Aging Concepts and Sensory Changes Flashcards

1
Q

Age-related macular degeneration

A

Eye disease that blurs central vision

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2
Q

Cataracts

A

Cloudy area in lens
Leads to blurriness

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3
Q

Diabetic Retinopathy

A

Eye condition that can cause vision loss and blindness
Leads to patches of vision

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4
Q

Glaucoma

A

Group of eye diseases that can cause vision loss and blindness by damaging optic nerve
Leads to loss of peripheral vision

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5
Q

Major source of income for older adults

A

Social Security

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6
Q

Primary source of health insurance for older adults

A

Medicare

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7
Q

What group is most likely to be the poorest older adults

A

Hispanic women living alone

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8
Q

What percent of adults over 65 are still working

A

18%

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9
Q

What percentage of older adults live alone?

A

27%

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10
Q

Traditionalists

A

Born from 1922-1945
Values respect for authority, conformity, discipline, sacrifice, and hard work

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11
Q

Baby boomers

A

Born from 1946-1964
Values optimism, involvement, personal gratification and growth, drive, personal fulfillment, communication, and questioning authority
Have more years of formal education
Politically active group

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12
Q

Generation X

A

Born from 1965-1980
Values fun, balance, informality, risk taking, skepticism, and self-reliance

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13
Q

Generation Y/Millenials

A

Born from 1981-2000
Values confidence, realism, socialization, multitasking, collectivism, and entrepreneurship

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14
Q

Effect of decreased subcutaneous fat around eye

A

Leads to decreased near vision

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15
Q

Effect of decreased eye tone and elasticity

A

Leads to poor eye coordination

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16
Q

Effect of decreased strength of eye muscles

A

Leads to distortion of images

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17
Q

Effect of weakening of levator palpebrae superioris

A

Leads to problems with upward gaze, convergence, poor eye coordination, and difficulty focusing

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18
Q

Effect of decreased cornea transparency

A

Leads to blurred vision, decreased cornea sensitivity, and decreased visual field

19
Q

Effect of cornea thickening, flattening, become more rigid, and less smooth

A

Leads to astigmatism and blurred vision

20
Q

Effect of degeneration of sclera, pupil, and iris

A

Leads to compromised night vision

21
Q

Effect of increased density and rigidity of lens

A

Leads to loss of color sensitivity to green, blue, and violet

22
Q

Effect of pupil size decreases and senile miosis (more fixed pupil)

A

Leads to impaired depth perception (appears further than they are) and driving ability

23
Q

Effect of increases in connective tissue, sclerosis of blood supply, and muscle weakness of eye

A

Leads to decreases in iris dilation, gradual loss of visual acuity, difficulty seeing in low lighting

24
Q

Effect of decreases in rod density and retinal nerve fiber thinning

A

Leads to narrower field of vision, difficulty seeing in low light, problems with light/dark adaptation, and increased sensitivity to glare

25
Q

Effect of decreased lens elasticity

A

Leads to decreased ability to change shape for objects of different distances which results in difficulty seeing near objects, and difficulty reading print

26
Q

Interventions for low vision

A

Use voice or touch to get attention and face adult when speaking
Adequate lighting with light source directed behind adult or on side of better seeing eye for reading or writing
Avoid fluorescent lighting
Remove clutter
Enlarge educational/reading material
Instructions on non-glossy paper
High contrast print and paper
At least 14 point font
Enhance contrast

27
Q

Effect of lost/damaged sensory hair cells

A

Lead to difficulty hearing higher frequencies or tinnitus

28
Q

Effect of nerve cell diminution of cochlear ganglia

A

Leads to diminished ability for pitch discrimination

29
Q

Effect of degeneration of central auditory pathways

A

Leads to reduced speech recognition and reception

30
Q

Effect of lost neurotransmitters related to hearing

A

Leads to loss of speech discrimination

31
Q

Presbycusis

A

Age-related hearing loss from cumulative loud sounds

32
Q

Conductive hearing loss

A

Blockage of acoustic energy that prevents conduction of sound to the inner ear due to problems with external or middle ear, ear infections, or ear wax

33
Q

Sensorineural hearing loss

A

Hearing loss that results from loss or damage to sensory hair cells or nerves with better air conduction than bone conduction
Not correctable

34
Q

Central auditory processing disorder

A

Ears and brain do not work well together
Ears can hear but brain has trouble processing the sounds

35
Q

Tinnitus

A

Leads to perception of buzzing, whistling, or ringing in ears
May be managed with CBT/counseling, decreased salt, nicotine, and caffeine intake, auditory habituation, and masking (use of a device that produces a sound to cover up buzzing)

36
Q

Intervention for strategies for hearing loss

A

Face when talking and get attention
Speak clearly
Do not shout
Rephrase if not understood
Closed captioning, assisted listening devices
Decrease background noise
Alerting devices with lower pitched rings
Amplified doorbells or phones

37
Q

Changes in taste and smell

A

Decline in ability to identify and discriminate sweet, sour, salty, bitter, and umami
Decline in thickness and dryness of oral mucosa
Anosmia (lack of smell), hyposmia (decrease in smell), dysosmia (distortion of smell), ageusia (absence of taste), hypogeusia (decreased sensitivity to tastes), dysgeusia (distortion of taste), phantosmia (smell hallucination), phantogeusia (taste hallucination)
Loss of neurons in olfactory tract/bulb
Degeneration of nasal mucosa sensory cells

38
Q

Importance of taste and smell

A

Eating may become less pleasurable
Smell is important for safety

39
Q

Intervention for chemosensory deficits

A

Flavor amplifications and variety
Good oral care before meals
Counseling due to assess overal wellbeing

40
Q

Skin changes with aging

A

Atrophic changes affect sensation of touch and pressure, pain and temperature
Epidermis becomes dryer, thinner, and stiffer
Degeneration of Pacinian and Meissner’s corpuscles
Decreased volume of sweat glands
Weak, decreased blood vessels
Hypodermis stores less fat
Speed and intensity in which touch/pressure are perceived affected by decreased response time
Deep pain perception decreases

41
Q

Intervention for touch and pressure deficits

A

Educate on care of skin
Use vision to prevent skin breakdown
Compensate with vision
Change position every 30-45 minutes

42
Q

Temperature changes

A

Reduction in number of thermoreceptors, decreased number of sweat glands, less effective cutaneous vasoconstrictor response leads to decreased ability to regulate temperature

43
Q

Intervention for temperature deficits

A

Educate on layering and moving to cooler or warmer environment
Decrease or increase activity level
Moving to cooler or warmer environments