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Smoking
Speeds Up
Memory Loss in Middle Age
Excerpt
By
Alison McCook,
Reuters Health
Cigarette smokers who continue
the habit through middle age may see their memory suffer as a
result, according to new study findings released Wednesday.
UK researchers found that, from
their 40s to their 50s, smokers showed a faster decline in their
scores on tests of word memory, relative to non-smokers.
Furthermore, people who smoked
in their 40s did worse on tests that measure how fast they could
pick out certain letters from a page than non-smokers of the same
age, the authors write in the American Journal of Public Health.
The relationship between smoking
and memory loss appeared strongest in people who smoked more than
20 cigarettes each day, and persisted even when the authors controlled
for the influence of socioeconomic status, gender and a range
of medical conditions.
Just why smoking may speed up age-related
memory loss is not yet clear, study author Dr. Marcus Richards
of University College London told Reuters Health.
He said that he and his colleagues
suspected that smoking may accelerate memory loss by increasing
the risk of high blood pressure, which can damage the brain. However,
the relationship between smoking and brain functioning may be
slightly more complicated, Richards said.
"Our results for memory still held
up after taking blood pressure into account, but smoking could
have been causing changes in the brain's blood supply that we
were not able to measure," he said.
Alternatively, chemicals in cigarette
smoke could also damage the brain directly, Richards added.
Whatever the reasons for why smoking
accelerates memory loss, the message from these results should
be clear, Richards said.
"This is yet another reason to
quit smoking," he said. "If you can't, then cut down as much as
you can."
During the study, Richards and
his team reviewed information collected from 5,362 people born
in 1946. Study participants were contacted 21 times by the time
they turned 53.
Researchers measured people's mental
functioning via a series of tests. In one test, which looked at
verbal memory, the investigators showed people 15 words for two
seconds each, then asked them to write down as many as they could
remember.
During tests of speed and concentration,
people had to look for and cross out as many Ps and Ws they could
find in a page of other letters within one minute.
Although smokers in their 40s performed
just as well as non-smokers in the verbal memory tests, puffers'
performance deteriorated much faster from their 40s to their 50s.
And people who said they smoked
while in their 40s scored worse during speed tests conducted in
their 40s than non-smokers.
But the findings also suggest that
quitting may help, for the researchers discovered that people
who stopped smoking before age 53, and especially those who stopped
before age 43, tended to exhibit a slower decline in memory.
"Our results suggest that quitting
may slow down the negative impact of smoking on cognitive function,"
Richards said.
SOURCE: American Journal of Public
Health 2003;93.
Reference
Source 89
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