The Free Press Journal

Blame it on your blues for memory problems

-

Depression may speed up brain ageing and lead to memory problems in older adults, suggests new research that offers hope of finding a new way to treat memory issues. “Since symptoms of depression can be treated, it may be possible that treatment may also reduce thinking and memory problems,” said study author Adina Zeki Al Hazzouri of the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine in Florida, US.

The study, published in the journal Neurology, also showed that older people with greater symptoms of depression may have structural difference­s in the brain compared to people without symptoms.

“With as many as 25 per cent of older adults experienci­ng symptoms of depression, it's important to better understand the relationsh­ip between depression and memory problems,” Zeki Al Hazzouri said.

The study involved over 1,000 people with an average age of 71. At the beginning of the study, all the participan­ts had brain scans, a psychologi­cal exam and assessment­s for memory and thinking skills. Their memory and thinking skills were tested again an average of five years later.

At the start of the study, 22 per cent of the participan­ts had greater symptoms of depression. The researcher­s found that greater symptoms of depression were linked to worse episodic memory — a person’s ability to remember specific experience­s and events. Those with greater symptoms of depression had difference­s in the brain including smaller brain volume as well as a 55 per cent greater chance of small vascular lesions in the brain, the findings showed.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India