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Alzheimer’s
Disease progresses
more rapidly in highly educated people
Newswise — High levels
of education may help ward off Alzheimer’s disease, but
they also speed up its progression once developed,
reveals research in the Journal of Neurology
Neurosurgery and Psychiatry.
The findings are based
on 312 New Yorkers aged 65 and older, who were diagnosed
with Alzheimer’s disease and monitored for over 5 years.
All the patients
underwent around four neurological assessments, each of
which comprised a dozen separate tests of brain
function.
Overall mental agility
declined every year among all the patients. But each
additional year of education equated to an additional
0.3 per cent deterioration.
The level of this drop
off was particularly evident in the speed of thought
processes and memory.
It was independent of
age, mental ability at diagnosis, or other factors
likely to affect brain function, such as depression and
vascular disease.
One of the possible
explanations for this finding is ‘cognitive reserve’
theory, suggest the authors.
This theory holds that
the brain’s ability to cope with Alzheimer’s disease
varies from person to person. But the amount of nerve
connections (neurons) and information hubs (synapses)
are likely to be more numerous in people who are highly
educated.
Alternatively, the
theory suggests that even if the quantity of neurons and
synapses is no different, the synapses are likely to be
more efficient and/or alternative circuitry is likely to
be operating in those who are highly educated.
Therefore, higher
education (or higher cognitive reserve) means that the
brain develops the decreased mental agility of Alzheimer
disease later, because it can “tolerate” changes for
longer.
But the subsequent
impact is likely to be greater than it would be in less
educated brains, because of the higher levels of
accumulated damage.