Anti-Aging Drugs Targeting ‘Zombie’ Cells May Benefit Some Older Women: Mayo Clinic Study

A new study finds that senolytic drugs may be used to clear the senescent ‘zombie’ cells that drive inflammation and aging.
Anti-Aging Drugs Targeting ‘Zombie’ Cells May Benefit Some Older Women: Mayo Clinic Study
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Mayo Clinic researchers have found that drugs targeting “zombie” cells in otherwise healthy older women may benefit health.

Zombie cells, also known as senescent cells, are cells that malfunction because of age. They are called zombie cells because they have slipped into a dormant stage: They’re not dead, but not really alive, either. What’s more, they can’t divide or reproduce as do normal cells. Instead, these cells drive inflammation and tissue dysfunction linked to aging and chronic diseases, including Alzheimer’s, arthritis, and certain cancers.

A.C. Dahnke
A.C. Dahnke
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A.C. Dahnke is a freelance writer and editor residing in California. She has covered community journalism and health care news for nearly a decade, winning a California Newspaper Publishers Award for her work.