How to Live Longer Better
  • Your journey
    • What is happening as we live longer >
      • Bad language about older people
    • Your monthly briefing >
      • 2025 4 april
    • The environment is tough >
      • Retirement has benefits and risks
      • Some people got a better start than others
      • the impact of isolation is now recognised
      • The physical environment is the cause of many problems blamed on ageing
      • Poverty affects too many older people
    • the Living Longer Better Programme >
      • what would a good life in your late 80s be likel
      • What do you fear most and want to avoid
      • Start to write your Living Longer Better Plan
      • Think positive
    • How to reduce your risk of a bad death
    • My diary & daily routine
    • My health record
    • My housing
    • Othercare - Supporting someone else
  • Learning
    • U3A
    • Ageing is a normal biological process
    • From 40 to 90 loss of fitness is serious
    • The effects of disease are often compounded by loss of fitness
    • Negative beliefs and attitudes have a huge impact
    • The importance of planning with purpose
    • The Ageing Brain and the Maturing Mind
    • Strength and Power can always be increased
    • Skill and co-ordination can be improved at any age
    • Stamina can be improved by brisk walking
    • Suppleness can always be improved and stiffness always reduced
    • Activity Therapy is of vital importance
  • Get physically better
    • the Daily Dozen + 30 for 4S fitness
    • Increase strength, stamina, suppleness and skill >
      • Strength
      • Stamina
      • Skill
      • Suppleness
      • Work hard
      • Restart cycling >
        • Virtual Cycling
      • Brisk walking >
        • Virtual Walking
      • Restart Sport >
        • Restart swimming
        • Restart tennis
        • Restart football
      • If you have difficulty walking briskly
      • Join a Gym or Wellness Hub >
        • Meet others for fitness >
          • Silver sneakers
          • Age UK Generation games
          • Join a Gym, Fitness Centre or Wellness Hub
          • Find a personal trainer
      • Find a Trainer
    • Look after your body >
      • Happy and Positive Birthday >
        • Sod 60!
        • Sod70!
        • Sod It! Eat Well
        • Sod Sittin, Get Moving!
      • Skin maintenance
      • Teeth and gum maintenance
      • Feet maintenance
      • Bone, joint and muscle maintenance
      • Bowel maintenance
      • Brain maintenance
      • Mind maintenance
      • Heart maintenance
      • Lung maintenance
      • Waterworks maintenance for men
      • Waterworks maintenance for women
      • See as clearly as possible
      • Keep your Hearing as acute as possible
  • FIGHT DISEASE
    • Reduce your risk of disease >
      • Eat Well
      • Stop smoking
      • Increase activity - physical, cognitive and emotional
      • Watch the alcohol
      • Accept the offers from the NHS screening programmes
      • We need a revolution
    • If disease occurs - Optimise Your Healthcare >
      • Making a big decision >
        • Should i have a hip replacement ?
      • Consequences of common conditions >
        • Loss of status
        • Disability and handicap
        • Isolation
        • Depression
        • Frailty
      • Look out for social as well as drug prescribing >
        • Enjoy Activity Therapy
      • What you can do to help the NHS even more
    • Arthritis
    • Cancer
    • COPD _ Bronchitis
    • Diabetes
    • Dementia
    • Heart disease
    • High Blood Pressure
    • Hypercholesterolaemia
    • Pain
    • Parkinson's Disease
    • Stroke
  • Think better
    • Train your brain ; we now know the brain can get fitter at any age
    • Understanding Dementia & Alzheimer's Disease
    • Reduce your risk of dementia >
      • Stimulate your brain more every year >
        • Learning new skills and build on your assets
        • Get even more engaged
      • Protect your brain >
        • Sleep better
        • Get more active
        • Avoid over medication
        • Control stress levels
        • Air pollution and dementia
      • Keep the oxygen flowing
  • Feel better
    • Combat depression
    • Combat anxiety
    • Stay engaged and don't lose your sense of purpose
    • Feel even better by helping other people even more
    • Meet others like you
    • Optimise the Internet >
      • My Virtual Reality
    • Join others for a Daily Service
    • Feel better by visiting Great Places >
      • Visit the great Museums
      • Visit the great libraries
      • Visit a National Trust treasure
    • Feel better through music >
      • Join a concert party
      • Your virtual choir
      • Music for Moving
    • Feel better by reading, listening and watching with other people >
      • Kindling Book Club >
        • Crime
        • Classics
        • Health
      • Audible Book Club
      • Your BBC
      • Your Film Club
    • Feel better by learning new skills and ideas
    • Feel better by joining a club to play games and meet others >
      • Chess Club
      • Bingo club
      • Bridge Club
    • Feel better by supporting nature >
      • Visit the great gardens
    • Feeling Better by Going Down Memory Lane >
      • Sporting memories are powerful
  • Our Mission
    • About Muir Gray
    • Muir Gray's Bookshelf >
      • Midlife
      • Sod60!
      • Sod70!
      • Get Moving
      • Eatwell!
      • Dr Gray's Walking Cure
    • About the OxAP >
      • Here is the news
    • References

