Keeping Friends and Family Close Protects Against Effects of Alzheimer’s
A team of researchers from Rush University Medical Center in Chicago recently
published a study in Lancet Neurology suggesting that a large social network may
act as a protective barrier to the cognitive defects of Alzheimer’s disease. The sample consisted
of 89 elderly people without known dementia who were participating in the Rush
Memory and Aging Project. While enrolled, participants were given 21 cognitive
performance tests per year and regular clinical evaluations. Data was also collected
from their brains post-mortem. The size of the social network was determined by
the number of children, relatives, and friends who visited the participants at
least once a month. The researchers found that the same amount of pathology, as
demonstrated by the typical tangles and plaques in the brain, had less of a cognitive
effect on those participants with a large social network, even after controlling
for other factors. This study was supported by grants from the National Institute
on Aging. http://www.thelancet.com/journals/laneur/article/PIIS1474442206704173/abstract