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Apex Nursing

Reference — Geriatrics

Normal Aging Changes by Body System

Aging changes every system in predictable ways. Knowing the expected change — and its nursing implication — is what lets you spot the finding that is not aging at all.

Educational use only. Individual variation is wide; interpret findings against the patient’s own baseline and escalate new changes for evaluation. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.

Expected Changes and Nursing Implications

SystemExpected ChangeNursing Implication
CardiovascularStiffer vessels and myocardium; slower HR response; baroreceptor bluntingOrthostatic hypotension risk — sit before standing; allow recovery time between position changes
RespiratoryDecreased elastic recoil, weaker cough, fewer ciliaHigher pneumonia and aspiration risk — encourage mobility, deep breathing, vaccination
NeurologicSlower processing and reaction time; lighter, fragmented sleepAllow extra response time; protect sleep; slower is normal — disoriented is not
RenalGFR declines roughly with age; less concentrating abilityRenally dosed medications; dehydration and toxicity risk rise together
GenitourinaryBladder capacity falls; prostate enlarges; nocturiaToileting schedules and nighttime lighting reduce falls; incontinence still warrants evaluation
GISlower motility, decreased thirst and taste, less salivaConstipation prevention; deliberate hydration; monitor nutrition and weight
Endocrine / metabolicReduced glucose tolerance; slower drug metabolismWatch for medication accumulation; hypoglycemia presents atypically
MusculoskeletalSarcopenia, bone density loss, joint stiffeningFall and fracture prevention; encourage resistance activity and safe mobility
IntegumentaryThin dermis, less subcutaneous fat, slower healing, less sweatingPressure injury vigilance, gentle handling, heat intolerance awareness
ImmuneBlunted fever and inflammatory responseInfection may present without fever — watch function and cognition instead
SensoryPresbyopia, presbycusis, reduced taste/smell/touchGlasses and hearing aids on for every assessment; safety teaching for burns and falls

Using This at the Bedside

Reserve, not failure

Healthy aging organs work at rest — what is lost is reserve. Stress (infection, surgery, dehydration) decompensates older adults faster, which is why early subtle changes matter.

Baseline beats textbook

The most useful comparison is the patient against themselves last week — ask family and caregivers what is different.

NCLEX Pearls

  • Orthostatic vitals before first ambulation — baroreceptor blunting makes standing a fall risk.
  • Blunted fever response: a normal temperature never rules out infection in an older adult.
  • Decreased thirst + decreased GFR = quiet dehydration; schedule fluids rather than waiting for thirst.
  • Slower metabolism means “start low and go slow” for new medications.

Related Resources

Standards & sources

Fact-checked Jun 21, 2026

This page is written to align with American Geriatrics Society (AGS) · AGS Beers Criteria. It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →