counter customizable free hit
America's Seniors at www.TodaysSeniorsNetwork.com
 
AddThis Feed ButtonNow, keep up to date with daily feeds of newly posted stories about America's Seniors...click on the box to the left
Election 2008...New! MSNBC Dashboard with continuous updates...information...stats...click here
 

 

 

Memory loss becoming less common in Older Americans
 
 


Home
Up
AARP Top 5 Places
Active Aging Environment
Active Communities
Active Communities Named
Adult Brains Active
Aging & Disabilty
Aging Survey
Alzheimer's Home Tips
Americans Sleep More
Are Mom and Dad Safe?
Aroma Therapy
Avoiding Disability Key
Benefits of Process
Biiological Clock
Brain Fails to Communicate
Changing Mindset
Charlie Rose Series
Checkups, Better Health
Cognitive Evaluation
Community Clinics
Cultural Brain Differences
Decision-Making Capabilities
Denial Harmful
Diversity in Aging
Dizziness Problems
Education Mortality Impact
Exercise, Moderate Drinking
Extra Day Personal Care
Falling Fear Guidelines
Falls Cllinic
Favorite Places
Fearful Adults
Fitness, Longevity Link
Free Tranportation
GA Help to Seniors
Geratric Health Problems
Hair Loss Fix
Happy Older Americans
Health Checklists
Health Protects Wealth
Healthy Life Styles
HealthTips
HGH Abuse Harmful
Hormone, Life Expectancy
Hot Flashes, Sleep
How Seniors Fall
Improve Brain Health
Independent Living Boost
Involvement, Health Outcome
Kentucky Initiative
Livable Communities
Livable Community Seminar
Keep Elderly in Own Home
Lack of Imagination
Liberal or Conservative?
Life Style Impact
Language Problem Link
Laser Skin Therapy
Livable Housing
Locale Aging Study
Longevity Influences
LTC Information Assist
Protecting Lips
Making Most of Dr. Visit
Managing Stress
Maturing of America
Memory Benefit?
Memory Loss Declines
Memory Loss Studied
Men's Care Urged
Mind,Body,Spirit
MI VOA Project
MN Sets Standards
Mortality Decline
Nap Helps Memory
No Benefit
NY AARP Initiative
Nutrition-Health Match
Obesity and Disability
Optimism Equals Health
PA State Plan Mtgs.
Pedestrian Friendly
Pets Good for Seniors
Physical Therapist & Falls
Pollution Endangers Heart
Pollution & Mortality
Preventing Falls
Quality of Aging
Rate of World's Aging
Retirement Communities
Saving Lives
Sedentary Lifestyle Harmful
Senior Health Conference
Senior Hunger in US
Seniors' WebMall Opens
Sleep Helps Brain
Sleep Loss, Memory Loss
Sleep--Too Much, Too Little
Smart Housing
Socialization Elderly Women
States Help Stay-at-Home
Steps to Save 100 K Lives
Subtle Hints Early Death
Successful Aging
Testosterone, Mortality
Things I Overheard
Thyroid Cause?
Trauma Center Impact
TX New Concepts
Unable to Get Insurance
Unsafe Neighborhoods
US Life Expectancy 42nd
Visualization Healing
Walking, Streets
Weight and Memory
What Seniors Fear
Where Fat is Stored
Video: Falls Study
Women's Health Needs
Women Urged: Protect  Health
Wrinkle Fighting
14 More Years of Life
2008 Resolutions
Growth Hormone Role

