The Phnom Penh Post

Socialisin­g may boost brain health

- Judith Graham

ASK Edith Smith, a proud 103-year-old, about her friends, and she’ll give you an earful. There’s Johnetta, 101, whom she’s known for 70 years and who has Alzheimer’s disease. “I call her every day and just say, ‘Hi, how are you doing?’ She never knows, but she says hi back, and I tease her,” Smith said.

There’s Katie, 93, whom Smith met during a long teaching career with Chicago Public Schools. “Every day we have a good conversati­on. She’s still driving and lives in her own house, and she tells me what’s going on.”

Then there’s Rhea, 90, whom Smith visits regularly at a retirement facility. And Mary, 95, who doesn’t leave her house anymore, “so I fix her a basket about once a month of jelly and little things I make and send it over by cab”. And there are Smith’s fellow residents at a Chicago seniors community, whom she recognises with a card and a treat on their birthdays.

“I’m a very friendly person,” Smith said, when asked to describe herself.

That may be one reason this lively centenaria­n has an extraordin­ary memory for someone her age, suggests a recent study highlighti­ng a notable link between brain health and positive relationsh­ips.

For nine years, these experts at Northweste­rn University have been examining “SuperAgers” – men and women older than 80 whose memories are as good as or better than people 20 to 30 years younger. Every couple of years, the group fills out surveys about their lives and gets a battery of neuropsych­ological tests, brain scans and a neurologic­al examinatio­n, among other evaluation­s.

“When we started this project, we weren’t really sure we could find these individual­s,” said Emily Rogalski, an associate professor at the Cognitive Neurology and Alzheimer’s Disease Center at Northweste­rn’s Feinberg School of Medicine.

But find them they did: Thirty-one older men and women with exceptiona­l memories, mostly from Illinois and surroundin­g states, are participat­ing in the project. “Part of the goal is to characteri­se them – who are they, what are they like,” Rogalski said.

Previous research by the North- western group provided tantalisin­g clues, showing that SuperAgers have distinctiv­e brain features: thicker cortexes, a resistance to age-related atrophy and a larger left anterior cingulate (a part of the brain important to attention and working memory).

But brain structure alone doesn’t fully account for SuperAgers’ unusual mental acuity, Rogalski suggested. “It’s likely there are a number of critical factors that are implicated,” she said.

For their new study, the researcher­s asked 31 SuperAgers and 19 cognitivel­y normal older adults to fill out a 42-item questionna­ire about their psychologi­cal well-being. The SuperAgers stood out in one area: the degree to which they reported having satisfying, warm, trusting relationsh­ips. (In other areas, such as having a purpose in life or retaining autonomy, they were much like their “normal” peers.)

“Social relationsh­ips are really important” to this group and might play a significan­t role in preserving their cognition, Rogalski said.

That finding is consistent with other research linking positive relationsh­ips to a reduced risk of cognitive decline, mild cognitive impairment and dementia. Still, researcher­s haven’t examined how SuperAgers sustain these relationsh­ips and whether their experience­s might include lessons for others.

Smith, one of the SuperAgers, has plenty of thoughts about that. At her retirement community, she’s one of nine people who welcome new residents and try to help make them feel at home. “I have a smile for everybody,” she said. “I try to learn someone’s name as soon as they come in, and if I see them, it’s ‘Good morning, how do you do?’”

“Many old people, all they do is tell you the same story over and over,” she said. “And sometimes all they do is complain and not show any interest in what you have to say. That’s terrible. You have to listen to what people have to say.”

Brian Fenwick, administra­tor of the Bethany Retirement Community, where Smith lives, calls Smith a “leader in the community” and explains that “she’s very involved. She keeps us in line. She notices what’s going on and isn’t afraid to speak out.”

Fifteen years ago, Smith became a caregiver for her husband, who passed away in 2013. “All the time he was ill, I was still doing things for me,” she recalls.

“You cannot drop everything and expect to be able to pick it up. You can’t drop your friends and expect them to be there when you’re ready.”

William “Bill” Gurolnick, 86, another SuperAger in the study, realised the value of becoming more demonstrat­ive after he retired from a sales and marketing position in 1999. “Men aren’t usually inclined to talk about their feelings, and I was a keep-thingsinsi­de kind of person,” he explained. “But opening up to other people is one of the things that I learned to do.”

With a small group of other men who’d left the work world behind, Gurolnick helped found a men’s group, Men Enjoying Leisure, which now has nearly 150 members. Every month, the group meets for two hours, including one hour they spend discussing personal issues.

“We learn people aren’t alone in the problems they’re dealing with,” Gurolnick said, adding that a dozen or so of the men have become good friends.

“Bill is the glue that holds the whole group together,” said Buddy Kalish, 80, a member of the group in Northbrook, a Chicago suburb. “He’s very, very caring – the first one to send out a thank-you note, the first one to send out a notice when there’s been a death in the family.”

Activities are another way of cultivatin­g relationsh­ips for Gurolnick. On Mondays, he bikes 32 to 48 kilometres with more than a dozen older men followed by lunch. On Tuesdays, he’s part of a walking group, followed by coffee. On Wednesdays, he goes to the Wenger Jewish Community Center in Northbrook for two hours of water volleyball. On Thursdays, it’s back to the JCC for pickleball, a racket sport.

“You really get a sense of still being alive,” Gurolnick said, when asked what he takes away from these interactio­ns. “You get a sense of not being alone.”

Without her best friend, Grayce, whom she’s known since high school, and friends who live in her condominiu­m complex, Evelyn Finegan, 88, might have become isolated. Another SuperAger, Finegan is hard of hearing and has macular degenerati­on in both eyes but otherwise is astonishin­gly healthy.

“It’s very important to keep up with your friends – to pick up the phone and call,” said Finegan, who talks to Grayce almost daily.

Today, the staples of Finegan’s life are her church; a monthly book club; volunteeri­ng at a resale shop; socialisin­g with a few people in her building; attending a club of Welsh women; and seeing her daughter, her son-inlaw and grandchild­ren, who live in Oregon, whenever she can.

“It’s so nice to spend time with Evelyn,” said her upstairs neighbour, June Witzl, 91, who drives Finegan to doctor’s appointmen­ts. “She’s very kind and very generous. And she tells you what she believes so you really feel like you know her, instead of wondering what’s on her mind.”

 ?? NICOLE CRAINE/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Ping Wong, 92, speaks to a friend on the phone at the Voorhees Care & Rehabilita­tion Center in Voorhees township, New Jersey, on December 15, 2016. New research suggests that socialisin­g could lead to improved brain health.
NICOLE CRAINE/THE NEW YORK TIMES Ping Wong, 92, speaks to a friend on the phone at the Voorhees Care & Rehabilita­tion Center in Voorhees township, New Jersey, on December 15, 2016. New research suggests that socialisin­g could lead to improved brain health.

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