OT Alzeimers

Came across this, forwarded in full. Might be of interest to some here.

UCLA on Alzheimer's ..very informative

Food for Thought

"The idea that Alzheimer's is entirely genetic and unpreventable is perhaps the greatest misconception about the disease," says Gary Small, M.D., director of the UCLA Center on Aging.

Researchers now know that Alzheimer's like heart disease and cancer, develops over decades and can be influenced by lifestyle factors including cholesterol, blood pressure, obesity, depression, education, nutrition, sleep and mental, physical and social activity.

The big news: Mountains of research reveals that simple things you do every day might cut your odds of losing your mind to Alzheimer's.

In search of scientific ways to delay and outlive Alzheimer's and other dementias, I tracked down thousands of studies and interviewed dozens of experts. The results in a new book: 100 Simple Things You Can Do to Prevent Alzheimer's and Age-Related Memory Loss (Little, Brown; $19.99).

Here are 10 strategies I found most surprising.

  1. Have coffee. In an amazing flip-flop, coffee is the new brain tonic. A large European study showed that drinking three to five cups of coffee a day in midlife cut Alzheimer's risk 65% in late life. University of South Florida researcher Gary Arendash credits caffeine: He says it reduces dementia-causing amyloid in animal brains. Others credit coffee's antioxidants. So drink up, Arendash advises, unless your doctor says you shouldn't.

  1. Floss. Oddly, the health of your teeth and gums can help predict dementia. University of Southern California research found that having periodontal disease before age 35 quadrupled the odds of dementia years later. Older people with tooth and gum disease score lower on memory and cognition tests, other studies show Experts speculate that inflammation in diseased mouths migrates to the brain.

  2. Be a "Googler". Doing an online search can stimulate your aging brain even more than reading a book, says UCLA's Gary Small, who used brain MRIs to prove it. The biggest surprise: Novice Internet surfers, ages 55 to 78, activated key memory and learning centers in the brain after only a week of Web surfing for an hour a day.

  1. Grow new brain cells. Impossible, scientists used to say. Now it's believed that thousands of brain cells are born daily. The trick is to keep the newborns alive. What works: aerobic exercise (such as a brisk 30-minute walk every day), strenuous mental activity, eating salmon and other fatty fish, and avoiding obesity, chronic stress, sleep deprivation, heavy drinking and vitamin B deficiency.

  2. Drink apple juice. Apple juice can push production of the "memory chemical" acetylcholine; that's the way the popular Alzheimer's drug Aricept works, says Thomas Shea, Ph.D., of the University of Massachusetts . He was surprised that old mice given apple juice did better on learning and memory tests than mice that received water. A dose for humans: 16 ounces, or two to three apples a day.

  1. Protect your head. Blows to the head, even mild ones early in life, increase odds of dementia years later. Pro football players have 19 times the typical rate of memory-related diseases. Alzheimer's is four times more common in elderly who suffer a head injury, Columbia University finds. Accidental falls doubled an older person's odds of dementia five years later in another study. Wear seat belts and helmets, fall-proof your house, and don't take risks.

  2. Meditate. Brain scans show that people who meditate regularly have less cognitive decline and brain shrinkage - a classic sign of Alzheimer's - as they age. Andrew Newberg of the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine says yoga meditation of 12 minutes a day for two months improved blood flow and cognitive functioning in seniors with memory problems.

  1. Take D. A "severe deficiency" of vitamin D boosts older Americans' risk of cognitive impairment 394%, an alarming study by England 's University of Exeter finds. And most Americans lack vitamin D. Experts recommend a daily dose of 800 IU to 2,000 IU of vitamin D3.

  2. Fill your brain. It 's called "cognitive reserve." A rich accumulation of life experiences - education, marriage, socializing, a stimulating job, language skills, having a purpose in life, physical activity and mentally demanding leisure activities - makes your brain better able to tolerate plaques and tangles. You can even have significant Alzheimer's pathology and no symptoms of dementia if you have high cognitive reserve, says David Bennett, M.D., of Chicago 's Rush University Medical Center .

