WASHINGTON
(AP) — It's pretty extraordinary for people in their 80s and 90s to
keep the same sharp memory as someone several decades younger, and now
scientists are peeking into the brains of these "superagers" to uncover
their secret.
The work is the flip side of the disappointing hunt for new drugs to fight or prevent Alzheimer's disease.
Instead,
"why don't we figure out what it is we might need to do to maximize our
memory?" said neuroscientist Emily Rogalski, who leads the SuperAging
study at Northwestern University in Chicago.
Parts
of the brain shrink with age, one of the reasons why most people
experience a gradual slowing of at least some types of memory late in
life, even if they avoid diseases like Alzheimer's.
But
it turns out that superagers' brains aren't shrinking nearly as fast as
their peers'. And autopsies of the first superagers to die during the
study show they harbor a lot more of a special kind of nerve cell in a
deep brain region that's important for attention, Rogalski told a recent
meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.
Source: Yahoo News
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