Keeping your brain mentally active could boost your brainpower in old age, suggests study.
Keeping your brain mentally active could boost your brainpower in old age, suggests study. Study author Robert S. Wilson, PhD, with Rush University Medical Center in Chicago, said that their study suggests that exercising brain by taking part in activities like these across a person's lifetime, from childhood through old age, is important for brain health in old age.
For the study, 294 people were given tests that measured memory and thinking every year for about six years before their deaths at an average age of 89.
They also answered a questionnaire about whether they read books, wrote and participated in other mentally stimulating activities during childhood, adolescence, middle age and at their current age.
After they died, their brains were examined at autopsy for evidence of the physical signs of dementia, such as lesions, brain plaques and tangles.
The research found that people who participated in mentally stimulating activities both early and late in life had a slower rate of decline in memory compared to those who did not participate in such activities across their lifetime, after adjusting for differing levels of plaques and tangles in the brain.
Mental activity accounted for nearly 15 percent of the difference in decline beyond what is explained by plaques and tangles in the brain.
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The study has been published in the online issue of Neurology, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology.
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