Home
120 Year Life?
57-Year-Old New Mom
Aging Study
AARP 37th Million
AARP Women's Foundation
Active Aging Week
Aging Boomers
Anti-Aging Products
Aging Center
Aging &Environment
Age in Place Homes
Aging Series
Aging_&_Intelligence
Aging in Place Tips
Aging by the Numbers
Aging, Cognition
Aging, Entrepreneurship
Aging in Place
Aging Causes diseases
Aging, Depression
Aging in America
Aging in Place Concept
Aging in US
Aging not so bad
Aging Prison Population
Aging Well
An Aging America
Anti-Aging Products
Average_Age_Up
Bolden Dies at 116
Boomers' Attitudes
Boomers Coming
Boomers, Consumer Launches
Boomers Ignored
Boomers & Media
Boomer Women
Boomers as Shapers
Boomers Turn 60
Botox ads Mislead
Botox Replacement
Brain Changes Determinant
Brain Changes
Brain Fitness
Brain Functions in Aging
Brain Impact
Brain Rust
Bush a 'No-Show'
Careers in Aging
Cell Key to Aging
Census Bureau Stats
Census Figures
Centenarian Attitudes
Centenarian Faces
Chronic Disease Facts
Cognitive Test Scores
Cut Risk Factors
Declines Exaggerated?
Defining Boomers
Defining Seniors Market
Delgates Named
Did You Know?
Director Johnson
Disabilities Decline
Doctor Shortage
End of Aging?
Doctors' Shortage
Elderly Driving Stories
End-of-Life
Environments for Aging
Evolution & Aging
Facial Aging
Face Changes
Facial Injections
Facial Letdown?
Falls Not Inevitable
Forrest Elected
Gene loss accelerates aging
Global Perspective
Growing Older
Happy Seniors
Harmful Substance
Harvard Research Grant
Hormones, Memory
Icons Successful Aging
Ill Effects of Anti-Aging items
Income Affects Attitude
Increased Risk
Gene Mutation Effect
Katrina Impact Elderly
Keeping Brain Sharp
Kirk Douglas & Life
Leaving a Legacy
legislators_honored.htm
Life Expectancy Change
Life Expectancy Up
Life-Giving Compounds
Lifts Popular
Living to 100
Longevity Genes
Longevity Link
Longevity Study
Lower Self Esteem
LTC Crisis
Memory Learning
Memory Like Machine
Menopause Tips
Mental Exercise
Mice Hold Aging Clues
Missouri Senior Info
NCOA Statement
New Aging Center
New  Tricks, Old Dogs
New Vision of Aging
NIH Brain Health
Normal Temperature
Older Americans 2005
Older Americans 2007
Older American Stats
Older, Not Wiser
Oldest Mouse
Out of Control
PA Housing
Pain-Free Aging
Older Adults Can Focus
Perspective Memory
Plasma Skin
Keeping Brain Young
Polio Survivors Aging
Population Changes
Preparation Important
Preventing Age Spots
Prevent Age Disabilities
Profiling Boomers
Redefining Aging
Religion, Older Women
Retirement, Mortality
Reverse Mental Decline
Science of Aging
Senator Byrd Speaks Out
Seniors' Concerns
Seniors Moving
Sharp Older Brains
Sleep, Aging
Senior-Friendly
Sharp Memory
Skin Perceptions
Sleeping Pill Risk
Joan Collins Video
Staying in Home
Staying Sharp
Stem Cell R&D Supported
Study on aging
Supplement Fails
Skin Aging
Sleep Problems
Stress & Aging
Stress, Memory Loss
Tea Anti-Aging
Thoughts on Aging
Tips on Aging Well
Trends Study
Uneven Facial Aging
Uric Acid Link
US Aging Trends
Veins Stiffen
Videos on Aging
Ways We Age
We're Living Longer
Women & Aging
World is Older
We're Growing Older
Who Are the Boomers?
Winter Drys Skin
World Challenges
Worry Harmful
2006 Older Americans Month
Working Memory
Wrong Stereotypes
Zen Role
Zimmers
50-Year Study
60-Year-Old Gives Birth
90 Tips to 90
2008 Older Americans

 

 

 


Google
 

 

Web TodaysSeniorsNetwork.com
 

New Service for TodaysSeniorsNetwork.com readers...roll mouse over, click on highlighted links in stories to review items from Amazon

AddThis Feed Button   Now, keep up to date with daily feeds of newly posted stories about America's Seniors...click on the box to the left

Memory loss becoming less common in Older Americans

 

Newswise — Although it’s too soon to sound the death knell for the “senior moment,” it appears that memory loss and thinking problems are becoming less common among older Americans.

A new nationally representative study shows a downward trend in the rate of “cognitive impairment” — the umbrella term for everything from significant memory loss to dementia and Alzheimer’s disease — among people aged 70 and older.

The prevalence of cognitive impairment in this age group went down by 3.5 percentage points between 1993 and 2002 — from 12.2 percent to 8.7 percent, representing a difference of hundreds of thousands of people.

And while the reasons for this decline aren’t yet fully known, the authors say today’s older people are much likelier to have had more formal education, higher economic status, and better care for risk factors such as high blood pressure, high cholesterol and smoking that can jeopardize their brains.

 

In fact, among the 11,000 people in the study, those with more formal education and personal wealth were less likely to have cognitive problems.

Interestingly, the more-educated seniors who had cognitive impairment were more likely to die within two years.

But the researchers say this may actually result from a protective effect of better education on a person’s “cognitive reserve” — their ability to sustain more insults to their brain before significant thinking problems arise.

The study is published today online in the journal Alzheimer’s and Dementia by a team led by two University of Michigan Medical School physicians and their colleagues.

The study is based on data from the Health and Retirement Study (HRS), a national survey of older Americans funded by the National Institute on Aging and based at the U-M Institute for Social Research (ISR).

Lead author Kenneth Langa, M.D., Ph.D., calls the findings good news for today’s seniors, noting that the new data support recent theories of how brains can be protected and preserved.

“From these results, we can say that brain health among older Americans seems to have improved in the decade studied, and that education and wealth may be a big piece of the puzzle,” says Langa, an associate professor of internal medicine who also holds appointments in ISR and the VA Ann Arbor Healthcare System.

“We know mental stimulation has an impact on the way a person’s brain is ‘wired,’ and that education early in life likely helps build up a person’s cognitive reserve. We also know cardiovascular health has a close link with brain health,” he continues.

“So what we may be seeing here is the accumulated effects of better education and better cardiovascular prevention among the people who were over age 70 in 2002, compared with those who were over age 70 in 1993.”

