Purpose in life may protect against harmful
changes in the brain associated with
Alzheimer's disease
May 9, 2012— Greater
purpose in life may help stave off the
harmful effects of plaques and tangles
associated with Alzheimer's disease,
according to a new study by researchers at
Rush University Medical Center.
The study, published in
the May issue of the Archives of General
Psychiatry, is available online at
www.archgenpsychiatry.com.
"Our study showed that
people who reported greater purpose in life
exhibited better cognition than those with
less purpose in life even as plaques and
tangles accumulated in their brains," said
Patricia A. Boyle, PhD.
"These findings suggest
that purpose in life protects against the
harmful effects of plaques and tangles on
memory and other thinking abilities.
"This is encouraging and
suggests that engaging in meaningful and
purposeful activities promotes cognitive
health in old age."
Boyle and her colleagues
from the Rush Alzheimer's Disease Center
studied 246 participants from the Rush
Memory and Aging Project who did not have
dementia and who subsequently died and
underwent brain autopsy.
Participants received an
annual clinical evaluation for up to
approximately 10 years, which included
detailed cognitive testing and neurological
exams.
Participants also
answered questions about purpose in life,
the degree to which one derives meaning from
life's experiences and is focused and
intentional. Brain plaques and tangles were
quantified after death.
The authors then
examined whether purpose in life slowed the
rate of cognitive decline even as older
persons accumulated plaques and tangles.
While plaques and
tangles are very common among persons who
develop Alzheimer's dementia (characterized
by prominent memory loss and changes in
other thinking abilities), recent data
suggest that plaques and tangles accumulate
in most older persons, even those without
dementia. Plaques and tangles disrupt memory
and other cognitive functions.
Boyle and colleagues
note that much of the Alzheimer's research
that is ongoing seeks to identify ways to
prevent or limit the accumulation of plaques
and tangles in the brain, a task that has
proven quite difficult.
Studies such as the
current one are needed because, until
effective preventive therapies are
discovered, strategies that minimize the
impact of plaques and tangles on cognition
are urgently needed.
"These studies are
challenging because many factors influence
cognition and research studies often lack
the brain specimen data needed to quantify
Alzheimer's changes in the brain," Boyle
said.
"Identifying factors
that promote cognitive health even as
plaques and tangles accumulate will help
combat the already large and rapidly
increasing public health challenge posed by
Alzheimer's disease."