We now know the brain can learn, and create new connections and create new brain cells


BRAIN TRAINING
 
Professor Ramón Cajal was the most famous and the most highly respected neurologist in the world and when in 1906 he published his definitive tract on the human brain it was taken as gospel.  He was justifiably renowned because he developed ways of studying the brain that were both new and beautiful and the artistry of his depiction of brain cells had a great impact on people.  He was absolutely clear.  Unlike all the other tissues in the body the number of brain cells that you had at birth was all that you were going to get.  Unlike all the other tissues in which cells would divide and grow, sometimes spontaneously, sometimes in response to injury, throughout life the brain cells had only one fate – death.  Every year there would be fewer and fewer brain cells.  

This doctrine was believed and taught not only in 1906 but through to 1966 and beyond.  The brain was different from everything else, it was taught, and because there was a sort of reverence for the brain compared with humdrum organs such as the spleen or even the heart his doctrine was accepted.

However in the last ten years new evidence has appeared that Cajal was wrong.  A number of neurologists and neuroscientists have have described how  the function of the brain can increase and improve throughout life,  partly by new connections taking place between existing brain cells, what is  sometimes called neuroplasticity, sometimes actually by creating new cells, what is called neurogenesis.  One of the leading scholars in this field is Professor Merzhenich and there are now a number of books available both for scientists and the public describing the plasticity of the brain and the scope for recovery.  These books relate not only to the challenge of living longer they also focus on recovery from brain injury of various sorts and they reframe problems such as autism and depression as problems with the thinking with the thinking being determined by nerves and the connection between them.

Increase your Brainability, and reduce your risk of dementia 


There is too much emphasis on disability and disease which perpetuate the wrong beliefs and create and sustain pessimistic attitudes and there is a move now to focus on the positive and this is the focus on Brainability, the theme of our book with this title that will be published in 2020. it describes not only the potential for increasing the ability of your brain and its reserves but also the three step programme to reduce your risk of dementia 
  • Protect your brain cells
  • Keep your brain supplied with oxygen rich blood to prevent vascular dementia 
  • Get even more engaged    ​
There is information and advice  about these three strategies. There is also great interest in brain training 

Brain training 


What Michael Merzhenich emphasises is that from the age of approximately twenty on, even going to university, we can coast, we are not required to learn at the rate we were learning as children except when we go to a new job and even then the learning is usually over in a couple of months.  What is clear now is that we need to keep learning throughout life. Any sort of learning is helpful.  Crosswords are good for you, learning a new language better and learning a new musical instrument better than that because it involves motor skills rather than only cognitive skills but the focus in recent years has been on games. Unfortunately games for the brain received a bad press when a game called Luminosity was over hyped and oversold. What is clear now is that there are a number of training programmes that have been evaluated carefully and can be recommended for consideration .

Another discourse has focused on the concept of cognitive fitness
 
The Harvard guide to cognitive fitness

The Harvard Medical School has developed its own programme and a brief description of it is given on the linked page.  It has six steps
​
STEP 1: Focuses on foods linked to better brainpower — including the specific fruits and veggies most likely to protect against dementia
STEP 2: Explains the importance of regular exercise and how it may even help clear away plaques that contribute to Alzheimer's disease
STEP 3: Reveals the importance of sleep — and the sleep stage that's most important for memory
STEP 4: Helps you manage stress and explains why comfort foods are "comforting"
STEP 5: Shows you the importance of staying socially active — it may help delay dementia
SEP 6: Challenges your brain with everything from puzzles and board games to music and travel


The last step  is based on the principle that you can train your brain to work better at any age.  This is the same principle underpinning Michael Merzhenich’s programme Brainhq. This programme has been scientifically evaluated and has a strong reputation.  On the evidence that is available we can say that
  • It slows down and can actually reverse trends commonly associated with, and blamed on ageing, namely slow decision making,
  • It has a part to play in reducing the risk of dementia
  • It can improve reactive skills such as the skills required in driving and therefore reduce the risk of accidents and some people have advocated that training such as this is essential for everyone who wants to keep their driving licence

​Key books 

Try these books which ghave been written for the general public and not for neurologists
  • Michael Merzenich’ - Soft-Wired: How the New Science of Brain Plasticity Can Change Your Life,
  • Norman Doidge - The Brain That Changes Itself : Stories of Personal Triumph from the Frontiers of Brain Science
  • Moheb Costandi - Neuroplasticity
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Proudly powered by Weebly