The research team’s analysis, in fact, suggests that about 40 percent of the decrease in cognitive impairment over the decade was likely due to the increase in education levels and personal wealth between the two groups of seniors studied at the two time points.

Langa notes that school attendance requirements, high school graduation rates and college or technical school enrollment rates all increased during the years when the adults in the study were children and young adults.

In 1990, 53 percent of people over age 65 had a high school diploma, but by 2003 that proportion had increased to 72 percent.

The rates of college-educated older people also rose, from 11 percent to 17 percent. In recent years, research has suggested that the more education a person receives early in life, the more his or her brain will be able to stay sharp later.

At the same time, the use of cholesterol-lowering drugs, blood pressure medications and other preventive cardiovascular medications and strategies increased dramatically in the 1990s.

These factors may have helped protect seniors’ brain function by decreasing the incidence of vascular dementia — cognitive problems brought on by mini-strokes, strokes and decreased blood flow to and within the brain due to “hardened” or clogged arteries.

Improved cardiovascular health, combined with more education and wealth, may also help explain why death rates within two years were highest for those with CI who were highly educated.

A good cognitive reserve can protect brains from minor insults, keeping them intact longer for thinking and memory by finding a way around a damaged area.

But then when a major crisis, such as a stroke, occurs, that remaining reserve may be depleted quickly and death can come more quickly.

Richard Suzman, Ph.D., director of the Social and Behavioral Research Program at the NIA, which partially funded the study, notes that “the trend toward improved cognitive status is consistent with a dramatic decline in chronic disability among older Americans over the past two decades, especially in the areas of everyday function that depend on cognition.

"It will be important to pinpoint the influence of factors such as increased education, exercise, medications, cardiovascular health, and lifestyle to discover which ones contributed to this trend and to also replicate the findings in other studies.”

The study divides individuals into four categories — no cognitive impairment, and mild, moderate and severe CI — based on their performance on a standardized cognitive test.

But the authors caution that they could not tell which patients had true dementia, which requires additional clinical information, or Alzheimer’s disease, which can be positively identified only on autopsy.

However, the cutoff points for the different categories of CI were based on prior studies and on data from a new sub-study of the HRS designed to identify dementia specifically.

While the new study shows a decline in CI prevalence over time, the researchers note that the gains made in the 1990s and early 2000s might be offset by the damage that could result if the current epidemic of type 2 diabetes keeps growing among the elderly and if current middle-aged and younger people stick with unhealthy eating and exercise habits that lead to unhealthy weights and blood pressures.

Even if the proportion of older adults with CI keeps declining, the total number of older adults with CI and dementia will likely increase significantly due to the huge increase in the size of the over-65 population as the Baby Boom generation enters older age in the coming decades.

“This demographic reality will continue to make combating Alzheimer’s disease and other types of dementia a top public health priority,” said Allison Rosen, M.D., Sc.D., assistant professor of internal medicine at U-M and the Ann Arbor VA, and co-author of the study.

Meanwhile, they say, today’s older Americans should not rest on their laurels — but instead should be pursuing activities that can keep their minds sharp and their cardiovascular risk low.

From crossword puzzles and volunteer activities to blood pressure medications, today’s seniors can work to boost their brain health now and prevent decline later.

“More and more studies suggest that walking and other types of physical activity are important for preventing cognitive and memory decline,” says co-author Eric Larson, M.D., M.P.H., executive director of the Group Health Center for Health Studies in Seattle, where he has led many studies of the relationship between physical activity and brain health.

“The evidence seems to be showing that staying mentally engaged with the world in any fashion — reading, talking with friends, going to church, going to movies — is also likely to help reduce your risk down the road,” says Langa.

In addition to Langa, Rosen and Larson, the study’s authors are Jason Karlawish, M.D., of the University of Pennsylvania, David Cutler, Ph.D., of Harvard University, Mohammed Kabeto, M.S., of U-M General Medicine, and Scott Kim, M.D., Ph.D., of the U-M Department of Psychiatry, Bioethics Program and Center for Behavioral and Decision Sciences in Medicine. Additional support for the study came from the Harvard Interfaculty Program for Health Systems Improvement, and from grants to individual authors from the Greenwall Faculty Scholar in Ethics and the Paul Beeson Physician Faculty Scholars in Aging Research programs.

 

 

 

...
...
...

 

 

 

 

 



Home
Up
About Us
America's Seniors WebMall
Aging News
California Report
Caregiving
Community/Workplace
Fitness,Health
Election 2008
Grandparents
Health Care Policy
Hispanic Seniors
Medicare News
Contents/Sitemap
Prescription Drugs
Pharma Suits
Restaurant Reviews
Rural Seniors
Safety & Security
Growing New Parts
Seniors Commentary
Seniors' Entertainment
Seniors Headlines
Seniors Finances
Seniors' Issues
Seniors Relationships
Seniors Rights
Social Security News
The Virtual Family
Travel News
TSN Radio on Web
Veterans' Tribute
White House Cards
Privacy Policy
Sitemap Contents
Consumer Alert

 

 

 

 

Copyright 1999-2008 TodaysSeniorsNetwork.com
To Contact Us, Click Here