The Oklahoman

Depression might speed brain aging

- By Lauran Neergaard

WASHINGTON — Memory and thinking skills naturally slow with age but now scientists are peeking inside living brains to tell if depression might worsen that decline — and finding some worrisome clues.

Depression has long been linked to certain cognitive problems, and depression late in life even may be a risk factor for the developmen­t of Alzheimer's. Yet how depression might harm cognition isn't clear.

One possibilit­y: Brain cells communicat­e by firing messages across connection­s called synapses. Generally, good cognition is linked to more and stronger synapses. With cognitive impairment, those junctions gradually shrink and die off. But until recently, scientists could count synapses only in brain tissue collected after death.

Yale University scientists used a new technique to scan the brains of living people — and discovered that patients with depression had a lower density of synapses than healthy people the same age.

The lower the density, the more severe the depression symptoms, particular­ly problems with attention and loss of interest in previously pleasurabl­e activities, Yale neuroscien­tist Irina Esterlis said Thursday at a meeting of the American Associatio­n for the Advancemen­t of Science. She wasn't studying just seniors but a range of ages including people too young for any cognitive changes to be obvious outside of a brain scan — on the theory that early damage can build up.

 ?? PRESS FILE PHOTO] [EVAN VUCCI/ASSOCIATED ?? In this May 19, 2015, photo, a nuclear medicine technologi­st makes a PET scan of a patient at Georgetown University Hospital in Washington.
PRESS FILE PHOTO] [EVAN VUCCI/ASSOCIATED In this May 19, 2015, photo, a nuclear medicine technologi­st makes a PET scan of a patient at Georgetown University Hospital in Washington.

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