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Posts Tagged ‘Senior Moments’

Good News About Age-Related Cognitive Decline in Baby Boomers!

May 18th, 2009

The bad news is that we live in an era when even young, agile brains are experiencing information overload. Constantly bombarded by info from TVs, newspapers, magazines, faxes, email, and non-ending data posted on the internet, I, for one, often think that too much is being required of my once considerable (now waning) mental powers.

The good news is that science continues to learn new ways to boost even the aging brain’s performance. Science now has a detailed picture of how the intricate machinery of the brain functions…and this makes it much easier for baby boomers to take a variety of supplements to give us the nutritional, neuro-chemical, and hormonal substances necessary for optimal brain performance. I suggest that careful, intelligent use of natural supplements can improve memory and help our aging brains adapt to today’s information overload.

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The Dreaded Baby Boomer “Senior Moment” - Is It Memory Loss or a Mental Glitch?

May 1st, 2009

I have often said that once a guy or gal turns 50 or so, he/she is taking pills for everything from high blood pressure, high cholesterol, osteoporosis, and baldness to urinating too much or not enough (and a myriad of other not so pleasant problems). It seems like there is a pill for everything…except perhaps for remembering to take all the pills!

Remember how you use to make fun of older folks’ absent-mindedness? Like the time your elderly neighbor locked herself out of the house for the third time one month? Or the day your dad’s friend Frank took the Dart train home because he forgot that he had driven to work in downtown Dallas that morning (this is not as bad as it appears - Frank usually took Dart to and from work)? And how about the time your mom put liquid Joy dish washing soap into the dishwasher soap dispenser instead of Cascade? Now that I am in my 50s, these ’senior moments’ aren’t so funny anymore…except maybe for the Joy in the dishwasher. I still chuckle at the visual image of my mother with a mop in her hands, knee deep in the soap suds that flowed so freely out of the dishwasher during that wash cycle!

Like most baby boomers, I have noticed some physical changes in the last few years. Some of the changes sort of crept up on me, while others seem to have appeared virtually overnight (although these I probably just did not notice until they became obvious). The most distressing of these changes is the frequency of the dreaded ’senior moment’. I realize that my aging brain cannot function like it did thirty years ago…but I am NOT enjoying having to make lists of things I could once remember effortlessly; and I am tired of the seemingly ever present thought, ‘it is on the tip of my tongue’.

Of all the usual signs of aging, the scariest are those that affect the mind. I will define a senior moment as a lapse of memory, logic, or mental function which is atypical or unusual. In other words, ’senior moment’ is an unscientific term for a variety of mental glitches…the most common of which is the temporary inability to recall a name, a phone number, or what you were about to do. Ever gone into a room to get something and forgotten what you went in there to get? Welcome to the ’senior moment’!

Part of the normal aging process is a general slowing of cognitive function - in other words, it becomes harder to pay attention and process information. Mental clarity wanes.This usually starts in the 50s and 60s. Why does it start? There are fewer neurotransmitters in the brain. (Neurotransmitters are the chemicals released by neurons that allow nerve cells to communicate by acting as messengers across synapses, the spaces between brain cells.) The brain shrinks, leaving less brain matter and fewer intact connections between brain cells. White matter — the fiber tracks connecting the front of the brain to storage areas — changes so that information takes longer to process. The brain becomes like a computer that freezes temporarily as it tries to call up a file. This time lapse is the senior moment where you have a hard time recalling names or choosing the right word.

But, you ask, should I be concerned about the memory loss of senior moments? Is what I am experiencing the first signs of something worse…something like Alzheimer’s disease?

Although I am no medical expert, both my mother and my mother-in-law passed away after long, ugly, seemingly endless bouts with Alzheimer’s. I saw the disease up close and personal. I lived with it every day and watched it consume the brains of two once remarkable women. I can tell you what I noticed about the disease. Extreme changes in mood, behavior, or memory can be a signal of early Alzheimer’s…and I do mean extreme here. If you have always been kind of ditzy, it is not really unusual that you can’t remember things well; BUT, if you have always had a remarkable memory and now can’t remember things, I would go talk with your doctor.

