Meet The ‘Super-Agers’: Seniors Who Defy Cognitive Decline

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Cognition News

Brain Health,Cognitive Function,Aging

I am a scientist, businessman, author, and philanthropist. For nearly two decades, I was a professor at Harvard Medical School and Harvard School of Public Health where I founded two academic research departments, the Division of Biochemical Pharmacology and the Division of Human Retrovirology.

It is no secret that cognition begins to decline with age. That one friend’s birthday becomes more and more difficult to remember, and you might start forgetting where you put your glasses or your wallet. Our thinking also begins to slow, occasionally becoming muddled or confused. This is just a natural and inevitable part of growing older.confirms that a lucky few, so-called “super-agers,” retain the brain health of someone aged 50 or 60 despite actually being 80 or older.

Donald Trump Jr Attends Father s Hush Money Trial As Melania And Ivanka Avoid It Here Are The Other Trump Allies In Court The key difference between super-agers and typical older adults came down to white matter; while the normal adults lost a significant portion of white matter as they aged, the super-agers did not. This was particularly pronounced in the hippocampus and the entorhinal cortex, two regions of the brain closely linked to memory. The super-agers also enjoyed better connectivity between areas in the front of the brain, a site involved in many different parts of cognition.

 

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