Oct 22

We hate to say we told you so, but…

nursesBy Paul R. Burghardt

In a recent issue of the British Medical Journal, van Dam and colleagues assessed the combined risk of “cigarette smoking, being overweight, taking little moderate to vigorous physical activity, no light to moderate alcohol intake, and low diet quality score” on mortality (a.k.a. death).

This is a very neat set of data and speaks to the foresight of the researchers that set up this project. Back in 1976 a heap of questionnaires were sent out to a lot of nurses (almost 100,000) so researchers could gather information on the nurses’ diet, activity levels, smoking habits, body weight and alcohol consumption. Then, they pestered these nurses with questionnaires for several decades to see how their behaviors might be related to their overall health.

If you’ve been paying attention, the punch-line won’t be all that surprising. Poor lifestyle habits result in greater risk of dying. What is interesting is that the combination of those 5 lifestyle choices accounted for 55% of the deaths in the group of nurses who took part in the study. You have to remember the unfortunate reality that a percentage of people will die over a period of time due to accidents, and the researchers took this into account. Therefore, the deaths of more than half the women from this study were due to these unhealthy lifestyle choices.

Another interesting tidbit is that they found no alcohol consumption, or alcohol consumption greater than one or two drinks each day increased risk for death attributable to cardiovascular disease. In contrast, two or more alcohol drinks per day resulted in an increased risk of cancer. Just something to keep in mind when considering your family health history.

There were also some pretty substantial jumps in the risk for death (mortality) once a person accumulated at least 3 of the unhealthy behaviors. This is an important idea to keep in mind. How heavy of a burden can you deal with? One unhealthy behavior or condition may not be insurmountable, but two or three may be more than you can carry before you become exhausted. An even more precarious situation is when something unexpected comes along. The burden of unhealthy behaviors can be viewed as the slippery slope, and a major life event (e.g. death of a loved one) as the little nudge it takes to send you over the edge.

It might be useful to think of this scenario like the foundation of your house. You can think of your lifestyle choices as reinforcing, or chipping away at the foundation set-up by your genes. Your genetic inheritance may have provided you with a given stability to your foundation. Engaging in healthy behaviors would be similar to sealing the cement of your foundation and grading the lawn so that water runs away from your house.

In contrast, unhealthy behaviors actively deteriorate your foundation, almost like someone pounding away at your foundation with a ball-peen hammer…. Doesn’t seem like a big deal, but over time problems will arise. Ping, ping ping….you have a chip. Ping, ping, ping…..now there is a crack. What happens when there is a little seismic activity in your neighborhood, or rain gets into the crack and freezes? That’s when big problems occur. Now think if you had five people with hammers pounding away on your foundation.

Again, it may not be much of a surprise that partaking in unhealthy behaviors resulted in substantially higher risk of dying. Although this study didn’t look at the effect of lifestyle choices on brain health, we know that a lot of these health issues travel together and can influence our brain. Diabetes, cardiovascular disease, obesity, physical inactivity, all set the stage for decreased brain health over our lifetime. So be proactive, put the hammer down and reinforce your basement, you never know when it might rain!

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Oct 15

BrainFit for Life: A User’s Guide to Life-Long Brain Health and Fitness

BrainFit for LifeBy Simon J. Evans

As the Brain Fitness industry continues to gain momentum, and people explore all the incredible brain-training tools being developed, we hope that enthusiasts don’t take their eye off the importance of the physical health of the brain and all the systems it communicates with. The brain is unique in that it houses our cognitive and emotional capacities in the form of the mind.

It is a ‘cognitive’ organ that hungers for stimulation from new experiences and challenges. Many brain fitness programs strive to satisfy this need. Yet the brain is also a physical organ that plays by many of the same rules as the heart, lungs, liver and kidneys. To stay healthy and perform optimally it requires quality nutrition, physical activity and optimal sleep.

The brain, especially, relies on a healthy vascular system to efficiently deliver oxygen and key nutrients and remove waste. In fact, the brain uses approximately 20% of the oxygen we breathe to satisfy its high-energy demands. Given that the brain only weighs about 2% of the body, we can consider it an energy hog and we must cater to its needs very carefully.

Brain Food

Nutrients play key roles in brain function. Several have shown efficacy in clinical trials treating cases of mood disorders, cognitive decline and of course benefiting the physical health of the brain. Nutrients are both the raw materials employed in creating new neural connections and important components in regulating the activity of genes involved in these processes. Specific nutrients involved in mitochondrial efficiency, the energy factories of brain and body cells, are particularly important for many aspects of brain function. Other nutrients are involved in the inner workings of neuronal membranes, responsible for ensuring that electrochemical signals, which make up our thoughts, transmit efficiently and reliably. Finally, antioxidants, important throughout the body, are especially important in the brain due to its high energy production rates and concurrent high capacity for free radical leakage. Keeping this in mind, it is readily apparent that nutrition provides the building blocks for our brain’s structure and function, and therefore cannot be ignored.

Building Brain Muscles

Exercise is a clearly established component for promoting brain health as well. No longer can we think that the brain is completely separate from the brawn. Human studies have shown the value of exercise in controlling stress and maintaining positive mood states; in improving cognitive function, including performance on memory and executive tasks; and in improving the brain’s two-way communication streams with the rest of the body. Some of these benefits are likely due to the positive effects of exercise on neurovascular health, which parallel cardiovascular health. Other benefits seem due to increased grey matter in ‘front office’ functions of the cortex; and neuronal birth, or neurogenesis, in the hippocampus, a brain region that controls aspects of memory and mood regulation. Whatever the mechanism, giving your body a workout will produce substantial benefits in terms of brain health. Remember, a body in motion tends to stay in motion, and your brain and body will be together your whole life.

