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How many people here would like to live
to be at least 80 years old?
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Yeah.
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I think we all have
this hopeful expectation
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of living into old age.
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Let's project out into the future,
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to your future yous,
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and let's imagine that we're all 85.
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Now everyone look at two people.
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One of you probably has
Alzheimer's disease.
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Alright, alright.
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And maybe you're thinking, well,
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it won't be me.
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Then, okay, you are a caregiver.
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So in some way,
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this terrifying disease
is likely to affect us all.
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Part of the fear around Alzheimer's
stems from the sense
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that there's nothing we can do about it.
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Despite decades of research, we still
have no disease-modifying treatment
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and no cure.
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So if we're lucky enough
to live long enough,
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Alzheimer's appears to be
our brain's destiny.
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But maybe it doesn't have to be.
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What if I told you we could
change these statistics,
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literally change our brain's destiny,
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without relying on a cure
or advancements in medicine?
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Let's begin by looking at
what we currently understand
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about the neuroscience of Alzheimer's.
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Here's a picture
of two neurons connecting.
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The point of connection,
this space circled in red,
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is called the synapse.
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The synapse is where
neurotransmitters are released.
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This is where signals are transmitted,
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where communication happens.
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This is where we think,
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feel, see, hear, desire,
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and remember.
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And the synapse
is where Alzheimer's happens.
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Let's zoom in on the synapse
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and look at a cartoon representation
of what's going on.
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During the business
of communicating information,
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in addition to releasing neurotransmitters
like glutamate into the synapse,
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neurons also release a small peptide
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called amyloid beta.
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Normally, amyloid beta is cleared away
and metabolized by microglia,
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the janitor cells of our brains.
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While the molecular causes
of Alzheimer's are still debated,
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most neuroscientists believe
that the disease begins
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when amyloid beta begins to accumulate.
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Too much is released,
or not enough is cleared away,
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and the synapse begins
to pile up with amyloid beta.
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And when this happens, it binds to itself,
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forming sticky aggregates
called amyloid plaques.
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How many people here
are 40 years old or older?
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You're afraid to admit it now.
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This initial step into the disease,
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this presence of amyloid
plaques accumulating,
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can already be found in your brains.
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Now, the only way we could
be sure of this would be
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through a PET scan, because at this point,
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you are blissfully unaware.
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You're not showing any impairments
in memory, language, or cognition
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yet.
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We think it takes at least 15 to 20 years
of amyloid plaque accumulation
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before it reaches a tipping point,
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then triggering a molecular cascade
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that causes the clinical
symptoms of the disease.
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Prior to the tipping point,
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your lapses in memory
might include things like,
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"Why did I come in this room?"
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or "Oh, what's his name?"
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or "Where did I put my keys?"
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Yeah, now before you all
start freaking out again,
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because I know half of you
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did at least one of those
in the last 24 hours,
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these are all normal kinds of forgetting.
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In fact, I would argue that these examples
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might not even involve your memory,
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because you didn't pay attention
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to where you put your keys
in the first place.
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After the tipping point,
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the glitches in memory,
language, and cognition are different.
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Instead of eventually finding
your keys in your coat pocket,
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or on the table by the door,
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you find them in the refrigerator,
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or you find them and you think,
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"What are these for?"
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Okay, so what happens
when amyloid plaques
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accumulate to this tipping point?
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Our microglia janitor cells
become hyper-activated,
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releasing chemicals that cause
inflammation and cellular damage.
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We think they might actually
start clearing away
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the synapses themselves.
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A crucial neural transport protein
called tau becomes hyperphosphorylated
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and twists itself
into something called tangles
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which choke off the neurons
from the inside.
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By mid-stage Alzheimer's,
we have massive inflammation and tangles
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and all-out war at the synapse
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and cell death.
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So if you are a scientist
trying to cure this disease,
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at what point would you ideally
want to intervene?
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Many scientists are betting big
on the simplest solution:
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keep amyloid plaques
from reaching that tipping point,
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which means that drug discovery
is largely focused on developing
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a compound that will prevent,
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eliminate, or reduce
amyloid plaque accumulation.
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And so the cure for Alzheimer's
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will likely be a preventative medicine.
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We're going to have to take this pill
before we reach that tipping point,
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before the cascade is triggered,
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before we start leaving
our keys in the refrigerator.
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We think this is why, to date, these kinds
of drugs have failed in clinical trials,
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not because the science wasn't sound,
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but because the people in these trials
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were already symptomatic.
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It was too late.
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Think of amyloid plaques as a lit match.
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At the tipping point, the match
sets fire to the forest.
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Once the forest is ablaze,
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it doesn't do any good
to blow out the match.
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You have to blow out the match
before the forest catches fire.
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Even before scientists sort this out,
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this information is actually
really good news for us,
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because it turns out that the way
we live can influence
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the accumulation of amyloid plaques.
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And so there are things we can do
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to keep us from reaching
that tipping point.
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Let's picture your risk of Alzheimer's
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as a see-saw scale.
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We're going to pile
risk factors on one arm,
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and when that arm hits the floor,
you are symptomatic
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and diagnosed with Alzheimer's.
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Let's imagine you're 50 years old.
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You're not a spring chicken anymore,
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so you've accumulated
some amyloid plaques with age.
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You're scale is tipped a little bit.
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Now let's look at your DNA.
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We've all inherited our genes
from our moms and our dads.
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Some of these genes will increase our risk
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and some will decrease it.
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If you're like Alice in "Still Alice,"
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you've inherited a rare genetic mutation
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that cranks out amyloid beta,
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and this alone will tip
your scale arm to the ground.
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But for most of us, the genes
we inherit will only tip the arm a bit.
