Younger facial looks are associate with a lower likelihood of several age-related morbidities in the middle-aged to elderly
Clinical Summary
View sourceWhat was studied
Cross-sectional analysis of 2,679 adults (51.5–87.8 years) of European descent from the Rotterdam Study tested whether the difference between perceived and chronological age (ΔPA) relates to age‑related morbidities across organ systems. Perceived age was scored from facial photographs by blinded raters in 5‑year categories and associations were modeled with adjustments for age, sex, BMI, smoking, and sun exposure.
Key findings
Each 5‑year higher ΔPA (looking ~5 years younger) was associated with lower odds of osteoporosis (OR 0.76, 95% CI 0.62–0.93), COPD (OR 0.85, 95% CI 0.77–0.95), and cataracts (OR 0.84, 95% CI 0.73–0.97), less age‑related hearing loss (model 2; B = −0.76, 95% CI −1.35 to −0.17), and better global cognitive function (model 2; B = 0.07, 95% CI 0.04–0.10).
Study limitations
Cross‑sectional design limits causal inference; all participants were of European descent, which may limit generalizability. Perceived age was panel‑scored in 5‑year bins, which may introduce measurement imprecision.
Clinical implications
In middle‑aged to older adults, looking younger for one’s age correlates with fewer age‑related conditions and better cognition; facial ageing may be a visible cue of systemic ageing burden. Use it, if at all, only as a prompt for appropriate evaluation, not as a basis for treatment decisions.
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