increase font size
Share
George F. Cressey II passed away peacefully on May 20, 2021, at Gosnell Memorial Hospice House in Scarborough after a long and courageous battle with kidney disease. George was born on Jan. 21, 1952 in Portland, the son of Janis Cook Cressey and W. Churchill Cressey. In 1976, he married the love of his life, Susan Fagan Cressey.
George grew up in Kennebunk and was active in the community as a businessman and volunteer. He was the co-founder of W.C. Cressey & Son, Inc. He and his father served as distributors for Thomas Built Buses in Maine, New Hampshire, and Vermont until George proudly turned the business over to his son Brian.
Researchers have identified a key factor in mental aging.
They’ve also shown that it might be prevented or reversed by fixing a glitch in the immune system’s front-line soldiers.
Certain cells of our immune system become increasingly irascible as we grow older. Instead of stamping out embers, they stoke the flames of chronic inflammation.
Biologists have long theorized that reducing this inflammation could slow the aging process and delay the onset of age-associated conditions, such as heart disease, Alzheimer’s disease, cancer, and frailty, and perhaps even forestall the gradual loss of mental acuity that happens to nearly everyone.
Study reveals immune driver of brain aging
Scientists have identified a key factor in mental aging and shown that it might be prevented or reversed by fixing a glitch in the immune system’s front-line soldiers. Jan 20 2021
Katrin Andreasson is the senior author of a study that identifies a particular set of immune cells as a key driver of mental aging.
Steve Fisch
Suppose Smokey Bear were to lose it and start setting forest fires instead of putting them out. That roughly describes the behavior of certain cells of our immune system that become increasingly irascible as we grow older. Instead of stamping out embers, they stoke the flames of chronic inflammation.
E-Mail
Suppose Smokey the Bear were to go on a tear and start setting forest fires instead of putting them out. That roughly describes the behavior of certain cells of our immune system that become increasingly irascible as we grow older. Instead of stamping out embers, they stoke the flames of chronic inflammation.
Biologists have long theorized that reducing this inflammation could slow the aging process and delay the onset of age-associated conditions, such as heart disease, Alzheimer s disease, cancer and frailty, and perhaps even forestall the gradual loss of mental acuity that happens to nearly everyone.
Yet the question of what, exactly, causes particular cells of the immune system to kick into inflammatory overdrive has lacked a definitive answer.