PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

70-year-olds smarter than they used to be

2010-10-23
(Press-News.org) Today´s 70-year-olds do far better in intelligence tests than their predecessors. It has also become more difficult to detect dementia in its early stages, though forgetfulness is still an early symptom, reveals new research from the University of Gothenburg, Sweden, based on the H70 study.

The H70 study provides data on cognitive symptoms that researchers have used to predict the development of dementia, and also to investigate whether the symptoms have changed in recent generations. The study involves a large proportion of 70-year-olds from Gothenburg, Sweden, who have been extensively examined over the years, including tests that measure memory, speed, language, logic and spatial awareness. New results from the study were published earlier this year in the reputable American journal Neurology.

"Using the test results, we've tried to identify people who are at risk of developing dementia," says Simona Sacuiu, resident in psychiatry at Sahlgrenska University Hospital and medical researcher at the Sahlgrenska Academy's Unit of Neuropsychiatric Epidemiology. "While this worked well for the group of 70-year-olds born in 1901-02, the same tests didn't offer any clues about who will develop dementia in the later generation of 70-year-olds born in 1930."

The 70-year-olds born in 1930 and examined in 2000 performed better in the intelligence tests than their predecessors born in 1901-02 and examined in 1971. There were no differences in test results between 70-year-olds who developed dementia and those who did not over the next five years in the group born in 1930 and examined in 2000, while many of the tests identified early signs of dementia in the group born in 1901-02.

"The improvement can partly be explained by better pre- and neonatal care, better nutrition, higher quality of education, better treatment of high blood pressure and other vascular diseases, and not least the higher intellectual requirements of today's society, where access to advanced technology, television and the Internet has become part of everyday life," says Dr. Sacuiu.

The study showed that memory problems were the only predictor of which 70-year-olds were at risk of developing dementia. However, far from all of the 70-year-olds with a poor memory went on to develop the illness.

"That's why it's important for people with memory problems to receive a thorough examination," explains Dr. Sacuiu. "If we are to identify dementia effectively at an early stage, we need good tools that include psychometric tests. However, these must constantly be adapted to new generations, as older people are performing better and better in standardised psychometric tests."

At the same time, the incidence of dementia remained unchanged – it is just as common between the age of 70 and 75 today as it was 30 years ago. The study included over 800 dementia-free 70-year-olds, 5% of whom went on to develop the illness over the subsequent five years.

"Learning more about the early signs of dementia means that patients may get help and support more quickly," says Dr. Sacuiu.

THE H70 STUDY

The study started in 1971 with an examination of 70-year-olds who were then regularly followed over a period of 30 years. A new H70 study started in the year 2000, and is still ongoing. Data from a total of more than 2,000 senior Gothenburg residents are included in these studies. The participants have been examined both physically and psychiatrically and have enabled several research groups to describe different trends in physical and mental health in the aging population.

INFORMATION:

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

UMMS biomedical researchers develop more reliable, less expensive synthetic graft material

2010-10-23
WORCESTER, Mass. – With a failure rate as high as 50 percent, bone tissue grafts pose a significant obstacle to orthopedic surgeons attempting to repair complex fractures or large areas of bone loss, such as those often caused by trauma and cancer. Current synthetic substitutes rarely possess the bone-like properties needed for successful grafting and are often difficult for surgeons to manipulate in the operating room. In response to these challenges, researchers at UMass Medical School have developed an easy-to-produce, inexpensive, synthetic bone material called FlexBone. ...

Vaccines could help what's ailing fish

2010-10-23
U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) scientists are developing vaccines to help protect healthy farm-raised catfish against key diseases. Working as a team, microbiologist Phillip H. Klesius and molecular biologists Julia Pridgeon and Craig Shoemaker with USDA's Agricultural Research Service (ARS) at the agency's Aquatic Animal Health Research Unit in Auburn, Ala., and Joyce J. Evans, aquatic pathologist at the Auburn unit's lab in Chestertown, Md., are developing vaccines against Streptococcus iniae, S. agalactiae and other pathogens. ARS is USDA's principal intramural ...

Succimer found ineffective for removing mercury

2010-10-23
Succimer, a drug used for treating lead poisoning, does not effectively remove mercury from the body, according to research supported by the National Institutes of Health. Some families have turned to succimer as an alternative therapy for treating autism. "Succimer is effective for treating children with lead poisoning, but it does not work very well for mercury," said Walter Rogan, M.D., head of the Pediatric Epidemiology Group at the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS), part of NIH, and an author on the paper that appears online in the Journal ...

New approaches to skin cancer prevention

2010-10-23
The annual "Euromelanoma Day" campaign is designed to prevent skin cancer among the general public. While there has been considerable interest, it has proved difficult to reach out to some of the at-risk groups. As such, new ways of encouraging these people to go to a dermatologist are being introduced, reveals research from the University of Gothenburg presented at the dermatologist conference in Sweden. John Paoli is a researcher at the Sahlgrenska Academy and specialist at Sahlgrenska University Hospital's dermatology clinic, and one of the speakers at the conference. "In ...

