Mindfulness meditation mends mild cognitive impairment
Jonathan D Grinstein
Jonathan D Grinstein
Quote:A standard therapy does not exist to prevent or delay the progression from mild cognitive impairment—a decline in brain abilities like memory, thinking, language, and judgment—to Alzheimer’s disease. This type of medical intervention would have a huge impact on patients and their loved ones as well as the economic burden of Alzheimer’s disease.
Now, a study has shown that mindfulness meditation can have positive effects on cognitive impairment in adults. In the study, adults with mild cognitive impairment could learn mindfulness meditation, and those that did had improved mild cognitive impairment. This research shows that the brain function of patients with mild cognitive impairment can be enhanced through non-drug-based approaches like mindfulness meditation.
Exercising away dementia demons
While medications have been unsuccessful, non-drug-based interventions, like exercise, have shown promise in improving brain function. Fittingly, exercise has shown to increase the volume of a key brain structure involved in memory processing that degenerates with Alzheimer’s disease called the hippocampus, which is a sign of improved brain health.
How these changes occur is not well-understood, but there are clues that the stress-reducing component of exercise may play a role. Chronic stress negatively impacts the hippocampus, and high levels of chronic stress are linked to an increased prevalence of mild cognitive impairment and Alzheimer’s disease.
'Historically, we may regard materialism as a system of dogma set up to combat orthodox dogma...Accordingly we find that, as ancient orthodoxies disintegrate, materialism more and more gives way to scepticism.'
- Bertrand Russell
- Bertrand Russell