counter customizable free hit
10 tips for keeping the Brain sharp into 2009
 
 


Home
Up
Abuse Awareness
Advisors Scramble
Aging Parents' Needs
A Little Help Helps
Alliance Awards
Alzheimer's Courses
Alzheimer's & Finances
Ambulance Flier
Antibiotics, Death Link
Assisted Living Initiative
Assisted Living Costs Up
Association Names Chair
At-Home Care Option
Avoid Drug Reactiions
Avoid Heat Stroke
Avoid Medical Overload
AZ Watchdog
Be Prepared for Changes
Better Care Coalition
Blacks' Care Disparity
Black Sepsis Deaths
Boomers, Aging Parents
Boomer Caregivers
Boomer Care Needs
Boomer Nursing Shortage
Brain Exercises Help
Brain Exercise Results
Brain Training Tips
Bride Seniors' Party
Broken Promises
Budget Cuts Opposed
Bush Cuts Oxygen
Call for Federal Aid
Camera Catches Abuse
Camera Controversy
Cancer Caregiver Support
Cancer Impact
Care for Aging America
Caregiving Challenges
Caregiving Fatigue
Caregiver Compensation
Caregivers Coping
Caregiver Depression
Caregiver Health
Caregiver Impact
Caregiving Burnout
Caregiving Numbers Grow
Caregiver Handbook
Caregivers' Health
Caregiving Key
Caregiving Grows
Caregiving Month
Caregiving Questions
Caregivers Lack Care
Caregiving Needs
Caregiving Reward
Caregiving Second Job
Caregiving Suggestions
Care Threat from Cuts
Catholic Charities Raps Cuts
Center Activities
Change Life Styles
Childhood Link to Death
Christmas Spirit
Chronic Illness Care
Coping Strategies
Costly Care
Costly Care Elderly Parents
Counseling Helps
Crisis Looms
Dana Reeve Dies
Disaster Plan Need
Daugher Recalls Dad
Disrupting Lives
Doctors, Aging Patients
Dr. Marion Bus Tour
Durable Equipment Need
Early Discharge ?
Eldercare Workforce
Elder Rage
Elderly Self-Neglect
Employee Involvement
Evaluating Nursing Homes
Exercise for Caregivers
Eye Exams Lacking
Get Sleep Help
Family Caregivng Value
Faster Electronic Records
Fewer in Homes
Fewer in Nursing Homes
Fighting Guilt, Sorrow
Financial Sacrifice
Finding LTC Facilities
FL Requires ID
Freddie Mac Helps
Future of Alzheimer's
Generational Abuse
Facilities Honored
Gay Caregiving
Geriatric Care Miinistry
Geriatric Care Standards
GPS Tracking Devices
Grants Announced
Greenhouse Findings
Guided Care
Gridiron Approach
Hairstylist Role
Happier at Home
HealthGrades Report
Health Endangered
Heart-Monitor Benefit
Holidays at Home
Holiday Hugs
Holiday in Hospital
Home Beats Hospital
Home Care Benefits
Housing Decision
Home Thanksgiving
Holiday Checkup on Elderly
Home Care Hazards
Home Care, Hospice Month
Home Care Standards
Hydration Monitoring
Illegal Hormone Claims
Illinois Caregivers
Illinois Cuts
IL Cuts Restored
Impact on Boomers
Incontinence
In-Home Care Helps Mood
In-Home Pharmacy
Innovative Caregiving
IN Seniors Act
Lack of Funds
Health Care Literacy
Illinois Budget Harmful
Illinois Homes Scandal
Improved Care
Independent Living
Indictment in Death
Intervention Helps
Keep Seniors at Home
Lalanne Mind Health
Lemington Home Future?
Little Billy's Story
Little Assistance
Little Protection
Lonliness, Health
LTC Cost Grows
LTC Priority in Reform
