Friday, November 11, 2022

Can these approaches really improve memory? Harvard Health Letter

My stuff is here but ask your doctor for proven specifics.

  • memory (236 posts to March 2011)

 

Can these approaches really improve memory? Harvard Health Letter

In contrast to past mixed results, a study in humans (not mice) published online Aug. 22, 2022, by the journal Nature Neuroscience reported on specific types of electrical stimulation directed at specific areas of the brain. The stimulation lasted for 20 minutes each day for four days, and it improved both working memory and long-term memory for at least a month. The electrical stimulation involved no surgery and no pain. These encouraging results need to be reproduced by other scientists, studying other people, before they can be considered true. If they are confirmed, it will remain to be determined how long the benefits last and whether there are any adverse effects.

So, like I said, don’t hold your breath. But I think that science is finally beginning to understand the aging process well enough to offer the hope that we will someday be able to slow it — even the effects of aging on the brain.

— Anthony L. Komaroff, M.D.
Editor in Chief, Harvard Health Letter

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