Social Networks May Help With Alzheimer's Disease
Staying in touch with close friends and family members may actually help protect
you from the damaging effects of Alzheimer's disease (AD), according to a new
study funded by NIH's National Institute on Aging.
Studies in older people have shown that social networks seem to reduce the risk
of a wide variety of health problems, including mental impairment. But AD is
a physical problem in the brain. It comes about when nerve cells in the brain
stop working, lose connections with other nerve cells and die. The physical damage
it causes can be measured in the brains of people after their death.
Dr. David A. Bennett and his colleagues from the Rush University Medical Center
in Chicago set out to understand the relationship between social networks and
physical changes in the brain caused by AD. They did clinical evaluations and
21 tests for memory and other mental functions in a study of more than 1,100
elderly people. The participants were also asked about the number of children,
family and friends they had and how often they interacted with them. When participants
passed away, their brains were removed and analyzed for physical evidence of
Alzheimer's disease.
The study, published in The Lancet Neurology, outlines the researchers' analysis
from the first 89 people in the study who've died. They found that the larger
the size of a person's social network, the less a given amount
of AD damage in the brain affected mental test scores. This was
true even when the AD damage was severe.
This study doesn't prove that social networks can stave off the effects of AD.
It may be that the better you can use the reserves in your brain, the better
you are at maintaining social networks. But social networks may help you use
what you've got more efficiently. There are also plenty of other good reasons
to make an effort to stay as well connected with friends and family as you can.
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