Long-Term Programs
Long Term Questions
LTC Bacteria
LTC Hospitals' Problems
LTC Tax Breaks?
LTC Use
Mailing Prescription Reminders
Maintain Health
Making Medication Use Guide
Maltruition Risk
Making a Difference
Master's Program
Meal Interaction
Medical Home Program
Medical Visit Companion
Med Record-Keeping
Meds Risk
Memory Loss, Sleep Loss
Men as Caregivers
Mexico Nursing Homes
Misperceptions
Missouri Plan
MO Ombudsman Need
More Blacks Hospitalized
More Leaving Hospitals
Mothers, Daughters
Music Soothes
National Homecare Month
Navigating Caregiving
New Age of Care
New Alzheimer's Site
New Approach
New Care Dimensions
New Caregiving Grant
New Depend Diapers
New Findings
Newsweek Coverage
NY Assisted Living
No Relief
Nursing Home Plan
Nursing Home Challenge
Nursing Home Drug Problems
Nursing Home Patient Strife
Not-for-Profits Best Homes
Nursing Home Infections
Nursing Home Report Card
Nursing Home Mistakes
Nursing Home Love
Nursing Home Report
Nursing Home Stays
Nursing Home System 'Broken'
NY Safety Net
NY Tech Program
Nursing Home Trends
Online Housing Guide
Online Resource
Oxygen Device Cuts
PA Inspections
PA Caregiving Shortages
PA Budget Causes Cuts
PA LTC Boost
PA Medicaid Cuts
Patient Guides for Low-Income
Parents' Benefit Checkup
Nursing Home Standards
Pay as you Go?
Plants Helpful
Patients' Pain
LTC Week Proclaimed
Peace of Mind
Policy Agreement Reached
Preventing Falls
Preventing Pneumonia
Private Equity Role
Promise to Elderly
Protect Home Health Care
Reduce Med Problems
Reducing Abuse
Respite Needs
Restraint Overuse
Rich History
Rising Gas Prices Hurt
Search for Body
Sandwich Caregivers
Sandwich Generation Tips
Save Grandma's Life
Self-Neglect Signs
Senior Living Forecast
Senior Living Outlook
Seniors' Funds Released
Seniors Worry About Care
Sensitive Dementia Care
Shootings Link
Silver Alert Tech
Silver Alert
Social Support Helpful
Solutions Aging Parents
Special Christmas
Standardization Need
State Role
Staying Active
Staying in Homes
Stepchildren Role
Stewart Testifies
Strength Within
Support in Illness
Support Important
Surgery, Cognitive Loss
Surgery Communications
Survivor Care
Suspect Charges
Talking Books
Talking to Parents
Technology LTC Role
The Gift of Time
Therapy Benefit
There is a Bridge
Tips for Holiday Visits
Top Dog
Top Nursing Homes
Training the Doctors
TN Srs. Want Options
Top Hospitals
Uninsured Challenges
Value In-Home Care
Vermont Program
Young Grandmothers
VOA Housing Grant
Widowed Caregivers
Workforce Shortages
Walking Helpful
Talking Urged
Teen Caregiving
Teen Caregivers
Texas Sentence
Toolkits Help Care
Topeka Volunteers
Transcripts Help
True Cost of Caregiving
Uncertain Prognoses
Understand Medical R&D
Use Funds Properlly
VA Caregiving Outreach
Voice Technology Added
Washington State Investigation
Wealth, Assisted Living
When is it Time?
Women as Caregivers
Who Will Care
Woman Survives Fall
Wrapped in Care
7 Caregiving Tips
52 Weeks of Trivia
2007 Caregiving Awards
2008 Top Hospitals
Texas Care Needs
Med Students in Home
7 Caregiving Tips
LTC Hospitals Troublesome

