Cognitive decline
- Diminishing mental capacity with age
- Deterioration of the mind with age
- Decline in cognitive ability with ageing
Nature
The brain changes with age: it loses about 10% of weight and some large nerve cells wither. Brain scans also show different brain patterns in younger and older people. Different regions of the brains of old people are also less well connected with each other. Such physical changes appear to be related to loss of cognitive and intellectual abilities in the aged, the most obvious being memory.
Background
Some studies have linked high blood pressure to mental decline, while other research suggests that keeping blood pressure under control wards off mental deterioration. Either way, maintaining a healthy flow of blood and oxygen protects the brain. There is some evidence that exercise might be able to offset some of the mental decline often associated with the aging process, sharpening memory and certain other mental abilities.
Incidence
In a US study of more than 400 people aged 45 to 103, a little more than half were considered to have mild cognitive impairment while the rest had no memory problems. Some of those with mild memory problems also had signs of other difficulty with judgement, problem solving or with personal care, which are typically seen with Alzheimer's disease. Over the 5-year observation period, only 7% of people with no memory problems went on to develop full-blown dementia. In contrast, 20% to 61% of those with mild cognitive impairment developed dementia, depending on the severity of symptoms at the beginning of the study. Of 25 of those who died, an autopsy of brain tissue showed that 24 had a dementing disorder, including 21 cases of Alzheimer's disease.
Claim
Staying mentally active helps a person's mental health just as staying physically active wards off the signs of physiological aging.
Counter-claim
The common belief that the mind loses its edge may be a with age may be a misperception. Actual disease, not age itself, may underline many of even most cases of feeblemindedness in the elderly. 60 people who are now septuagenarians, within a sample of 2,000 people aged 20 to 97, have been repeating the same mental tasks every year as part of a research programme. The old people had lost little of their capability except in the area of memory. They were only fractionally slower in tests of mental ability, and virtually identical on verbal abilities. Physiologists are finding that the old brain is just as capable as the young brain at growing new connections between brain cells. It is quite possible that dullness in older people is simply due to lack of thinking.