Space telescopes reveal previously unknown brilliant X-ray explosion in our Milky Way galaxy

Space telescopes reveal previously unknown brilliant X-ray explosion in our Milky Way galaxy
2010-10-23
VIDEO: The Swift observatory can rapidly rotate 50 degrees in less than 75 seconds to quickly observe the afterglow from a gamma ray burst (GRB). Click here for more information. Astronomers in Japan, using an X-ray detector on the International Space Station, and at Penn State University, using NASA's Swift space observatory, are announcing the discovery of an object newly emitting X-rays, which previously had been hidden inside our Milky Way galaxy in the constellation ...

LSUHSC study IDs proteins regulating water retention in salt-sensitive hypertension

2010-10-23
New Orleans, LA – Research conducted by scientists at LSU Health Sciences Center New Orleans has found that two proteins in the brain act as valves to turn the hormone that regulates water retention in the body on and off. Their findings may lead to advances in treatment for diseases like high blood pressure, congestive heart failure, and cirrhosis of the liver. The research is published in the November 1, 2010 issue of Endocrinology. Daniel Kapusta, PhD, Professor of Pharmacology at LSU Health Sciences Center New Orleans, and Richard Wainford, PhD, LSUHSC Instructor ...

Making school lunchrooms smarter

Making school lunchrooms smarter
2010-10-23
Saratoga Springs, NY: Don't ban it, move it. This is one conclusion of a new Cornell University study. In one set of schools, sales of fruit increased by 100% when it was moved to a colorful bowl. Salad bar sales tripled when the cart was placed in front of cash registers. These findings presented today at the School Nutrition Association's New York conference, underscore the easiest way to lunchroom choices is to make an apple more convenient, cool, and visible than a cookie. The conclusion of six different studies with over 11,000 middle and high school studies ...

Green Carbon Center takes all-inclusive view of energy

2010-10-23
Rice University has created a Green Carbon Center to bring the benefits offered by oil, gas, coal, wind, solar, geothermal, biomass and other energy sources together in a way that will not only help ensure the world's energy future but also provide a means to recycle carbon dioxide into useful products. Whether or not one believes in anthropogenic climate change, the fact is humans are throwing away a potentially valuable resource with every ton of carbon dioxide released into the atmosphere, said James Tour, Rice's T.T. and W.F. Chao Chair in Chemistry as well as a professor ...

Mount Sinai researchers discover origin of immune cells in the brain

2010-10-23
Mount Sinai researchers have discovered that microglia, the immune cells that reside in the brain, have a unique origin and are formed shortly after conception. It was previously thought that microglia originated at the same time as macrophages, which are other immune cells that are thought to develop at birth. This groundbreaking discovery has the potential to lead to future treatments of degenerative brain diseases such as Alzheimer's and autoimmune diseases such as multiple sclerosis. The study is published online October 21 in Science Express. Microglia are thought ...

UC San Diego researchers identify factor boosting leukemia's aggressiveness

2010-10-23
Chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) cells survive and thrive not just by their own innate wiles, but by also acquiring aid and support from host cells in their surrounding environment. In a paper published online this week in The Proceedings of National Academy of Sciences, an international team of researchers led by cancer specialists at the University of California San Diego School of Medicine and the Moores UCSD Cancer Center identify a particular relationship that can promote notably aggressive leukemias and lymphomas. "The microenvironment is the term used to describe ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Bees facing new threats, putting our survival and theirs at risk

Deep learning can predict lung cancer risk from single LDCT scan

Genomic data shows widespread mpox transmission in West Africa prior to 2022 global outbreak

Research spotlight: Gender differences in primary care physician earnings and outcomes

Eating craved foods with meals lessens cravings, boosts weight loss

Limited evidence suggests calorie restriction may slightly reduce depressive symptoms in people with elevated cardiometabolic risk

U of A researchers developing world's first petahertz-speed phototransistor in ambient conditions

NRL hosts Innovation Day for Industry

Here comes the boom! Studying the effects of rocket launch sonic booms on neighboring communities #ASA188

Researchers capture brain activity with imager that is smaller than an eyelash

A head and a hundred tails: how a branching worm manages reproductive complexity

Investment risk for energy infrastructure construction is highest for nuclear power plants, lowest for solar

Personality traits influence the development of insomnia

Controlling these 8 risk factors may eliminate early death risk for those with high blood pressure

A groundbreaking discovery of a common master switch to cure Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s, and other brain-related diseases

Novel data streaming software chases light speed from accelerator to supercomputer

UK child sexual abuse survivors lack support - report

Rice’s Mikos elected to the European Academy of Sciences

Hari Kalva, Ph.D., inducted into the Florida Inventors Hall of Fame

Machine learning model helps identify patients at risk of postpartum depression

The US has a new most powerful laser

Team creates light-activated therapy to target hard-to-treat cancer

Tiny microlaser sensors offer supercharged biosensing

Having a team therapist reduces burnout in critical care nurses

Ciliary dysfunction linked to bronchopulmonary dysplasia severity

Inhaled microplastics inhibit key immune cell in the lungs

R. Rex and Carrol Parris make $10 million gift to launch USC Longevity Research Accelerator at Keck School of Medicine

Stars or numbers? How rating formats change consumer behavior

Empowering robots with human-like perception to navigate unwieldy terrain

Human brain activity linked to memory recall

[Press-News.org] 70-year-olds smarter than they used to be