  1. Avoid infection. Astonishing new evidence ties Alzheimer's to cold sores, gastric ulcers, Lyme disease, pneumonia and the flu. Ruth Itzhaki, Ph.D., of the University of Manchester in England estimates the cold-sore herpes simplex virus is incriminated in 60% of Alzheimer's cases. The theory: Infections trigger excessive beta amyloid "gunk" that kills brain cells. Proof is still lacking, but why not avoid common infections and take appropriate vaccines, antibiotics and antiviral agents?

*What to Drink for Good Memory*

A great way to keep your aging memory sharp and avoid Alzheimer's is to drink the right stuff.

a. Tops: Juice. A glass of any fruit or vegetable juice three times a week slashed Alzheimer's odds 76% in Vanderbilt University research. Especially protective:blueberry, grape and apple juice, say other studies.

b. Tea: Only a cup of black or green tea a week cut rates of cognitive decline in older people by 37%, reports the Alzheimer's Association. Only brewed tea works. Skip bottled tea, which is devoid of antioxidants.

c. Caffeine beverages. Surprisingly, caffeine fights memory loss and Alzheimer's, suggest dozens of studies. Best sources: coffee (one Alzheimer's researcher drinks five cups a day), tea and chocolate. Beware caffeine if you are pregnant, have high blood pressure, insomnia or anxiety.

d. Red wine: If you drink alcohol, a little red wine is most apt to benefit your aging brain. It's high in antioxidants. Limit it to one daily glass for women, two for men. Excessive alcohol, notably binge drinking, brings on Alzheimer's.

e. Try to avoid: Sugary soft drinks, Especially those sweetened with high fructose corn syrup. They make lab animals dumb. Water with high copper content also can up your odds of Alzheimer's. Use a water filter that removes excess minerals.

*5 Ways to Save Your Kids from Alzheimer's Now*

Alzheimer's isn't just a disease that starts in old age. What happens to your child's brain seems to have a dramatic impact on his or her likelihood of Alzheimer's many decades later.

Here are five things you can do now to help save your child from Alzheimer's and memory loss later in life, according to the latest research.

  1. Prevent head blows: Insist your child wear a helmet during biking, skating, skiing, baseball, football, hockey, and all contact sports. A major blow as well as tiny repetitive unnoticed concussions can cause damage, leading to memory loss and Alzheimer's years later.

2 Encourage language skills: A teenage girl who is a superior writer is eight times more likely to escape Alzheimer's in late life than a teen with poor linguistic skills. Teaching young children to be fluent in two or more languages makes them less vulnerable to Alzheimer's.

  1. Insist your child go to college: Education is a powerful Alzheimer's deterrent. The more years of formal schooling, the lower the odds. Most Alzheimer's prone: teenage drop outs. For each year of education, your risk of dementia drops 11%, says a recent University of Cambridge study.

  1. Provide stimulation: Keep your child's brain busy with physical, mental and social activities and novel experiences. All these contribute to a bigger, better functioning brain with more so-called 'cognitive reserve.' High cognitive reserve protects against memory decline and Alzheimer's.

  2. Spare the junk food: Lab animals raised on berries, spinach and high omega-3 fish have great memories in old age. Those overfed sugar, especially high fructose in soft drinks, saturated fat and trans fats become overweight and diabetic, with smaller brains and impaired memories as they age, a prelude to Alzheimer's.

*Excerpted from

Jean Carper's newest book: "100 Simple Things You Can Do to Prevent Alzheimer's"

Reply to
harryagain
Loading thread data ...

And profitable for anyone flogging a book.

Tim

Reply to
Tim+

Yes and if you pardon the pun also most of them are no brainers. its long been known that the healthier one is and the more used the brain is then the more resilient it is to the rigours of age. Maybe the mechanisms are now more understood, but the actual ways have certainly been around for over a decade. Of course if you are one of those with a genetic tendency, this will make the percentages nowhere near as high as quoted. Also of course the percentages are judged against what exactly? Brian

Reply to
Brian Gaff

What's bottled tea?

