Aging may seem unavoidable, but that's not
necessarily so when it comes to the brain. So say researchers in the April 27th
issue of the Cell Press journal Trends in Cognitive Sciences explaining that it
is what you do in old age that matters more when it comes to maintaining a
youthful brain not what you did earlier in life.
"Although
some memory
functions do tend to decline as we get older, several elderly show
well preserved functioning and this is related to a well-preserved, youth-like brain," says Lars Nyberg
of UmeƄ University in Sweden.
Education
won't save your brain -- PhDs are as likely as high-school dropouts to
experience memory loss with old age, the researchers say. Don't count on your
job either. Those with a complex or demanding career may enjoy a limited
advantage, but those benefits quickly dwindle after retirement.
Engagement
is the secret to success. Those who are socially, mentally and physically
stimulated reliably show better cognitive performance with a brain that appears
younger than its years.
"There
is quite solid evidence that staying physically and mentally active is a way
towards brain maintenance," Nyberg says.
The
researchers say this new take on successful aging represents an important shift
in focus for the field. Much attention in the past has gone instead to
understanding ways in which the brain copes with or compensates for cognitive
decline in aging.
The
research team now argues for the importance of avoiding those age-related brain
changes in the first place. Genes play some role, but life choices and other
environmental factors, especially in old age, are critical.
Elderly
people generally do have more trouble remembering meetings or names, Nyberg
says. But those memory losses often happen later than many often think, after
the age of 60. Older
people also continue to accumulate knowledge and to use what they know
effectively, often to very old ages.
"Taken
together, a wide range of findings provides converging evidence for marked
heterogeneity in brain aging," the scientists write. "Critically,
some older adults show little or no brain changes relative to younger adults,
along with intact cognitive performance, which supports the notion of brain
maintenance.
In
other words, maintaining a youthful brain, rather than responding to and
compensating for changes, may be the key to successful memory aging."
More
information: Nyberg
et al.: "Memory aging and brain maintenance. "http://dx.doi.org/ … .2012.04.005
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