Can Caffeine Cut Age-Related Memory Loss? Dearborn Heights MI

Here's another item to add to the growing list of caffeine's health benefits: That daily java habit may help you avoid Alzheimer's disease as you get older. Not only that, a recent study of caffeine consumption reveals that drinking the brew actually may reverse any age-related memory loss you already experience.

Leslie Group Home
(313)562-9384
26743 Stanford
Inkster, MI
Parkside Home
(313)359-3312
6000 Silvery Lane
Dearborn Heights, MI
Henry Ford Village, Inc.
(313)584-1000
15101 Ford Road
Dearborn, MI
Rose Cottage
(734)762-8885
32111 Cherry Hill Road
Westland, MI
Homestead Residence
(734)374-9660
15475 Pardee Road
Taylor, MI
Love and Grace Home Care
(313)359-3146
26428 Stanford St.
Inkster, MI
Norborne Home
313 682-7973
11376 Norborne
Redford, MI
Mortenview Manor
(313)291-9425
8734 Mortenview
Taylor, MI
Ivy Cottage
(734)762-8885
32151 Cherry Hill Road
Westland, MI
Beechwood Living Center
(313)292-6690
10470 Beech Daly Road
Taylor, MI
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Can Caffeine Cut Age-Related Memory Loss?

Here's another item to add to the growing list of caffeine's health benefits: That daily java habit may help you avoid Alzheimer's disease as you get older. Not only that, a recent study of caffeine consumption reveals that drinking the brew actually may reverse any age-related memory loss you already experience.

Researchers at the University of South Florida's Florida Alzheimer's Disease Research Center conducted a study on 55 mice that were genetically tweaked to develop memory problems much like Alzheimer's as they got older. At about a year and a half old (or 70 in human years), half of the mice began to be served caffeine in their drinking water equivalent to five cups of coffee a day. The other half were served plain water.

After two months, the researchers found that the caffeinated mice were able to perform significantly better on memory and thinking-skills tests than the mice that drank nothing but water. The caffeinated mice actually possessed the mental abilities of regular mice of the same age that had never been genetically altered to have memory problems. As further evidence of their new superior brain power, the mice given caffeine had 50 percent less beta amyloid in their brains than they had before. Beta amyloid is a protein that forms the sticky plaques that signify Alzheimer's disease.

Encouraged by their results, the researchers set out to learn whether caffeine would boost brain power in normal mice that did not have any memory problems but found it would not. They concluded that caffeine's benefits with regard to memory were limited to fixing problems that had already developed, not supercharging the brains of those who were healthy to begin with.....

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