|

HOME PAGE |
Plenty can be done to slow the age-related declines in memory, mental
speed, and decision making that affect most people.
Keeping
Your Brain Fit
There's plenty you can do to slow the effects of aging. Here's how to keep
your thinking and memory sharp
U.S. News
By
Christine Larson
Posted January 31, 2008
Marian Conte's brain weighs 1,100 grams, according to Nintendo. "That's up
from 800 grams when I started playing," jokes Conte, 52, a real-estate
agent from Hamilton, N.J., who recently added the video game Big Brain
Academy to her fitness regimen. The better she scores on brainteasers, the
larger her fictional brain. Since Conte's mother died of complications
from Alzheimer's disease in 2003, she's trying to guard herself any way
she can, embracing crossword puzzles, fruits and vegetables, and a new
genre of high-tech workouts that aim to slow cognitive loss. This
particular game makes no such claim. But regular play certainly can't
hurt, Conte figures: "I want to do any little thing I can to protect my
brain."

(Stephen Rountree-USN&WR)
Related News
·Vigorous
Exercise Can Really Roll Back the Years
·Attacking
Alzheimer's
·Games
to Keep Your Brain Agile
·Join
a Discussion
If her Nintendo score isn't solid evidence, science increasingly suggests
Conte's efforts may pay off. Just within the past few months, several
groups of researchers have added support for the growing consensus that
plenty can be done to slow the age-related declines in memory, mental
speed, and decision making that affect most people. In November, a team
from the Mayo Clinic and the University of Southern California announced
that one computer-based mental training program appeared to improve older
people's cognitive performance by as much as 10 years. That same month, a
Harvard researcher found that long-term use of beta carotene supplements
delayed cognitive decline by up to a year and a half.
And a new book out last month puts forth evidence that "exercise is the
single best thing you can do for your brain," says author John Ratey, a
clinical associate professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School. The
book is Spark: The Revolutionary New Science of Exercise and the Brain.
"Some of the myths about the brain—that it was not changeable, that there
was nothing you could do about cognitive decline—have really been
dispelled in the past 10 years," says Lynda Anderson, director of the
Healthy Aging Program at the federal Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention, whose bold goal is "to maintain or improve the cognitive
performance of all adults." The potential payoff is enormous. Alzheimer's
now afflicts 4.5 million people in the United States—double the number in
1980—and is expected to reach 16 million by 2050. "Statistics show if we
could delay the onset of Alzheimer's by five years, the number of people
with the disease would be cut in half," says Yaakov Stern, a cognitive
neuroscientist at Columbia University.
What are you up against? The inevitable physical changes start in early
adulthood but become especially marked after about age 60 or so.
Gradually, the brain shrinks, losing around 0.5 percent to 1 percent of
its volume each year after that age threshold; brains with Alzheimer's
shrink about twice as fast. The effects are greatest in the prefrontal
cortex, the seat of executive function (which includes working
memory—responsible for remembering a telephone number while you're
dialing, say—and planning, focus, and behavior choices), and sometimes in
the hippocampus, involved in memory. Brain cells' dendrites and axons—the
slender filaments that transmit electrical impulses—shrink. The brain's
white matter, which contains nerve fibers that transmit signals from one
brain region to another, starts to degrade around age 50. Result: It gets
harder and harder to remember what you wanted to buy at the grocery store,
to process and respond to information, and to reason your way through a
problem. In your 70s and 80s, executive function starts to fail.
Not every mental skill suffers equally. Vocabulary, for instance, tends to
remain, as do skills practiced for a long time, like playing the piano or
using a spreadsheet. You might even improve at some things: In tests of
experienced crossword puzzlers of all ages, the best were in their 60s and
70s.
Potential.
The more scientists learn about the brain's decay, the more curious
they've become about how well people function anyway. Even among people 85
and older, only 18.2 percent live in nursing homes. "In the past, much of
the research has focused on disease and decline," says Gene Cohen,
director of the Center on Aging, Health and Humanities at George
Washington University. "Now we're looking at the concept of potential and
how older people often continue to thrive and grow even in the face of the
most serious illness." Recent studies of both animal and human subjects
have found that several factors go hand in hand with better mental
performance, including education, professional success, and intellectual,
social, and physical activities. A 2003 study reported in the New
England Journal of Medicine, for example, found that people over 75
who danced, read, or played board games or musical instruments also had a
lower rate of dementia.
