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| THE FAB FOUR: Physical and mental activity, social engagement and cardiovascular health are important.
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IF you think of your brain as a car, the sleekest, fastest machine youll ever own is a 20-year-old brain. It accelerates effortlessly and handles sharp turns with ease. It never stalls.
Whether you use that Maserati between your ears to actually go somewhere on the road of life or spend your time doing doughnuts in the Gas-N-Go parking lot is up to you. Either way, you wont be driving it forever.
Scientists suspect that our brainpower begins to slip as early as our 30s. As we motor through middle age, connections between brain cells falter, and levels of important brain chemicals run low. The mind gradually becomes less quick and nimble.
But all is not lost. More and more research suggests that a bit of regular maintenance work can counteract this cognitive decline and help us stay mentally sharp as we age.
Earlier this year, a panel of experts assembled by the US National Institutes of Health reviewed the scientific literature on cognitive ageing. Aside from genetics, four factors stood out as good predictors of how well people keep their mental edge as they age, says Marilyn Albert, a cognitive neuroscientist at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, who sat on the panel.
The fab four, Albert says, are physical activity, mental activity, social engagement and cardiovascular health. (And whats good for the gander in this case is good for the goose: Albert and other researchers say cognitive aging seems to be very similar in men and women.)
Often, the first problem people notice as they age is a drop-off in working memory, the ability to hold information in ones mind for short periods of time. Car keys become more elusive, parking spaces harder to recall. In lab tests, ageing subjects also show reductions in mental processing speed, such as the ability to make quick decisions based on new information.
For most people, these changes are so subtle that they make little difference in everyday life.
An active lifestyle may provide an additional boost. In terms of physical activity, you dont need to be a triathlete to reap the benefits of exercise, says Arthur Kramer, a psychologist at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign.
In an article in Nature, Kramer and his colleagues reported that sedentary adults aged 60 to 75 years who took a brisk walk three times a week for six months improved substantially on cognitive tests that required them to juggle multiple tasks. A similar group who did non-aerobic stretching and toning exercises showed no such improvement.
More recently, Kramers team has found evidence that modest aerobic exercise in older adults boosts the efficiency of the frontal cortex, a brain region important for multi-tasking, planning and other high-level cognitive functions.
Exercise also helps maintain cardiovascular capacity, another factor tied to brain health. In fact, anything that helps keep the blood vessels of the heart healthy and flowing freely will do the same for the vessels that feed the brain, Albert says. The better the brain is nourished, the better it will function, she says. That means that controlling your blood pressure, weight and cholesterol is important for brain health. So is not smoking.
A healthy, balanced diet probably helps too. Some animal studies have found that foods high in antioxidants — such as blueberries, strawberries and spinach — may protect the brain from the ravages of time. Theres also some evidence that moderate alcohol use is beneficial for cognitive health. (Heavy drinking takes a heavy toll on the brain.)
Several studies in recent years have suggested a link between mental activity and cognitive health, finding, for example, that people who regularly engage in mentally stimulating activities in their free time — such as reading, playing games or even doing home repairs — have a reduced risk of Alzheimers disease. (Watching television has the opposite effect, presumably because it requires little mental effort.)
All this suggests — but doesnt yet prove — that mental stimulation is good for the brains of healthy humans, says Denise Park, a cognitive neuroscientist also at the University of Illinois. The data arent completely there, but my personal view is that its important to learn new things and try out things you havent done before, she says.
So if youre a sudoku addict, try taking language lessons. Already fluent in seven tongues? Try learning the flute. Seeking new challenges may do more for your brain than sticking with the few activities you know best.
Making some friends probably wouldnt hurt either, Albert says, because socialising seems to help buffer people against mental slippage. One possible reason, she says, is that a strong social network staves off two known contributors to cognitive decline: stress and depression.
Healthy cognitive ageing is a relatively new area of research, so experts are wary of making overly specific recommendations about what kinds and what amounts of activity best protect the ageing brain.
Even so, its hard to see a downside to staying physically, mentally and socially active, Park says. At least you'll have a more interesting life.
L.A. Times
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