About this Research Topic
In this scenario, frailty and dementia have been triggering special interest both in research and clinical settings due to their high prevalence, impact on the individual’s quality of life, and consequences for public health worldwide. These conditions aptly reflect the complexity of age-related pathological conditions, finding as causal factor a myriad of heterogeneous, interacting, and often still unclear pathophysiological processes. Indeed, their study is strongly affected by the difficulty to differentiate the effects of a normal aging process from eventual pathological deviations of the underlying systems. Their occurrence and trajectories over time are strongly affected by a wide array of factors and determinants that can be hardly attributed to the deficit/involvement of single biological systems and/or health domains. Moreover, environment and social factors also play a key role in the determination of phenotypes. Therefore, there is a growing awareness that these conditions require a broader understanding and holistic approach, in order to properly capture their biological and clinical peculiarities and to improve their management.
The present Research Topic is aimed at widening our understanding of the frailty and dementia phenomena occurring with aging, in order to improve the clinical and public health approaches to these burdening conditions. Authors from all medical and research fields and disciplines are invited to contribute to this collection original research, review articles, opinions, and perspectives stemming from their backgrounds and specialties. The ultimate goal is to depict the multidimensional nature of these heterogeneous conditions, their commonalities and challenging aspects manifested across social, clinical, and research settings. This Research Topic welcomes contributions from different fields (from basic science to public health, from translational to clinical research) with the overall goal of serving as reference and guidance for future interdisciplinary conversations on aging and age-related conditions.
Keywords: Dementia, frailty, aging, longevity
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.