Logo Join | About | Forum| Help | Bookmark | Login
Home Stories Groups People Marketplace | FREE Benefits
Senior moments a normal part of aging
Study: Even healthy people’s brain structures deteriorate with age
Reuters
updated 6:22 p.m. CT, Wed., Dec. 5, 2007

CHICAGO - Forgot where you put your keys? Or your car?

If you are over 60, it may just be a normal part of aging, U.S. researchers said on Wednesday in a study that suggests brain structures deteriorate with age in otherwise healthy people.

The study, published in the journal Neuron, is part of an effort by researchers at Harvard University to understand the difference between normal, age-related declines and clinical impairment.

"We're trying to understand the edge of that boundary between normal aging and Alzheimer's disease," said Randy Buckner, a Harvard professor and Howard Hughes Medical Institute researcher who worked on the study.

Buckner and colleagues took brain scans of 55 adults ages 60 and over, and 38 younger adults ages 35 and younger. They used an imaging technique called PET to detect the presence of amyloid, a chemical typically associated with Alzheimer's disease, to rule out those whose memory declines were disease-related.

What they found is that some brain systems become less coordinated with age. "It looks like it is an effect of normal aging independent of Alzheimer's disease," Buckner said in a telephone interview.

They found brain structures called white matter tracks, which carry information between different regions of the brain, were deteriorating only in the older group.

"In young adults, the front of the brain was pretty well in sync with the back of the brain," Jessica Andrews-Hanna, a graduate student in Buckner's lab, said in a statement. "In older adults this was not the case. The regions became out of sync and they were less correlated with each other."

Buckner said the study suggests the cognitive decline in aging may be linked to communication problems between regions of the brain.

"We are talking about an effect that is progressing in the late
 
 
Tags: seniors
Posted By: Evmim Posted Yesterday
All Votes: 1
Bookmark
Comments (2) | Who voted on this story (1) | Email this story
 

UnitedProject.org Inc. (c) 2006-2010 All content published on UnitedProject.org is provided for informational purposes only and is not meant to substitute for the advice, diagnosis or treatment provided by your physician or other healthcare professionals. If you think you are experiencing a medical problem or an emergency please contact your physician, local emergency room or call 911. Healthcare benefits and discounts are not insurance and not intended as a substitute for health insurance. Except when other source is cited, all content posted by members is licensed under Creative Commons Public Domain License.

This website is certified by Health On the Net Foundation. Click to verify. This site complies with the HONcode standard for trustworthy health information:
verify here.


Site last updated 02/11/12 - loaded in 0.0486 seconds
Website and Case Management Software powered by Paas Cloud Computing Platform