• Email Password

    Forgot Password|No Account YetRegister Now

  • Home
  • Study Classes
  • Exercises
  • E-Library
  • News
  • Gists & Jokes
  • Jobs Board
  • News Categories
  • articles and papers
  • campus news
  • entertainment news
  • health news
  • life style
  • scholarship and programme news
  • schools/examination news
  • science and technology news
  • skoola news
  • universities and colleges news
  • Featured News
  • NOTICE! NOTICE! NOTICE!!
  • Scientific Cure For Blindness Out
  • Okonjo Iweala Laments on State of Education in Nigeria
  • University of Port Harcourt Post Screening Exam Date and Time
  • NGO’s First-Aid boxes for schools
  • KWASU 2012/2013 Post UTME - How to Register - Stops 10th June
  • Check Your Delta State University 2012/2013 Diploma in Law Admission List
  • Benzema reveals Man United interest
  • Adeniran Ogunsanya College of Education Post UTME Result 2012/2013
  • BIDA POLY 2012/2013 Post UTME Forms Now Available
  • National Association of Seadogs Donate Funds for Support of Indigent Cross River Students
  • 101 First Class Graduates in Nigeria Receives FG Scholarships
  • Raul Signs for Schalke after leaving Real Madrid
  • Reg. for Delta State Poly Oghara HND and SPAT Screening 2012/2013
  • Men are Susceptible to Memory decline than women
  • Comments (0) :: Type Comment   Share/Bookmark Print
  • Men are more susceptible than women to memory problems in old age, according to a new study.

    Mild cognitive impairment, a condition in which people have problems with memory or thinking beyond that explained by normal aging, can lead to Alzheimer's disease. The new research, published Sept. 7 in the journal Neurology, found that mild cognitive impairment is 1.5 times more common in men than women.

    "This is the first study conducted among community-dwelling persons to find a higher prevalence of MCI in men," said study researcher Ronald Petersen, the director of Mayo Clinic Alzheimer's Disease Research Center in Rochester, Minn. "If these results are confirmed in other studies, it may suggest that factors related to gender play a role in the disease. For example, men may experience cognitive decline earlier in life but more gradually, whereas women may transition from normal memory directly to dementia at a later age but more quickly."

    Another recent study revealed that reading and other brain exercises could delay cognitive decline, but once the outward signs of dementia hit, it seems to progress faster than if it hadn't been postponed.

    In the new study, Peterson and his colleagues interviewed 2,050 people ages 70 to 89 about their memory and their medical history. They also tested the participants on their memory and thinking skills.

    Nearly 14 percent of those tested had mild cognitive impairment. Another 10 percent had dementia, a loss of cognitive function most often caused by Alzheimer's disease. When split up by gender, 19 percent of men had mild cognitive impairment compared with 14 percent of women.

    People in the study with low education levels and those who were never married had higher rates of mild cognitive impairment than those who were married or highly educated.

    Besides uncovering a gender disparity in memory, Petersen said, the finding that almost a quarter of elderly people have memory problems or dementia highlights the need for new treatments.

    By Stephanie Pappas, LiveScience Senior Writer
  • Posted by andy chuks on 2010-09-07
  • Share/Bookmark     Print
  • Related News
  • Nasarawa To Create Special Schools For Physically Impairments
  • Flood victims: Western Union and DOAMF donates N3.9m educational materials
  • Government To Immunize 25 Million Children In 11 States
  • NDLEA Captures N351 Million Drugs Hidden in Balls
  • 1,000 Mushin residents Screened by LUTH for diabetes, hypertension
  • Comments
  • Make Your Comment

© Copyright 2010 Skoola  | Contact Us | Blog | Terms of Use | RSSDeveloped by Best Value Providers
Sign in or Register
to continue.

Close