With early Alzheimer’s, there is a significant change in short term memory. You can pull up obscure old memories, but have difficulty with recent events and conversations. You may forget the names of simple things. You may go from being very organized to frequently misplacing things. If you cannot find your car in a parking lot because you forgot to look at the number associated with the space in which you parked, you are probably having a senior moment. If you can’t remember the make of the car or the color of the car and it is the car that you drive all the time, I’d make an appointment with a doctor.

Just remember that there is a huge difference between the mild cognitive impairment of normal aging and Alzheimer’s. People with normal age-related memory loss are usually able to compensate for these changes by using lists and other memory aids. In other words, the senior moments don’t generally impair daily functioning. If you’re concerned, get evaluated by a family doctor or a memory specialist…and do it sooner, rather than later. And also remember, DO NOT PANIC. There are many other physical conditions that can cause memory problems — depression, alcohol abuse, thyroid problems, vitamin deficiencies, hormone fluctuations… and you will notice that these are treatable. If it is Alzheimer’s, getting help early may be able to reduce symptoms and slow the progress of the disease - at least for awhile.

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Health and Wellness, Baby Boomer Style

April 27th, 2009

It has taken me 57 years to get to this point in my life. The good news is that I made it to this age and can order off the senior menu at Denny’s (although I can’t imagine why I would want to). The bad news is that I stop short every time I see myself in a mirror; in my head I am still the dark haired, brown eyed gal who was always raring to go. Where is the world did all this salt and pepper hair come from?

We baby boomers are in a truly unique position in American society. Due to the anticipated shortfall of the Social Security system and the prevalence of Alzheimer’s in older adults, we are expected to become a huge drain on the American economy over the next 20 years or so. I have news for the naysayers, we baby boomers have lived through wars in Korea, Vietnam, the Persian Gulf, Afghanistan, Iraq (and probably some others I do not remember; darn these senior moments!). We have thrived despite setbacks in our personal lives and fortunes. We constitute a vast number of people who have no intention of going quietly to the end of our days. We are a force and we plan to stay healthy and active for a long time to come.

If we baby boomers want to emphasize health and wellness, I must point out that we are going to need to make some changes in the way we live. Let’s begin by assuming here that I am ‘average’ with cholesterol too high, osteoporosis knocking at the door, a urinary system effected by having borne three children, etc. (Sounds familiar, doesn’t it; and yet I am an active, 57 year old who thoroughly enjoys life and desires to continue enjoying it for a long time to come.)

Let’s take a look at a couple of my life choices and see what changes I need to make. Let’s look at one of my food choices first. My favorite food is the good old American hamburger, add bacon and jalapenos but no cheese. Want fries with that? You bet I do! And I like them swimming in catsup. This particular meal is a cholesterol nightmare and a cardiac event in the making. Knowing that I need to monitor my cholesterol intake, I must now answer an important question: Do I really need to eat hamburgers and fries regularly or do I want to be healthy and active for a long time to come? Alas, it looks like it is time for a change. Hey, I am a baby boomer. I am not easily defeated by life’s trials and tribulations. I can handle only eating a burger and fries occasionally.

Smoking and drinking excessive amounts of alcohol will also greatly effect my health and wellness efforts. I do not now nor have I ever smoked. I wanted to when I was a teenager because I thought it looked cool, but I could never get past the horrible coughing when I took a puff off a cigarette (let me point out here that we did not know smoking was so bad for us back in the day). I was also never a heavy drinker, but I do not drink at all now. I have had rheumatoid arthritis for 19 years and cannot mix alcohol with one of the medications I take unless I have a death wish (this is a VERY easy choice to make). Life works in mysterious ways. Because I never did these things, I do not need to stop doing them. Fellow baby boomers, if you smoke and drink alcohol excessively, the Baby Boomer Health and Wellness Plan (I am giving it a name!) dictates that you put out that cigarette and exchange that bottle of hooch for a bottle of water.

How about it? Are you up to a challenge? I will use this blog to begin to discuss one particular health and wellness issue we face, fading memory and the ’senior moment’. Just remember that we can handle whatever comes up. After all, we are baby boomers and we are here to stay!

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