Today.Az » Weird / Interesting » How memory is lost: Loss of memory due to aging may be reversible
28 July 2011 [21:00] - Today.Az
Yale University researchers can't tell you where you left your car keys -- but they can tell you why you can't find them.
A new study published July 27 in the journal Nature shows
the neural networks in the brains of the middle-aged and elderly have
weaker connections and fire less robustly than in youthful ones.
Intriguingly, the research suggests that this condition is reversible.
"Age-related cognitive deficits can have a serious impact on our
lives in the Information Age as people often need higher cognitive
functions to meet even basic needs, such as paying bills or accessing
medical care," said Amy Arnsten, Professor of Neurobiology and
Psychology and a member of the Kavli Institute for Neuroscience. "These
abilities are critical for maintaining demanding careers and being able
to live independently as we grow older."
As people age, they tend to forget things more often, are more easily
distracted and disrupted by interference, and have greater difficulty
with executive functions. While these age-related deficits have been
known for many years, the cellular basis for these common cognitive
difficulties has not been understood. The new study examined for the
first time age-related changes in the activity of neurons in the
prefrontal cortex (PFC), the area of the brain that is responsible for
higher cognitive and executive functions.
Networks of neurons in the prefrontal cortex generate persistent
firing to keep information "in mind" even in the absence of cues from
the environment. This process is called "working memory," and it allows
us to recall information, such as where the car keys were left, even
when that information must be constantly updated. This ability is the
basis for abstract thought and reasoning, and is often called the
"Mental Sketch Pad." It is also essential for executive functions, such
as multi-tasking, organizing, and inhibiting inappropriate thoughts and
actions.
Arnsten and her team studied the firing of prefrontal cortical
neurons in young, middle-aged and aged animals as they performed a
working memory task. Neurons in the prefrontal cortex of the young
animals were able to maintain firing at a high rate during working
memory, while neurons in older animals showed slower firing rates.
However, when the researchers adjusted the neurochemical environment
around the neurons to be more similar to that of a younger subject, the
neuronal firing rates were restored to more youthful levels.
Arnsten said that the aging prefrontal cortex appears to accumulate
excessive levels of a signaling molecule called cAMP, which can open ion
channels and weaken prefrontal neuronal firing. Agents that either
inhibited cAMP or blocked cAMP-sensitive ion channels were able to
restore more youthful firing patterns in the aged neurons. One of the
compounds that enhanced neuronal firing was guanfacine, a medication
that is already approved for treating hypertension in adults, and
prefrontal deficits in children, suggesting that it may be helpful in
the elderly as well.
Arnsten's finding is already moving to the clinical setting. Yale is
enrolling subjects in a clinical trial testing guanfacine's ability to
improve working memory and executive functions in elderly subjects who
do not have Alzheimer's Disease or other dementias. /Science Daily/
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