Wednesday, May 11, 2011

Alzheimers and the Boomer Generation

Beginning this year, 10,000 baby boomers a day will turn sixty-five. Alzheimer's Disease is a progressive, degenerative disease and generally develops in people over sixty-five years of age but can start earlier. The biggest factor is age which puts the aging baby boomer population at risk.

Other risk factors are a history of Alzheimer's in your family, environmental issues, high blood pressure, poor diet and lack of exercise. It is estimated that one out of every eight boomers will suffer from Alzheimer's in their lifetime. The average life expectancy of the disease is eight years but many can live as long as twenty years.

There are presently five million people living in the United States with Alzheimer's Disease and over 400,000 Canadians over sixty-five years of age diagnosed with the disease. Alzheimer's is devastating not only to the sufferer but to their families as well. As the condition escalates, people can forget where they live, the names of family members and friends and can become lost on their own street. They become isolated by how they think and by what they can't remember.

There is currently no proven way to cure Alzheimer's but there are ways to delay the onset of this vicious disease. Physical exercise can slow down the degeneration of the nervous system. Other things that depend on the healthy well-being of our brains are: adequate fluid intake, a balanced diet, sufficient sleep, a minimum of stress, maintaining a healthy weight and looking after your health.

The plasticity of the brain gives hope. We can all start building better brains by keeping them active. We can do this by continuous learning which stimulates our brain. Once we stop learning, our mental capacity declines, we lose brain power and our brain cells begin to shrink.

We're never too old to learn new things and our brain's capacity for learning is limitless. The more variety of learning we undertake, the less likely we will experience cognitive decline as we age.

The varieties of learning that are beneficial to our brain are many. Music is one excellent learning experience whether we sing, dance or learn to play a musical instrument. Music increases blood flow to the brain, stimulates creativity, improves memory as well as concentration. Reading, writing and math are also great for the brain. Reading improves not only our memory but our brain. Writing in a journal is excellent for improving the brain and the memory. And when solving math calculations, areas on both sides of the brain are activated. Art is also excellent for firing up the brain and allows us to build links between both sides of the brain.

It is important to begin increasing our brain power when we are young, but it is also never too late to start no matter our age. It is possible to grow new brain cells even as we age.

Generation Alheimers: The Defining Disease of the Baby Boomers http://www.alz-news.org
Alzheimers Society of Canada www.alzheimer.ca
Alzheimers Society of B.C. www.alzheimer.bc.org

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