Much of the work has focused on finding ways to bulletproof people against
Alzheimer's. In mice, an Alzheimer's vaccine seemed to work, but it proved
toxic in humans and trials were suspended (although research on vaccines
continues). Beta carotene supplements may delay cognitive decline if taken
for many years—but only by a year and a half. Education seems to lower
your odds of Alzheimer's—but even some Nobel laureates develop it.
Cholesterol-lowering drugs seemed to offer some promise in fending off
Alzheimer's, but a 12-year-long study published in January showed they had
no effect. For now, experts think the best approach is to take the sorts
of steps that Conte is taking to delay normal cognitive decline.
Stretch the plastic.
For decades, scientists assumed that humans were born with all the brain
cells they'd ever have. Then, in the 1970s, researchers showed that new
brain cells and neural pathways form through the end of life. "This was
the beginning of the brain plasticity movement," says Cohen, "the
understanding that when we challenge our brains, the brain cells sprout
new dendrites, which results in increased synapses, or contact points."
More recent research has shown that there isn't an age limit: Training
older adults in certain memory tasks, like remembering faces and names,
seems to boost those specific abilities—though it won't remind you to
bring your shopping list to the store. And the newest evidence suggests
that intensive practice in reasoning skills or in distinguishing sounds
appears to lead to more generalized improvements in brain function.
In 2006, for example, a controlled clinical study of more than 2,000 older
people by researchers at Pennsylvania State University, Indiana
University, Johns Hopkins University, and elsewhere found that those who
received 10 60-to-75-minute training sessions in reasoning—specifically,
in recognizing word, number, and letter patterns and filling in the next
item in a series—reported less difficulty with such activities of daily
living as understanding instructions on a medication label. The effects
still were apparent five years later. This past November, scientists from
the University of Southern California and the Mayo Clinic announced that
study subjects who spent an hour a day for eight to 10 weeks using a
program that asked them to recognize subtle differences in sounds
performed better than the control group on memory and speed tests, too.
Designers of the Brain Fitness Program (made by Posit Science, which
funded the study) claim that such ear training causes the brain to convey
information more precisely from one region to another—which, in turn,
improves other types of thinking.
"The amount of memory improvement was equivalent to going back 10 years in
your ability," says Elizabeth Zelinski, professor of gerontology and
psychology at USC and a principal investigator on the study, which has not
yet been published.
Experts caution that most
brain-training
products haven't been tested and that what data do exist are
still shaky. If improvement of daily living tasks is the goal, "we don't
yet have the data to suggest they accomplish that," says Arthur Kramer, a
neuroscientist at the University of Illinois. "Yes, we have data that says
you can get better at certain things with practice. But does it translate
to the real world? We don't know yet." Still, many doctors who work with
older people feel they don't have time to wait for the research, and
nursing homes and senior centers across the country are adding "brain
gyms" and other programs to help older people stay mentally active.
"I've learned more about China than you can imagine," says Hortense
Gutmann, 100, who started using E-mail just over a year ago through a new
computer-education program for residents of Sarah Neuman Center for
Healthcare and Rehabilitation, a nursing home in Mamaroneck, N.Y. She now
keeps in touch with relatives there, as well as in Minnesota and Israel,
and takes great pleasure in having mastered a new skill.
Consumers aren't waiting for more research, either. The market for
products like Brain Fitness Program, Nintendo's Brain Age, and MindFit
soared to an estimated $80 million in 2007, up from just $2 million to $4
million in 2005, according to SharpBrains.com, a San Francisco-based group
that follows the industry. Meanwhile, the Alzheimer's Association
recommends any activity that will keep you curious and learning: reading
and writing, attending lectures, taking classes, even gardening.
Sound body, sound mind.
Still, the best workout for your brain may be the old-fashioned kind.
As far back as 1999, researchers at the University of Illinois found that
older people who started exercising showed faster reaction times and
better ability to focus after just six months than did a control group.
