Rank: Advanced Member Groups: Member
Joined: 5/15/2008 Posts: 5,936 Points: 16,585 Location: Payne Whitney Ward #3
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From NPR -
You may want to read this twice if you're older than 45. In fact, you may have to.
That's because your mental abilities are already in decline, according to a study of 7,390 British civil servants just published in BMJ, the British Medical Journal.
For men and women who were between 45 and 49 when first tested, the ability to reason declined 3.6 percent over the next decade, the study found. And the decline was even faster for people in their 50s and 60s, especially men.
Other mental abilities that faded included memory, and so-called verbal fluency, which measures a person's ability to quickly say words in a particular category. However, people's vocabulary didn't change.
Previous studies have found little evidence of cognitive decline until people turn 60. But this study was larger than most earlier efforts and took the unusual step of testing each participant three times over 10 years.
The results suggest that efforts to head off mental problems late in life need to begin in middle age, the study's authors write at the end of their paper. These efforts should include "aggressive control" of problems such as diabetes, high cholesterol, and high blood pressure, which are linked to dementia and Alzheimer's disease, they say.
Perhaps, says epidemiologist Francine Grodstein of Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston, who wrote an editorial accompanying the new study. The problem is that "we don't know yet how to prevent the small amounts of decline which begin to happen at younger ages," she says.
Even so, it may well turn out that the same things that affect memory at older ages also make a difference for younger people, Grodstein says. If so, "living a healthy lifestyle (e.g., a good diet, physical activity, etc.) starting at young ages might protect our brains when we're older," she says.
And even if you notice some lapses in memory as you age, there are likely to be other realms of thinking and decision-making where you improve. Barbara Strauch, author of The Secret Life of the Grown-up Brain: The Surprising Talents of the Middle-Aged Mind, says people's feeling of well-being is highest when they hit middle age. And some research indicates that older brains are better at solving problems than younger ones.
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Rank: Advanced Member Groups: Member
Joined: 6/7/2008 Posts: 2,495 Points: 7,509 Location: Prescott
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Geez I started noticing mental decline in my late 20's. Had to start keeping an "in box," before that I could always keep a "to do list" in my head. We all start going downhill at some point after puberty, don't worry, learn to COMPENSATE....it's just going to get worse so no sense losing sleep over it.
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Rank: Advanced Member Groups: Member
Joined: 6/29/2009 Posts: 3,111 Points: 9,590 Location: The leaf I am sitting on
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Old hag that I am ... I can't help but notice the study was conducted on 7400 British civil servants. At the risk of sounding "elite-ist" ... I am neither British, nor a civil servant. The day they round up a bunch of bugs and study THEM for mental acuity is the day I'll pay attention to ... um ... say, what was that stuff about .... Ack. I have to back and read the whole damn thing all over again! Oh yeah, mental acuity! Where was I? I have started taking SAM-e as of 5 weeks ago! This is supposed to be a mood enhancer and mental sharpener of sorts. I was feeling so proud of myself yesterday as I identified many of the Ho'wood stars in some online rag - just by looking at their faces. But then I forgot about 10 other things that same day that were far more important. I have to guffaw! Hubs is listening to the Beatles "When I'm 64!" in the living room as I peck this out. What are the odds?! I Bug U
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Rank: Advanced Member Groups: Member
Joined: 5/17/2008 Posts: 5,655 Points: 10,711 Location: i just turned over a new leaf to reveal the same t
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as you get older you need to be choosier about what you take in. that's the key to memory and retention in my experience and observation. keep the hard drive clean and simple.
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Rank: Advanced Member Groups: Member
Joined: 6/4/2008 Posts: 6,566 Points: 19,579
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Chris K wrote:as you get older you need to be choosier about what you take in. that's the key to memory and retention in my experience and observation. keep the hard drive clean and simple. Darling, you are just a babe. What are you talking about!
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Rank: Advanced Member Groups: Member
Joined: 6/29/2009 Posts: 3,111 Points: 9,590 Location: The leaf I am sitting on
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^^^^ He is a babe with an old soul! That is for sure. I like his advice about being choosey in what I want to store on my hard drive. Now where in HE!! did I put that hard drive? I Bug U
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