Greater Language Skills in 20s May Guard Against Alzheimer's

Small study found women who wrote more articulate essays were protected from symptoms

Posted: July 8, 2009

By Amanda Gardner
HealthDay Reporter

WEDNESDAY, July 8 (HealthDay News) -- Women with greater language abilities in early adulthood were less likely to have Alzheimer's disease later in life, even when autopsies revealed the clear brain changes that are hallmarks of the disease.

Also, the brains of women without symptoms of Alzheimer's housed bigger neurons, according to a study appearing in the July 9 online edition of Neurology.

"We noticed that the neurons in this group of people are larger and we also know that the same group of people we call asymptomatic also had higher language skills during their 20s," said study author Dr. Diego Iacono, a research fellow in neuropathology at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore.

It's possible that the larger neurons compensated for the brain plaques and tangles that are usually indicative of Alzheimer's, the authors stated.

The findings could also mean that language abilities in the early 20s can predict the risk of developing dementia several decades later.

A previous study, this one in men, also found larger neurons in individuals who had plaques and tangles but no clinical evidence of Alzheimer's.

For the current study, researchers examined the brains of 38 deceased Catholic nuns, part of the ongoing Nun Study.

Women were divided into two groups: those with symptoms of memory loss along with plaques and tangles and those with no memory loss whether or not they had plaques or tangles.

Essays written by the women when they first entered the convent in their late teens or early 20s were analyzed for richness of language skills, including how many ideas were expressed per 10 words, number of verbs and adjectives in one sentence and more.

Women without memory problems scored 20 percent higher on language tests (though not grammar tests) than did women with memory issues. "We think this percentage could be higher if we could increase the sample size of the subjects to examine. We are working on that," Iacono said.

"The novelty is that these people were normal [cognitively] but they have Alzheimer's disease pathology like the people with dementia," Iacono said. "It's amazing that, even though you have a certain amount of pathology in your brain, you are not demented. You have some protective mechanism."

It's not clear whether that protection comes from genetic factors or from more studying during the first two decades of life, although it does fit with the "cognitive reserve" theory.

"The idea is that we have a sort of cognitive reserve that we start to increase during our second and third decades of life, and you can spend this reserve when you get older," Iacono explained. "In this way, you can avoid the manifestation of dementia even if you have some pathology. This is something we didn't expect."

"This is the second independent sample with the same result. We're back to the metaphor of the brain as a computer and a muscle," said Dr. Gary J. Kennedy, director of geriatric psychiatry at Montefiore Medical Center in New York City. "In volunteers who had no signs of Alzheimer's but did have the plaques and tangles, the neurons were actually larger and more functional with more connections."

The paper also showed an increased risk for cognitive impairment in people with the APOE4 gene and a protective effect in those with the APOE2 gene.

The authors are now investigating to see if they can show a connection between the language skills and these particular genes.

More information

Visit the Alzheimer's Association for more on this condition.

How Does This Affect Autism Research

Since Alzheimer's and Autism are being found to have so many similaries lately, this new Alzheimer's research naturally raises the question for autism research: how do enhanced language skills affect raising the communication and social cognition abilities in autism to a higher level ?

Anonymous of FL @ Jul 11, 2009 23:52:48 PM

Write and Make Sure you Pack in the Ideas

I had originally read this study and interestingly, it turns out that the type of writing we do in our teens or early life may actually predict neuropathologic markers in our brains many decades later!

This is another study in a long line of research indicating early life environments are critical to shaping our brains for health well into late life

Dr. Pual Nussbaum

www.fitbrains.com

-- @ Jul 09, 2009 15:08:11 PM

Healthy use of brain.

This article makes perfect sense, when one realizes the brain needs exercise as well as most body parts to avoid dementia. When one adds this to a regimen that includes fresh, healthy and organic foods, avoiding debilitating drugs, surgeries, chemicals, alcohol, etc. you will see a generally healthier society, as our systems are avoiding the grease and poisons that can clog or harm the maintenance of our bodies. For other ideas - the web's "Healing News Network".

Dennis Knicely of NM @ Jul 09, 2009 11:22:50 AM

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