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For example, APOE4 is a gene variant
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that increases amyloid,
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but you can inherit a copy of APOE4
from mom and dad
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and still never get Alzheimer's,
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which means that for most of us,
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our DNA alone does not determine
whether we get Alzheimer's.
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So what does?
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We can't do anything about getting older
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or the genes we've inherited.
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So far, we haven't changed
our brain's destiny.
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What about sleep?
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In slow-wave deep sleep,
our glial cells
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rinse cerebral spinal fluid
throughout our brains
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clearing away metabolic waste
that accumulated in our synapses
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while we were awake.
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Deep sleep is like
a power cleanse for the brain.
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But what happens if you short-change
yourself on sleep?
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Many scientists believe
that poor sleep hygiene
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might actually be
a predictor of Alzheimer's.
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A single night of sleep deprivation
leads to an increase in amyloid beta.
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And amyloid accumulation
has been shown to disrupt sleep,
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which in turn causes
more amyloid to accumulate.
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And so now we have
this positive feedback loop
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that's going to accelerate
the tipping of that scale.
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What else?
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Cardiovascular health.
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High blood pressure, diabetes,
obesity, smoking, high cholesterol,
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have all been shown to increase
our risk of developing Alzheimer's.
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Some autopsy studies have shown
that as many as 80 percent
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of people with Alzheimer's
also had cardiovascular disease.
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Aerobic exercise has been shown
in many studies
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to decrease amyloid beta
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in animal models of the disease.
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So a heart-healthy Mediterranean
lifestyle and diet
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can help to counter
the tipping of this scale.
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Okay, so there are many things
we can do to prevent
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or delay the onset of Alzheimer's,
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but let's say you haven't
done any of them.
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Let's say you're 65,
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there's Alzheimer's in your family,
so you've likely inherited a gene or two
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that tips your scale arm a bit,
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you've been burning the candle
at both ends for years,
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you love bacon,
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and you don't run unless
someone's chasing you.
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Let's imagine that your amyloid plaques
have reached that tipping point.
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Your scale arm has crashed to the floor.
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You've tripped the cascade,
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setting fire to the forest,
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causing inflammation, tangles,
and cell death.
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You should be symptomatic for Alzheimer's.
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You should be having trouble
finding words and keys
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and remember what I said
at the beginning of this talk.
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But you might not be.
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There's one more thing you can do
to protect yourself
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from experiencing
the symptoms of Alzheimer's
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even if you have the full-blown disease
pathology ablaze in your brain.
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It has to do with neural plasticity
and cognitive reserve.
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Remember, the experience
of having Alzheimer's
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is ultimately a result of losing synapses.
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The average brain has
over a hundred trillion synapses,
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which is fantastic. We've got
a lot to work with.
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And this isn't a static number.
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We gain and lose synapses
all the time through a process
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called neural plasticity.
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Every time we learn something new,
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we are creating and strengthening
new neural connections,
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new synapses.
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In the nun study,
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678 nuns,
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all over the age of 75
when the study began,
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were followed for more than two decades.
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They were regularly given
physical checkups and cognitive tests
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and when they died, their brains
were all donated for autopsy.
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In some of these brains, scientists
discovered something surprising.
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Despite the presence of plaques
and tangles and brain shrinkage,
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what appeared to be
unquestionable Alzheimer's,
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the nuns who had belonged to these brains
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showed no signs of having the disease
while they were alive.
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How can this be?
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We think it is because these nuns
had a high level of cognitive reserve,
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which is a way of saying that they had
more functional synapses.
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People who have more years
of formal education,
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who have a high degree of literacy,
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who engage regularly
in mentally stimulating activities,
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all have more cognitive reserve.
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They have an abundance
and a redundancy in neural connections.
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So even if they have a disease
like Alzheimer's
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compromising some of their synapses,
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they've got many extra backup connections,
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and this buffers them from noticing
that anything is amiss.
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Let's imagine a simplified example.
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Let's say you only know one thing
about a subject.
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Let's say it's about me.
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You know that Lisa Genova
wrote "Still Alice,"
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and that's the only thing
you know about me.
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You have that single neural connection,
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that one synapse.
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Now imagine you have Alzheimer's.
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You have plaques and tangles
and inflammation
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and microglia devouring that synapse.
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Now, when someone asks you,
"Hey, who wrote 'Still Alice?'"
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you can't remember, because
that synapse is either failing or gone.
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You've forgotten me forever.
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But what if you had learned more about me?
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Let's say you learned
four things about me.
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Now imagine you have Alzheimer's,
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and three of those synapses
are damaged or destroyed.
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You still have a way
to detour the wreckage.
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You can still remember my name.
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So we can be resilient
to the presence of Alzheimer's pathology
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through the recruitment of
yet undamaged pathways,
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and we create these pathways,
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this cognitive reserve,
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by learning new things.
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Now ideally we want these new things
to be as rich in meaning as possible,
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recruiting sight and sound
and associations and emotion.
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So this really doesn't mean
doing crossword puzzles.
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You don't want to simply retrieve
information you've already learned,
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because this is like traveling
down old, familiar streets,
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cruising neighborhoods you already know.
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You want to pave new neural roads.
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Building an Alzheimer's-resistant brain
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means learning to speak Italian,
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meeting new friends,
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reading a book,
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or listening to a great TEDTalk.
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And if despite all of this, you are
someday diagnosed with Alzheimer's,
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there are three lessons I've learned
from my grandmother
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and the dozens of people I've come
to know living with this disease.
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Diagnosis doesn't mean
you're dying tomorrow.
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Keep living.
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You won't lose your emotional memory.
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You'll still be able to understand
love and joy.
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You might not remember what I said
five minutes ago,
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but you'll remember
how I made you feel.
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And you are more than what
you can remember.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)