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The 115 year old brain


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#1 Lazarus Long

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Posted 11 June 2008 - 06:37 PM


This is a subject that has come up many times in our discussions and here is some evidence that the deterioration of the brain might not be inevitable at all.

Also don't forget to check out the links at the end because it appears that Live Science Journal is taking the subject seriously.

115-year-old Woman's Brain in Tip-Top Shape

By LiveScience Staff
posted: 09 June 2008 11:40 am ET

A Dutch woman who reached 115 years of age and remained mentally sharp throughout life also had a healthy brain when she died, a new study finds.

The woman's brain showed almost no evidence of Alzheimer's disease. The finding suggests Alzheimer's disease and other forms of dementia are not inevitable, as had been suspected.

"Our observations suggest that, in contrast to general belief, the limits of human cognitive function may extend far beyond the range that is currently enjoyed by most individuals," said lead researcher Gert Holstege, a neuroscientist at the University Medical Center Groningen, in The Netherlands.

The results are detailed in the August issue of the journal Neurobiology of Aging.

At age 82, the Dutch woman made arrangements to donate her body to science after death. She contacted Holstege when she reached age 111, worried that her body was too old to be useful for research or teaching purposes. The neuroscientists reassured her that, contrary to her belief, they were particularly interested due to her age.

"She was very enthusiastic about her being important for science," Holstege and his colleagues write in the journal article.

Neurological and psychological examinations were performed when the centenarian was 112 and 113 years old. The results were essentially normal, with no signs of dementia or problems with memory or attention. Her mental performance was above average for adults aged 60 to 75.

When the woman died at age 115, her body was donated to science. Holstege's team found no signs of narrowing of the arteries, called atherosclerosis, and very few brain abnormalities. In fact, the number of brain cells was similar to that expected in healthy people between 60 and 80 years old.

The woman's brain showed little or no evidence of Alzheimer's disease. The neuroscientists found almost no deposits of so-called beta-amyloid, which are characteristic in Alzheimer's brains. The other abnormalities present, including "neurofibrillary tangles," were very mild, and would not have caused significant mental impairment.

Currently, there are more than 80,000 Americans 100 years of age or older, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. That number is expected to rise to more than 580,000 centenarians by 2040.

A recent study of a man who lived to age 114 found a combination of genes and lifestyle play a role in longevity, though the long-life recipe is far from clear.

As the number of people living to age 100 and beyond continues to increase, the researchers say, deterioration of the brain is not inevitable.


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#2 Luna

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Posted 11 June 2008 - 07:26 PM

I am not sure if it is depressing or not.

#3 Mind

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Posted 11 June 2008 - 08:14 PM

So her brain was in good shape...no beta-amyloid. I will assume this is a proxy for the rest of her body being in decent shape as well. If this is the case, it really piques my interest as to the cause of death, or the leading factor in her death. There has to be something in her body/brain, some critical function, that succumbed to damage accumulation or pathology. Something failed because it was impaired or damaged and I would really like to know the reason why. A genetic assay would be very interesting as well.

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#4 VictorBjoerk

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Posted 11 June 2008 - 08:43 PM

I don't think it necessary has to do with the rest of the body....When Jeanne Calment turned 122 she was in bad physical shape but still very sharp in her brain.... Hendrikje Van-Andel Schipper died of stomach cancer btw..........

#5 kismet

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Posted 12 June 2008 - 03:05 PM

Her diet and lifestyle? (hopefully it was not only luck and genetics) Cause of death? Tell us more.

#6 VictorBjoerk

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Posted 12 June 2008 - 03:22 PM

She died of stomach cancer..............She attributed her good health to herrings.....

#7 edward

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Posted 12 June 2008 - 07:35 PM

herrings? lol at last the secret to a youthful brain at 115 years old

ok fish oil check
ok consume fish regularly check
ok 2:1 or less omega 3 to 6 ratio check

115 here I come

somehow I think her real secret was genes, maybe she was unknowingly on CR or IF with better than average nutrition

Edited by edward, 12 June 2008 - 07:36 PM.


#8 Mixter

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Posted 12 June 2008 - 09:23 PM

Through reports like these, I'm increasingly more inclined to think that
mitochondrial health is the crucial aging marker in humans/mammals,
and all the other markers/types of aging damage have important places,
but the importance of efficient mitochondria is by far the highest one.
If having a lot of cellular junk eventually is not inevitable, then
probably so due to a very efficient metabolism and immune function..
which will in turn need optimal cellular energy to work. Mitochondria
being the most important achilles heel for eurkaryotes, that makes a
lot of sense. Mito health affects chances of getting cancer, and apparently
has significant connections with telomeres (PMID 18334557)...

