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Subject: Now we have a good reason to play chess until we die !

Author: Jorge Pichard

Date: 13:30:27 06/20/03



Mind Games May Trump Alzheimer's
Study Cites Effects Of Bridge, Chess
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By Shankar Vedantam
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, June 19, 2003; Page A01


Playing chess, bridge or a musical instrument significantly lowers the risk of
developing Alzheimer's disease or other forms of dementia, according to the most
comprehensive study to examine the benefits of challenging intellectual activity
among the elderly.

Seniors who regularly engaged in pastimes that stretched their minds -- sorry,
watching TV doesn't count -- lowered their risk of developing Alzheimer's
disease and other dementias by as much as 75 percent, compared with those who
didn't exercise their minds, researchers said yesterday.

The report bolsters a growing body of evidence that exercising the mind through
board games, social activities and education offers powerful protection against
mental deterioration and disease.

"I see a lot of elderly patients -- a lot come with memory complaints," said Joe
Verghese, a neurologist at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in the Bronx,
who led the study team. "They have so-called senior moments -- they go in a room
and forget why they are there. One thing I advise is for them to increase their
participation in cognitively stimulating activities."

Some mental activity appears to be better than none, said Verghese. And the more
hours seniors spent doing challenging tasks, the more protection they gained
against brain decline. The day may not be far off, he said, when doctors
recommend a game of chess and the daily crossword along with physical exercise
and a healthy diet.

The benefits of such activities -- widely available and inexpensive -- appear to
benefit those at all levels of education and IQ.

The finding comes as researchers race to find ways to slow or prevent disorders
such as Alzheimer's disease, which afflicts 4 million Americans. As the large
number of people in the baby boom generation age, dementia-related disease is
expected to rise, and reducing its toll could have enormous ramifications.

Equally intriguing from a scientific standpoint is the idea that mental activity
such as playing bridge can alter the molecular march of a neurological process.

"How can the molecular determinism of Alzheimer's disease be trumped by elderly
people's card-playing?" asked Joseph Coyle, a professor of psychiatry and
neuroscience at Harvard Medical School, in an analysis of Verghese's study. Both
papers are being published today in the New England Journal of Medicine.

"The apparent conflict is between biology and psychology," Coyle said in an
interview. But neuroscientists are finding that in many ways the brain is
"plastic" -- thoughts and experiences change neural structure and chemistry.

"Using the mind actually causes rewiring of the brain, sprouting new synapses --
it may even cause the generation of new neurons," Coyle said. "So psychology
trumps biology."

The new study tracked 469 people over age 75, starting in 1980. The researchers
measured how often they participated in leisure activities such as reading,
walking, dancing and board games. As people aged, researchers tracked how many
people developed dementia.

Verghese's team also solved a chicken-and-egg problem that dogged previous
research: Do mental activities really prevent dementia, or does dementia cause
people to lose interest in mental activities? By screening out anyone who might
have had dementia at the outset from their analysis, the researchers showed that
leisure activities influenced dementia in their study, and not the other way
around.

Those who played board games had a 74 percent lower risk and those who played an
instrument had a 69 percent lower risk. Doing crossword puzzles cut the risk by
38 percent.

Purely physical activities failed to lower the risk, said Verghese, except for
dancing, which lowered the risk by a dramatic 76 percent. Of all the physical
activities, dancing involved the most mental effort, the researchers noted. A
previous study found benefits for gardening, which also involves both mental and
physical effort.

Andrea Farbman, executive director of the American Music Therapy Association,
noted that music therapy is being widely used in Alzheimer's disease care.

"These are people who would not know what day it is, what their name is or where
they are, but they can recall the songs, the chord and music," she said.

Lon S. Schneider, professor of psychiatry, neurology and gerontology at the
University of Southern California, said that while final proof of the benefits
of mental activity would require a study that compared people who systematically
increased mental activity against a group that did not, the current results were
promising.

"Use it or lose it -- exercise your mind," he said. Schneider said that because
participants in Verghese's study had probably been involved in leisure
activities their whole lives, it would be unwise to advise 80-year-olds who had
never been mentally active to solve a crossword puzzle every day.

Rather, he said, people should find ways to stretch their minds doing things
they already enjoy: "If you are interested in sports, learn the box scores," he
said. "Learning the statistics is learning and memory."


© 2003 The Washington Post Company





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