Division of Geriatrics, David Geffen School of Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles, CA 90095-1687, USA.
Ann N Y Acad Sci. 2010 Feb;1186:223-39. doi: 10.1111/j.1749-6632.2009.05341.x.
This chapter focuses on evidence linking socio-economic status (SES) to "downstream" peripheral biology. Drawing on the concept of allostatic load, we examine evidence linking lower SES with greater cumulative physiological toll on multiple major biological regulatory systems over the life course. We begin by reviewing evidence linking lower SES to poorer trajectories of aging in multiple, individual physiological systems, followed by evidence of the resulting cumulative, overall burdens of physiological dysregulation seen among those of lower SES. The role of cumulative physiological dysregulation in mediating SES gradients in morbidity and mortality is then examined. We conclude with discussion of the question of interactions between SES (and other such environmental factors) and genetic endowment, and their potential consequences for patterns of physiological activity--an area of research that appears poised to contribute significantly to our understanding of how social conditions "get under the skin" to affect health and aging.
这一章重点介绍社会经济地位(SES)与“下游”外周生物学之间的关联证据。借鉴适应负荷的概念,我们研究了低 SES 与生命过程中多个主要生物调节系统中更大的累积生理负担之间的关联证据。我们首先回顾了低 SES 与多个个体生理系统中衰老轨迹较差的关联证据,然后是低 SES 人群中生理失调的累积、总体负担的证据。接下来,我们研究了累积生理失调在调节 SES 梯度与发病率和死亡率中的作用。最后,我们讨论了 SES(和其他环境因素)与遗传因素之间的相互作用及其对生理活动模式的潜在影响,这是一个有望为我们理解社会条件如何“深入皮肤”影响健康和衰老的重要研究领域。