Study of the association of total and differential white blood cell counts with geriatric conditions, cardio-vascular diseases, seric IL-6 levels and telomere length

Geriatric patients are highly susceptible to infections. While reduced lymphocyte count has been associated with age, other studies found no change in WBC counts with age. Increased circulating white blood cell (WBC) count has been associated with cardiovascular (CV) diseases and frailty but there a...

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Veröffentlicht in:Experimental gerontology 2015-01, Vol.61, p.105-112
Hauptverfasser: Compté, Nathalie, Bailly, Benjamin, De Breucker, Sandra, Goriely, Stanislas, Pepersack, Thierry
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container_title Experimental gerontology
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creator Compté, Nathalie
Bailly, Benjamin
De Breucker, Sandra
Goriely, Stanislas
Pepersack, Thierry
description Geriatric patients are highly susceptible to infections. While reduced lymphocyte count has been associated with age, other studies found no change in WBC counts with age. Increased circulating white blood cell (WBC) count has been associated with cardiovascular (CV) diseases and frailty but there are discrepancies. Frailty, geriatric conditions, cardiovascular diseases and WBC count have also been associated with low grade inflammation. Association between geriatric conditions and WBC has been scarcely studied. The aim of the study is to assess the association between WBC and geriatric conditions, CV diseases, and seric IL-6 levels. We recruited 100 subjects in the general population and hospitalized for chronic medical conditions (age, 23–96years). We collected information on clinical status (medical history, comorbidities, treatments and geriatric syndromes), biological parameters (hematological tests, cytomegalovirus serology) and cytokine production (basal IL-6). Using stepwise backward multivariate analyses, we defined which set of clinical and biological variables could be predictive of increased total and differential WBC counts. We found that low-grade inflammation is independently associated with total WBC, monocyte and neutrophil counts, but not geriatric conditions. CV diseases were the only significant associated factor for high monocyte count. In this study, we observed that differential and total WBC counts do not seem to be associated with geriatric conditions but with CV diseases, low-grade inflammation and telomere length •Link between biological and clinical parameters•Old individuals are assessed thanks to geriatric syndrome.•Effect of age and CV diseases is studied thanks to the recruitment of young individuals.•Exclusion of acute conditions interfering with increase of WBC count
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.exger.2014.11.016
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subjects Adult
Aged
Aged, 80 and over
Aging - immunology
Cardiovascular diseases
Cardiovascular Diseases - etiology
Cytomegalovirus
Female
Geriatric conditions
Humans
Interleukin-6 - blood
Leukocyte Count
Male
Middle Aged
Monocytes - immunology
Neutrophils - immunology
Telomere
White blood cell counts
title Study of the association of total and differential white blood cell counts with geriatric conditions, cardio-vascular diseases, seric IL-6 levels and telomere length
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