Reply to
Dave W

I believe that in some third world countries tea is considered to be a cold drink and comes in bottles for those too thick to understand how to make it.

Reply to
alan_m

FSVO of 'third world'....

formatting link

Oh, hang on, in many ways they *are*...

Reply to
Bob Eager

[...]

"correlation is not causation"

formatting link

J^n

Reply to
jkn

I would say that this "research" is 150% nonsense.

I looked at the report of the Alzheimer's Disease International for 2009 and the only suggested cause of Alzheimer's mentioned both in this report and in the booklet "100 Simple Things You Can Do to Prevent Alzheimer's" appears to be head injury.

As to the supposed good effect of coffee, I note that the average consumption of coffee in the Netherlands is over 6 times that in the UK (over 2.4 cups per day against under 0.4)

One would imagine that if coffee had any effect at all, let alone a 65% decrease in the disease, the Netherlands would have a low rate of Alzheimer's. In fact the rate there is higher than in the UK (21.4 against 17.1) .

The Netherlands has one of the highest rates of the disease in the world. The country with the highest rate of the disease in the world is Finland (34.5), which is also second in the world in coffee consumption, at 1.85 cups per day.

I wonder how "researcher Gary Arendash" explains these figures?

Reply to
Timothy Murphy

Not doubting for a minute the statistics you've put up, but I would just mention that caffeine can significantly reduce the occurrence and development of Parkinson's disease, another brain disorder. But it doesn't benefit everybody. Apparently it depends on your DNA. Maybe the same is true for caffeine and Alzheimer's.

Reply to
Chris Hogg

Is that tea or just sugar water?

They claim 50 to 150 calories per 8oz serving and "Now with Fewer Calories!"

formatting link
states 15 calories per teaspoon of sugar

So it's up to 10 teaspoons of sugar per small bottle.

Reply to
alan_m

I'd have thought that health of teeth etc might be a reasonably good marker for all sorts of complicating things, like social class, attitude to healthy eating, interest in keeping mentally active etc...

Reply to
Jeremy Nicoll - news posts

The statistics quoted by quacks are always unbelievable. As if nobody would have noticed a 400% increase in dementia until it was discovered by "University of Southern California research".

Reply to
Timothy Murphy

Having had both mother and step-father die with/from dementia/Alzheimer's, I am all too well aware of how devastating they can be. But there are many other things that can get us. If you (or anyone) is going to claim apple juice helps to prevent Alzheimers, we need to be very sure that its preventative capacity is not outweighed by its causation of other problems whether due to preservatives, pesticides, etc., or fructose.

Reply to
polygonum

Actually it seems quite plausible that a lot of dementia might go undetected among people who simply never come to the attention of the kind of health professionals whose job it is to recognise such a condition. Especially in somewhere like the USA where there's limited free health provision.

And so who would only come to anyone's attention as at all a result of a targetted study. Which in the nature of such things will probably be funded by some vested interest or other.

The fruit juice/apples/fructose advice does however seem very confused in places and possibly self-contradictory.

michael adams

...

Reply to
michael adams

Has anyone else noticed, if their newsreader sorts articles by subject alphabetically, that this thread is immediately followed by the one entitled 'OT: Mind gone blank'?

Reply to
Bob Eager

Not sure about that. With something as serious as dementia/Alzheimer's those other things are much less important and worth the risk as long as whatever is proposed can be shown to have a real effect on the risk of getting dementia/Alzheimer's.

Reply to
john james

/john james

From the boy with multiple personalities....

Jim K

Reply to
JimK

(Not sure, but ..) I think you got the wrong Rod. I kill-filed Rod Speed some time ago (yeah Rod, even my tolerance wore out), but not Polygonum.

John

Reply to
Another John

Ha ha! Yes! I'm seeing the same thing!

Re the thread topic: just read an article in The Week which summarises a fairly astounding discovery:

Reply to
Another John

Yet... :-)

Reply to
polygonum

HomeOwnersHub website is not affiliated with any of the manufacturers or service providers discussed here. All logos and trade names are the property of their respective owners.