I once thought that age related gene expression and differentiation
were the second achilles heel in complex organisms, but a lot of
current findings speak against that (the ease of influencing methylation,
vast changes of CR/SIRT, the fact that gene expression changes in
all aging cells of a tissue the same which signifies it is a controlled
response to aging rather than an aging marker...).

So, we'd need the tiny rest of the mtDNA allotopically expressed...
then we can talk about the rest of the measures :~ mRNA tagging
seems like good progress..

Edited by mixter, 12 June 2008 - 09:26 PM.


#9 VictorBjoerk

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Posted 12 June 2008 - 10:17 PM

Yes probably genes can explain a lot......

#10 Wandering Jew

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Posted 13 June 2008 - 02:31 AM

interesting

#11 Dr Martha A Castro N MD

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Posted 20 June 2008 - 07:37 AM

I definitely think that genetics interfere with our longevity, but the treatment that we give to our body is way more important. I am absolutely sure that she never smoked, drank alcoholic beverages in excess -probably none at all-, kept physically and mentally active and probably was a very positive and happy person. All these factors are extremely important to avoid dozens of diseases that can take us to the grave way sooner that it supposed to be.

PS Interesting thread, very interesting. Thank you for sharing.

#12 VictorBjoerk

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Posted 20 June 2008 - 10:19 PM

Her mother lived to 100 so genes are certainly involved,probably a healthy lifestyle as well...........

#13 VictorBjoerk

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Posted 20 June 2008 - 11:48 PM

It is mentioned in the paper that she probably could have continued to live a few more years if she didn't die from the tumour.........

#14 Brianjonsson

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Posted 11 December 2008 - 01:10 AM

herrings? lol at last the secret to a youthful brain at 115 years old

ok fish oil check
ok consume fish regularly check
ok 2:1 or less omega 3 to 6 ratio check

115 here I come

somehow I think her real secret was genes, maybe she was unknowingly on CR or IF with better than average nutrition


On top of that you can also keep you r mind fresh with exercise. I keep reading that watching shows like Jeopardy and playing along or playing mind exercise games is good. I found Brain games and I am now addicted but it is good for me so I don't care.

#15 missminni

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Posted 11 December 2008 - 03:47 AM

herrings? lol at last the secret to a youthful brain at 115 years old

ok fish oil check
ok consume fish regularly check
ok 2:1 or less omega 3 to 6 ratio check

115 here I come

somehow I think her real secret was genes, maybe she was unknowingly on CR or IF with better than average nutrition


On top of that you can also keep you r mind fresh with exercise. I keep reading that watching shows like Jeopardy and playing along or playing mind exercise games is good. I found Brain games and I am now addicted but it is good for me so I don't care.

I always believed keeping your mind active, i.e crosswords, chess, would keep your brain healthy. You know use it or lose it. But I recently saw a PBS program about brain health and keeping your brain from aging and, they said that was not so. To keep your brain healthy you have to do cardiovascular exercise for an hour at least three times a week. That is what keeps the brain growing new cells. They said the brain can keep growing for your entire life, as long as you do that hour ... play tennis, jog, whatever gets your heart rate up...at least 3 times a week.

#16 Heliotrope

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Posted 11 January 2009 - 05:58 AM

I always believed keeping your mind active, i.e crosswords, chess, would keep your brain healthy. You know use it or lose it. But I recently saw a PBS program about brain health and keeping your brain from aging and, they said that was not so. To keep your brain healthy you have to do cardiovascular exercise for an hour at least three times a week. That is what keeps the brain growing new cells. They said the brain can keep growing for your entire life, as long as you do that hour ... play tennis, jog, whatever gets your heart rate up...at least 3 times a week.



I think it could be. when i don't "do that hour" for a long time, I swear I feel myself growing a bit stupider, same effect as mindless tv etc The easiest way I find is distance jogging , fast , simple , efficient. sanjay gupta says jog extends life, lol, hope he makes to surgeon general, at least he's LEist.

i'm into joggng, swimming, cycling, chi-gong/tai-chi/martial art, though the others are complex/hard/difficult in comparison. it's nice to know the brain continues to grow and develop

Edited by HYP86, 11 January 2009 - 06:00 AM.





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