FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

ACS News Service Weekly PressPac: March 19, 2010

Probing the secrets of sharp memory in old age

EMBARGOED FOR RELEASE: Tuesday, March 23, 8 p.m., Eastern Time

A study of the brains of people who stayed mentally sharp into their 80s and beyond challenges the notion that brain changes linked to mental decline and Alzheimer鈥檚 disease are a normal, inevitable part of aging.

In a presentation here today at the 239th National Meeting of the American Chemical 中国365bet中文官网 (ACS), Changiz Geula, Ph.D. and colleagues described their discovery of elderly people with super-sharp memory 鈥� so-called 鈥渟uper-aged鈥� individuals 鈥� who somehow escaped formation of brain 鈥渢angles.鈥� The tanglesconsist of an abnormal form of a protein called 鈥渢au鈥� that damages and eventually kills nerve cells. Named for their snarled, knotted appearance under a microscope, tangles increase with advancing age and peak in people with Alzheimer鈥檚 disease.

The findings are based on examination of the 9 brains from super-aged individuals. Subjects who volunteer for this study get a battery of memory and other tests and agree to donate their brains for examination after death. They are considered 鈥榮uper- aged鈥� because of their high performance on the tests. The tests include memory exercises to evaluate their ability to recall facts after being told a story or their ability to remember a list of more than a dozen words and recall those words sometime later. The super-aged individuals recruited for study so far are all more than 80 years old, but they performed the memory tasks at the level of 50-year-olds.


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The brains of some elderly people
with super-sharp memory seem
to escape the formation of
destructive 鈥渢angles鈥� that increase
with normal aging and peak in
people with Alzheimer鈥檚.
Credit: iStock
(High-resolution version)