Bangkok Post

Women’s brains appear younger

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Women tend to outlive men and stay mentally sharp longer, and a new study out last week could explain why: female brains appear on average about three years younger.

The study enrolled 121 women and 84 men, who underwent PET scans to measure brain metabolism, or the flow of oxygen and glucose in their brains.

Like other organs in the body, the brain uses sugar as fuel. But just how it metabolise­s glucose can reveal a lot about the brain’s metabolic age.

Subjects ranged from their 20s to 80s, and across those age spans, women’s brains appeared metabolica­lly younger than men’s, said the findings in the Proceeding­s Of The National Academy of Sciences, a peer-reviewed US journal.

A machine-learned algorithm showed that women’s brains were on average about 3.8 years younger than their chronologi­cal ages. And when compared to men, male brains were about 2.4 years older than their true ages.

“It’s not that men’s brains age faster,” said senior author Manu Goyal, assistant professor of radiology at Washington University School of Medicine, St Louis. “They start adulthood about three years older than women, and that persists throughout life.” But why?

One theory is that hormones might begin shaping brain metabolism at a young age, setting females on a pattern that is more youthful throughout their lives, compared to men.

Scientists hope to find out if metabolic difference­s in the brain may play a protective role for women, who tend to score better than men on cognitive tests of reason, memory and problem-solving in old age.

More work is under way to confirm and better understand the implicatio­ns of the research.

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