Home
About Us
America's Seniors WebMall
Aging News
California Report
Caregiving
Community/Workplace
Fitness,Health
Grandparents
Health Care Policy
Hispanic Seniors
Medicare News
Contents/Sitemap
Prescription Drugs
Pharma Suits
Restaurant Reviews
Rural Seniors
Safety & Security
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
Consumer Alert
Pull Plug Heat Costs

 

 

 



Google
 

 

Web TodaysSeniorsNetwork.com
 

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

10 tips for keeping the Brain sharp into 2009

New York, NY, January 04, 2009 --(PR.com)-- One piece of excellent news in the past year was that brain health seems to be improving among older Americans.

A large national survey from the University of Michigan found that over a 10-year-period ending in 2002, memory loss and thinking problems were down significantly among seniors aged 70 and up, from 12.2 percent to 8.7 percent.

 

That’s a change that translates into hundreds of thousands of men and women, though Alzheimer’s is still a top concern for millions worldwide.

Researchers aren’t sure why the decrease in cognitive impairment is occurring, but they suspect that a better educated and more affluent older generation that is less likely to smoke and more likely to eat better and get regular exercise may be helping to keep the brain young.

Here’s a roundup of ALZinfo.org Wellness and Prevention stories from the past year that may help set the tone for a brain-healthy new year.

1. Stay Mentally Challenged. Seniors who engage in reading books or newspapers, doing crossword puzzles and word or card games, or who attend adult education classes may be more likely to ward off Alzheimer’s as they age. Researchers at Columbia University in New York found that participation in intellectual and social activities among seniors was associated with fewer cases of Alzheimer’s disease.

2. Practice Good Waist Management. Having a thick middle in the middle years increases the risk of developing Alzheimer’s disease, a study of more than 6,500 adults from Northern California found. Belly fat, in particular, may be bad for the brain. Having a large abdomen increased the risk of dementia regardless of whether someone was normal weight, overweight or obese.

3. Work It. Another study, from Duke University, found that having a job that challenges the intellect may help to keep the mind sharp into old age. And the more complex the job, the better memory and thinking skills held up after retirement. The jobs that proved most beneficial included careers like law, medicine and journalism. But any tasks that required complex organization, decision-making and multi-tasking boosted brain function late into life.

4. Stay in School. Research continues to show that the more years of formal education someone has, the lower the risk of Alzheimer’s disease. Most recently, investigators in Italy showed that men and women who had many years of schooling and who went on to work in demanding jobs were much more likely stay mentally alert into old age. Even though their brains had many of the changes typical of Alzheimer’s disease, education seemed to protect them against memory loss and problems with thinking.

5. Maintain an Active Social Life. Men and women who remained socially connected with friends and family as they aged had sharper memories, a study from the Harvard School of Public Health reported. The findings add to a growing body of evidence that active social engagement is key to keeping the brain fit and lowering the risk of Alzheimer’s among the elderly.

6. Walk for the Brain. Seniors who regularly took walks and engaged in other forms of moderate exercise had a lower risk of developing vascular dementia, a form of memory loss tied to poor blood flow in the brain. Vascular dementia is the second most common form of dementia, after Alzheimer’s disease, and affects a large segment of the senior population. Poor blood flow may also aggravate the memory loss and symptoms of Alzheimer’s disease.

7. Keep Cholesterol in Check. Scientists still aren’t sure whether statins, the popular cholesterol-lowering drugs that are prescribed for heart disease, help protect against Alzheimer’s disease. But they do know that having high cholesterol, at midlife or in later years, can raise the risk of Alzheimer’s and other forms of dementia. And statin drugs are proven fighters against heart attacks and strokes. To help keep cholesterol in check, eat a heart-healthy diet and exercise regularly, and see your doctor to see if you could benefit from a statin medication.

8. Control Blood Pressure. Getting blood pressure under control, an important step for reducing heart disease and stroke, may also help reduce rates of Alzheimer’s as well. And it’s never too late. New findings show that for seniors in their 80s and 90s, lowering blood pressure with antihypertensive medications was good for the brain.

9. Pass the Fish. Once again, research showed that eating tuna and other types of oily fish like salmon, mackerel and anchovies may help lower the risk of memory decline and stroke in healthy older adults. Fish that was baked or broiled, but not fried, appeared to benefit the brain.

10. Surf the Web. Finally, searching the Internet may be good the brain. Researchers at the University of California, Los Angeles, found that surfing the Web triggers key centers in the brain involved in decision-making and complex reasoning and was better for the brain than reading a book. So whether you turn to the Web to e-mail friends, read up on the latest Alzheimer’s disease research, or join the discussion groups at ALZinfo.org, keep coming back for a brain-healthy 2009.

 

 

 

 

 

 

... ..
...
...

 

 

 

 



Home
Up
About Us
America's Seniors WebMall
Aging News
California Report
Community/Workplace
Fitness,Health
Grandparents
Health Care Policy
Hispanic Seniors
Medicare News
Contents/Sitemap
Prescription Drugs
Pharma Suits
Restaurant Reviews
Rural Seniors
Safety & Security
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
Consumer Alert
Pull Plug Heat Costs

 

 

 To Contact Us, Click here
Copyright (C) 1999-2010 TodaysSeniorsNetwork.com