July 16, 20256:00 AM ET
Even healthy brains slow down as they age. But there are ways to keep that thinker in tip-top shape.
Each year, our reaction time slows by
a few thousandths of a second. We're also less able to recall items on a
shopping list.
Those changes can be signs of a
disease, like Alzheimer's. But usually, they're not.
"Both of those things, memory and
processing speed, change with age in a normal group of people," says Matt Huentelman,
a professor at TGen, the Translational Genomics Research Institute, in Phoenix.
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Huentelman should know. He helps run MindCrowd, a free online cognitive test that has been taken by more than 700,000 adults.
About a thousand of those people had
test scores indicating that their brain was "exceptional," meaning
they performed like a person 30 years younger on tests of memory and processing
speed.
Genetics played a role, of course. But
Huentelman and a team of researchers have been focusing on other differences.
"We want to study these exceptional performers because we think they can tell us what the rest of us should be doing," he says.
Early results suggest that sleep and
maintaining cardiovascular health are a good start. Other measures include avoiding smoking, limiting alcohol and
getting plenty of exercise.
Huentelman was one of several dozen
researchers who met in Miami this summer to discuss healthy brain aging. The
event was hosted by the McKnight Brain Research Foundation, which funds studies on
age-related cognitive decline and memory loss.
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Another speaker was Christian Agudelo, a sleep neurologist at the University of Miami's Evelyn F. McKnight Brain Institute.
"I think the value of sleep and
sleep deprivation became true to me when I had kids," Agudelo says.
Those kids are 4 and 6 now, so Agudelo
is getting more sleep. But his own experience is consistent with his research on the relationship between sleep and cognitive
decline.
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Keep in mind: Better sleep isn't just
about getting more sleep.
The key is getting high-quality sleep,
which allows the brain to cycle through all the sleep stages,
Agudelo says.
Researchers can measure how well a
person is sleeping by monitoring their brain wave patterns. But people usually
know when they've had a good night's rest, Agudelo says.
"You go to sleep, you wake up and
you feel like that experience was worthwhile," he says. "You feel
refreshed."
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Ensuring high-quality sleep is tricky.
But people can improve the odds with certain behaviors, Agudelo says
"Waking up at the same time every
single day and aligning our sleep rhythms with the rhythm of the sun" can
lead to better sleep, he says. So can "being active, both socially and
physically."
Those behaviors increase "sleep
pressure," the body's natural desire to sleep the longer we are awake,
Agudelo says. When that pressure is high, he says, "we can fall asleep
more easily and deeply."
Brain aging is also influenced by
vascular risk factors, like blood pressure, cholesterol levels and diabetes,
says Charles DeCarli, a neurologist who co-directs the Alzheimer's
Disease Research Center at the University of California, Davis.
So DeCarli and a team of researchers
are studying whether it's possible to protect the brain by aggressively
treating conditions that affect the circulatory system.
"The question is, if you have
these diseases and they are well controlled, will you have a younger-looking
brain?" he says. "And the answer seems to be yes."