|
Your
Never Too Old To Learn
(HealthScoutNews)
-- Scientists now have proof that you're never too old to learn.
For years,
researchers have believed the human brain stops growing by the
time we reach adulthood. But a new study shows our minds keep
developing well into our 40s.
The findings
could cast new light on how we look at brain development and treat
brain disease, researchers say. It could also lead to new drugs
that might nurture brain development.
Until now,
most scientific studies have focused on the growth of the brain
in early childhood, when the volume and weight of the brain increases
dramatically.
"Because brain
size didn't change after 18, everyone has assumed growth
stopped. Not so. It looks stable, but huge things are happening,"
says lead author Dr. George Bartzokis, who is with the Veterans
Administration's Central Arkansas Veterans Health Care System.
The study appears in a recent issue of the Archives of General
Psychiatry.
A neurology
expert says the findings have great potential.
"That sounds
like exciting stuff," says Paul Thompson, associate professor
of neurology at the University of California/Los Angeles Medical
Center in Los Angeles. "Anyone studying disease knows you really
need a good model of what's happening in the normal brain. This
is an important focus for understanding brain changes in later
years."
Using a special
type of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), Bartzokis and his colleagues
mapped the amount of white and gray matter in the frontal and
temporal lobes of the brains in 70 normal adult males between
the ages of 19 and 76. What they found was that white matter,
which lets the different parts of the brain communicate with each
other, continued to increase well into the 40s. Gray matter, the
part of the brain that contains white matter, declined through
adulthood.
Until you
hit your 50s, "white matter is replacing gray matter," Bartzokis
explains, which is why the size of your brain remains stable after
childhood. Unfortunately, the aging process begins to eat away
at white matter after your 40s.
Likening gray
matter to your computer and white matter to its Internet connections,
Bartzokis explains that what is really increasing is something
called myelin -- the protective sheath that surrounds nerve fibers
in your brain.
"What keeps
growing is the myelin," he says. "It affects the speed of the
signals that travel from neuron to neuron. What's growing is this
insulation. It helps your brain communicate more effectively.
It literally allows your brain to work in concert; you're not
as prone to impulse."
This may lend
credence to the concept of wisdom, Bartzokis says, and explain
why adults are better able to control their emotions and make
more reasoned decisions than young people do.
Thompson notes
that studies have shown nerve cells covered in myelin send messages
100 times faster than nerve cells that are not so covered: "It
speeds up the connections. We're losing the number of connections
-- sort of a pruning away -- but improving the connections that
stay."
The findings
could explain how something like trauma, schizophrenia or drug
addiction can damage the adult brain, Bartzokis says. Many brain
diseases are age-related, he adds, and mapping out normal brain
growth in adults could help scientists pinpoint the onset of neurological
disorders.
The idea that
the brain grows for a much longer period of time than many thought
could also lead to new and better treatments for brain disease
and addictions, he says. For instance, we may now be able to explain
why studies have shown an 18-year-old who tries cocaine is much
more likely to become an addict than a 30-year-old who does the
same. And drugs that could help increase the amount of myelin
in our brains might treat conditions like schizophrenia and Alzheimer's
disease more effectively. With this tracking method, Bartzokis
says, researchers could literally see whether the drugs were working.
There are
also new drugs being studied called neurotrophins, which seem
to help nerve cells grow and prevent decay. This type of MRI could
help measure how well those drugs work, Bartzokis adds.
"It's a new
way of looking at this," he says, and it could even give scientists
clues that might help them slow or stop the aging process.
Read about
Thompson's study, in which
doctors used MRIs to map brain development in children.
And the National
Institutes of Health (NIH) is funding a nationwide study of 500
children at seven pediatric centers that will use MRIs
to track normal brain development in children over the course
of five years.
Go here for
facts on
how the brain works.
Reference
Source 101
For more information on how to prevent other diseases, use
PreventDisease.com's "Quick
Prevention Resources".
|