Speed training cuts dementia risk by 25 percent in trial

A 20-year randomized controlled trial has shown that cognitive speed training, combined with booster sessions, reduces the risk of dementia diagnosis by 25 percent among older adults. The study, involving over 2,800 participants aged 65 and older, focused on a computer-based task requiring quick recall of visual details. While results are promising, experts urge caution due to the study's multiple outcome measures.

The findings come from a landmark study published in Alzheimer's & Dementia: Translational Research and Clinical Interventions, marking the first randomized controlled trial to demonstrate a clear intervention against dementia over two decades.

Conducted on 2,832 individuals aged 65 and older, the trial randomly assigned participants to four groups: speed training, memory training, reasoning training, or a control group with no intervention. The speed training used a task called Double Decision, where participants briefly viewed a scene with a car and a road sign, then recalled the car's identity and the sign's location. The exercise adapted to improve performance, making it progressively challenging.

Training involved two 60- to 75-minute sessions weekly for five weeks. About half of each intervention group received boosters: four one-hour sessions after the first year and four more after the third year.

Twenty years on, analysis of US Medicare claims revealed that only the speed training group with boosters had a significantly lower dementia risk—25 percent less for Alzheimer's or related conditions—compared to controls. Other groups showed no notable reduction.

"The size of the effect is really quite astonishing," said Marilyn Albert of Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore, Maryland. She noted the task's reliance on implicit learning, which produces enduring brain changes without conscious effort. "We know that changes that occur from this kind of learning are very long-lasting," Albert added.

Torkel Klingberg of the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm praised the rigor: "It is impressive to have a 20-year follow-up, and reducing the risk score for dementia is an impressive and important result."

However, Walter Boot of Weill Cornell Medicine in New York cautioned that testing numerous outcomes over 20 years raises the chance of statistically significant results by coincidence. "This does not mean the findings are wrong, but it does mean they should be interpreted cautiously."

Etienne De Villers-Sidani of McGill University in Montreal suggested the training builds brain reserve, delaying cognitive decline, akin to how a single traumatic event like a car crash can create lasting fear.

The study revives interest in brain training amid past controversies, including 2014 open letters from scientists debating its real-world benefits. Andrew Budson of Boston University emphasized broader applications: activities involving implicit learning, such as learning a new sport or craft, may similarly support brain health and delay Alzheimer's effects.

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Group of elderly people walking in a park, illustrating how modest daily walking may delay cognitive decline in those at risk for Alzheimer’s disease.
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Walking a few thousand steps may delay Alzheimer’s-related cognitive decline, study finds

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A Mass General Brigham–led study published in Nature Medicine suggests that modest daily walking is associated with delayed cognitive decline among older adults at risk for Alzheimer’s disease. Model-based estimates link 3,000–5,000 daily steps with about a three-year delay and 5,001–7,500 steps with roughly seven years.

A new study suggests that spending a few hours each week assisting others can significantly reduce cognitive decline in middle-aged and older adults. Researchers found that both formal volunteering and informal support, such as aiding neighbors or family, lead to slower brain aging over time. The benefits are most pronounced with moderate engagement of two to four hours per week.

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A large-scale international study has found that age-related memory decline stems from broad structural changes across the brain, rather than a single region or gene. Analyzing over 10,000 MRI scans from thousands of healthy adults, researchers observed that brain shrinkage's impact on memory intensifies nonlinearly in later life. The findings highlight a distributed vulnerability that accelerates memory loss once a tipping point is reached.

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Prof KVS Hari, director of the Centre for Brain Research at IISc Bengaluru, emphasized digital biomarkers for early detection and prevention of dementia. He noted that India's rapidly aging population makes dementia a major public health challenge. The centre focuses on data collection and AI to understand disease progression in the Indian context.

A 25-year Swedish study of nearly 28,000 people, published in Neurology, found that higher daily intake of full-fat cheese and cream was associated with a 13% to 24% lower risk of dementia—particularly in those without genetic predispositions—but not for low-fat dairy or those with genetic risks. The findings challenge low-fat dairy recommendations and emphasize overall healthy diets.

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Researchers at Rutgers Health have identified how the brain integrates fast and slow processing through white matter connections, influencing cognitive abilities. Published in Nature Communications, the study analyzed data from nearly 1,000 people to map these neural timescales. Variations in this system may explain differences in thinking efficiency and hold promise for mental health research.

 

 

 

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