It’s Not Too Late To Save Your Brain
I realize this is not really about weight loss, but it is a very good read!!
It’s Not Too Late To Save Your Brain
Dr Michael Colgan 13 March 2013
It’s beyond sad to see one of your friends for more than 30 years, a
colleague, a brilliant scientist, and a proud and beautiful wife and
mother, slowly turn into a shell. Watching her lose her memory was a
sight more awful than the foulest cancer. It was wretched hearing the
stifled sobs, seeing the tears in her eyes as she realized she had to
use her cell phone photos just to remember people, and eventually to
remember who she was herself.
Now she no longer remembers how
to use a cell phone, and does not know me at all, nor her husband, nor
her two children. All the memories, all the years, all the joys of her
life and family, are lost to her forever.
She does nothing any
more. She watches TV blankly, and cannot even understand the news. Her
pealing laughter that would illuminate a room is gone. Her erstwhile
smiling mouth is ever set in anguish. The once proud stature bent and
trembling, the blazing flame of hair now dank and grey. Despite all the
drugs, Alzheimer’s has taken her brain in its deadly grip, a grip that
never lets go.
She brought great jewels of laughter,
A million flecks of gold,
And flashing smiles of diamonds,
So dazzling to behold.
But now the house is dismal,
And the wind is heard to grieve,
Where is that lovely lady?
Why did she have to leave?
Don’t let it happen to you. Though I may never have met you, I know
exactly where you live. You live in your brain, a mobile house. You can
take your brain house anywhere on Earth. But you can never sell it,
you can never exchange it, you can never leave it lifelong. So it makes
good sense to look after your brain, to nurture and maintain it every
day. Yet most people take their brain for granted, and give it less
care than they give their teeth.
It may convince you to give
your brain more care if you know a few salient facts about memory loss
and Alzheimer’s disease. Alzheimer’s has escalated in the US to become
the 6th leading cause of death. There is no cure, nor any effective
treatment.
In 2011, Barack Obama passed the National
Alzheimer’s Protection Act, giving $100 million a year in research
grants to find an effective treatment by 2025. Also in 2011, the
National Institutes of Health acknowledged that current drugs are
ineffective, and changed their long-standing criteria for Alzheimer’s to
a focus on prevention. They published voluminous evidence that memory
loss, the salient identifying feature of Alzheimer’s, begins to occur in
the average American at about age 35.
“Converging evidence from both genetic at-risk cohorts
and clinically normal older individuals suggests that the
pathophysiological process of Alzheimer’s disease (AD)
begins years, if not decades, before the diagnosis of clinical
dementia.” (NIH, 19 April 2011)
The National Institutes of Health also reported that half of all
Americans over age 50 will suffer memory loss. Once memory loss
progresses to forgetting pots on the stove, the sufferer can no longer
live independently, and progresses quickly to total helplessness and
24-hour nursing care, until death.
Since 2011, with modern
neuroimaging and cerebrospinal fluid analysis, over 100 controlled
studies published in 2012 and 2013, have confirmed the pathological
processes that begin in apparently normal people at age 35. Prominent
among these is a loss of formation of new neurons (neurogenesis) the
normal process that replaces worn-out neurons in the hippocampus, the
brain area that is crucial for forming new memories. This loss in one
of the earliest events that precipitates a cascade of degeneration in
the progression to Alzheimer’s, and very likely the first thing we have
to prevent.
The good news is that recent controlled studies also show three interventions that can prevent loss of neurogenesis.
1. Optimum brain nutrition
2. Computerized brain exercises
3. Daily physical exercise with both aerobic and resistance components.
If you can read, understand, and remember this article, it is not too late.
Visit www.stopmemorylossnow.com for more information on how to Save Your Brain.
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