Mental Workouts

Mental activity is an obvious, and critical, ingredient for optimizing and maintaining brain function. Studies have established relationships between the degree of life-time mental activity and late-life cognitive function. It’s clear that those who engage in intellectually challenging endeavors on a regular basis reap the benefits of a clear mind. There is, however a need for each individual to balance sufficient variety with a proper degree of challenge. Without variety and challenge, tasks become too mundane and too easy, eventually growing stale and losing their capacity to adequately stimulate the brain. We must also realize that mental activity goes beyond ‘cognitive’ tasks. Mental activities also include practices like meditative focus, relaxation and stress reduction techniques, as well as social interaction. These active and dynamic processes challenge the mind as well. Mixing cognitive challenges with emotional regulation provides a more complete mental workout that will help you to use it to improve it.

Rest and Regeneration

An often neglected component contributing to brain health is optimal sleep. On average, we sleep approximately 1.5 hours per night less than we did 100 years ago. Modern technology makes it easier to get less sleep and our busy lives encourage us to do it. Sleep is far more than a time of rest, and is too often misclassified as a period of lost productivity. It is an active metabolic period for our brains. Sleep is a time when we consolidate memories of the previous day, a time when we re-synchronize the circadian rhythm of at least dozens, if not hundreds, of hormones controlling our metabolism. Sleep loss is associated with a high percentage of mood disorders and certainly reduces our cognitive efficiencies. We must give ourselves permission to sleep by realizing that it is counterproductive to steal from it.

In BrainFit for Life: A User’s Guide to Life-Long Brain Health and Fitness, we focus equally on the cognitive, emotional and physical health of the brain and all of the lifestyle factors that come into play to maintain them. Today’s aging population is becoming increasingly focused on the maintenance of cognitive health and the value of ‘brain training’ programs. But we must realize that such training is not unlike that of an athlete, who must focus on their diet, sleep needs and psychological preparation in addition to their physical skill development. We explore specific aspects of nutrition, exercise, mental activity and sleep. We discuss how they regulate emotional, physical and intellectual functions of the brain. After all, they are not separable.

“To keep the body in good health is a duty…otherwise we shall not be able to keep our mind strong and clear.” – Buddha, circa 500 B.C.

BrainFit For Life is available at http://www.brainfitforlife.com/book.php

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May 14

Climbing the Corporate Ladder of Brain Fitness

graduationBy Simon J. Evans, PhD

Does your job have anything to do with your odds of getting Alzheimer’s disease down the road? Studies have come out recently linking intellectually challenging careers to reduced risk of dementia. Other studies link education level to cognitive health in later years. Overall, people with more education have lower rates of Alzheimer’s disease than those with less education.

This really isn’t that surprising if you think about it. We know that the more you use your brain, the stronger it gets. Just like muscles in your arms and legs, the brain gets more fit when you work it out. Higher education usually means more mentally stimulating jobs and that keeps your brain fit.

But that doesn’t mean that you have to go to graduate school to stay mentally active. Big studies look at large groups of people. On average, when you look at lots of people those with higher levels of education have more intellectually challenging jobs. So overall, they have lower rates of dementia. However, you can be a high-school drop out and still do what’s necessary to keep your brain fit. Just don’t be average.

You can maintain an active mind by committing yourself to life-long learning. It doesn’t take a formal education to teach yourself new skills, read new books and continually challenge your mind – it ain’t rocket science.

There is, however, a flip-side to this coin. Even though higher education predicts lower odds of getting Alzheimer’s disease, those with higher education who do get Alzheimer’s, decline much more rapidly and die sooner than those with less education. Remember, again, this is based on big number averages and is not necessarily predictive for any one person. Still, on average if you have an intellectually challenging career, your odds of getting dementia are lower, but if you do get it, your odds of rapid decline are greater.

At first, this might seem paradoxical. But I think there is a likely explanation for these seemingly odd data. It all relates back to the cognitive reserve theory, which we have discussed in the past.

Essentially, cognitive reserve is something you create throughout your life. The more you learn and the more you experience, the more you create cognitive reserve. This is like ‘extra’ brain circuits to accomplish intellectual tasks.

Think of it like a city building multiple bridges across a river. If you only have one bridge to cross the river and it gets knocked out by a freak storm, you can’t get traffic to the other side. If, however, you’ve created reserve routes to cross the river with multiple bridges and one gets knocked out, you can divert traffic across the other bridges.

This is the same with brain circuits. If you’ve created multiple circuits through a variety of experiences you have different ways to accomplish the same task. If one takes a hit due to age-related damage, you can divert thoughts through different circuits and not really notice a problem.

So people with higher education and more challenging jobs may have reserve brain circuits. That means that even though we may all experience the same age-related damage, someone with more cognitive reserve will show less cognitive decline. There are also ways to minimize the age-related damage through healthy living, but that’s another topic.

So why would people with more reserve show more rapid decline once dementia sets in? Again, this makes sense if you think about it. People with high levels of reserve who get dementia must have experienced severe damage that took out all their bridges. Damage of this severity will take them down quickly.

However, it’s an illusion. Since studies only compare people diagnosed with dementia, they may be comparing apples to oranges. On average, the people with high reserve (mentally challenging careers in these studies) who have Alzheimer’s disease have likely experienced a lot more damage than, on average, the people with low reserve who have Alzheimer’s.

This would explain why people with more challenging careers would have fewer cases of Alzheimer’s; and also why people with higher levels of education who do get Alzheimer’s, decline much more quickly.

Overall, it’s better to boost your odds of not getting dementia in the first place by doing what’s necessary to challenge your mind on a daily basis. Commit yourself to life-long learning and stay mentally active to build more bridges. Couple this with quality nutrition, plenty of exercise and enough sleep, and you will also minimize the storms that create the damage that can damage your bridges.

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