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.