausal and the causes of the various forms of anemia range from iron deficiency, malnutrition, chronic inflammation, hormonal dysregulation, functional organ disorders, impaired synthesis to malignancies. The corresponding pathomechanisms are closely associated with the development of other geriatric syndromes such as gait disorders, sarcopenia, frailty, and falls. Against this backdrop, the "working group on anemia" of the German Geriatric Society has devised a second position paper:"Multicausality and the significant association between anemia and assessment-based quantifiable impairments suggest the consideration of anemia in the aged to be a geriatric syndrome."

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