Now, it's becoming clearer why. In a second study reported in 2006, the
same team found that the aerobic exercisers actually increased their brain
size by about 3 percent. Last year, researchers at Columbia University
found that when people exercised regularly for three months, blood flow
increased to a part of the hippocampus, which is important for memory. In
studies of mice who exercised on treadmills, increased blood flow to the
same part of the brain corresponded with an increase in the production of
new brain cells.
The power of exercise seems far more impressive than that of
brain-training software, says Sandra Aamodt, editor in chief of Nature
Neuroscience, a scientific journal on brain research, and coauthor of
the forthcoming book Welcome to Your Brain. A recent meta-analysis
of numerous exercise studies found that, on average, faithful aerobic
exercise might boost someone's cognitive performance from average—say,
from 10th place out of 20 people tested—to notably above average—say, to
No. 5. But cognitive training would boost the same person to eighth out of
20.
Why is exercise so good for the brain? Maybe for the same reason it's so
good for the heart: its beneficial effect on blood vessels. "It may be
that a pretty significant amount of deterioration in brain function
relates to disruptions of the cardiovascular system by microstrokes," in
the tiny vessels in the brain, says Aamodt. Exercise may help prevent
them. It also stimulates the production of proteins called growth factors,
which promote the formation and growth of brain cells and synapses.
Certain nutrients, too, are thought to be protective. The antioxidants in
fruits and vegetables have been linked to improved cognitive function;
berries, for instance, seem especially beneficial in keeping brains spry.
"Old neurons, like a lot of old married couples, don't talk to each other
anymore," says James Joseph, director of the neuroscience lab at the USDA
Human Nutrition Research Center on Aging at Tufts University. "We have
found that the berry fruits improve neuronal communication." In November,
Harvard researchers announced that men who took a beta carotene supplement
for 18 years had slightly better cognitive function than those who
didn't—their memory scores matched those of people about one year younger.
However, men who took supplements for only one year showed no improvement,
and several other studies have found no link between antioxidants and
mental performance. The
Alzheimer's
Association recommends a diet high in dark-colored veggies,
like kale, spinach, beets, and eggplant; colorful fruits like berries,
raisins, prunes, oranges, and red grapes; plus fish like salmon or trout
high in heart-healthful omega-3 fatty acids.
Making connections.
It has been more than two decades since Bill Harves, 90, quit singing in
his church choir. Four years ago, he joined the professionally led chorale
that rehearses once a week at his Bailey's Crossroads, Va., continuing
care retirement community. The chorale gives several concerts a year,
including one at Washington, D.C.'s Kennedy Center. He's gained in
breathing technique, enunciation, and music reading skills. "There's no
doubt I've improved as a singer," he says.
Besides having fun, Harves, who also serves as chairman of his community's
computer club and is active on a residents' committee, is very likely
protecting his cognitive function. In a study of more than 2,800 people
ages 65 or older, Harvard researchers found that those with at least five
social ties—church groups, social groups, regular visits, or phone calls
with family and friends—were less likely to suffer cognitive decline than
those with no social ties.
"The working hypothesis is that it has something to do with stress
management," says Marilyn Albert, a neuroscientist at Johns Hopkins and
codirector of the Alzheimer's research center there. In animal studies, a
prolonged elevation in stress hormones damages the hippocampus. Social
engagement appears to boost people's sense of control, which affects their
stress level. Creative arts seem to be a highly promising way to increase
social engagement. George Washington University's Cohen has found that
elderly people who joined choirs also stepped up their other activities
during a 12-month period, while a nonsinging control group dropped out of
some activities. The singers also reported fewer health problems, while
the control group reported an increase.
All the new research has senior programs rethinking their offerings. In
Chicago, for example, Mather LifeWays, a not-for-profit that promotes
healthful aging, has opened three neighborhood cafes that serve coffee and
sandwiches to people of all ages and offer fitness classes, computer
courses, lifelong-learning opportunities, and volunteer activities for
older adults. "I've met lots of friends here," says Jill Wonsil, 66, who
drops in at the cafe near her home several times a week to socialize,
check E-mail, and take exercise and other classes. If living life to the
fullest is the best way to stay sharp, it's not such a tough prescription
to swallow.
|