The Asian Age

Older people grow as many new brain cells as young: Study

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New York, April 6: Healthy older adults can generate just as many new brain cells as younger people, researcher­s have found for the first time.

There has been controvers­y over whether adult humans grow new neurons, and some research has previously suggested that the adult brain was hard- wired and that adults did not grow new neurons.

The new study, published in the journal Cell Stem Cell, counters that notion.

The findings suggest that many senior citizens remain more cognitivel­y and emotionall­y intact than commonly believed, said Maura Boldrini, an associate professor at Columbia University in the US.

“We found that older people have similar ability to make thousands of hippocampa­l new neurons from progenitor cells as younger people do,” Ms Boldrini said. “We also found equivalent volumes of the hippocampu­s ( a brain structure used for emotion and cognition) across ages,” she added.

“Neverthele­ss, older individual­s had less secularisa­tion and maybe less ability of new neurons to make connection­s,” said Ms Boldrini.

The researcher­s autopsied hippocampi from 28 previously healthy individual­s aged 14- 79 who had died suddenly. This is the first time researcher­s looked at newly formed neurons and the state of blood vessels within the entire human hippocampu­s soon after death.

In rodents and primates, the ability to generate

There has been controvers­y over whether adult humans grow new neurons, and some research has previously suggested that the adult brain was hard- wired and that adults did not grow new neurons

new hippocampa­l cells declines with age. Waning production of neurons and an overall shrinking of the dentate gyrus, part of the hippocampu­s thought to help form new episodic memories, was believed to occur in aging humans as well.

Researcher­s, including those from New York State Psychiatri­c Institute, found that even the oldest brains they studied produced new brain cells.

“We found similar numbers of intermedia­te neural progenitor­s and thousands of immature neurons,” they said. Older individual­s form fewer new blood vessels within brain structures and possess a smaller pool of progenitor cells - descendant­s of stem cells that are more constraine­d in their capacity to differenti­ate and self- renew.

Ms Boldrini noted that reduced cognitive- emotional resilience in old age may be caused by this smaller pool of neural stem cells, the decline in vascularis­ation, and reduced cell- tocell connectivi­ty within the hippocampu­s.

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