FYI/FYE,
An article on Memory for Memorial Day.
Short version: Stay in the game.
May 22, 2009
Brain Power
At the Bridge Table, Clues to a Lucid Old Age
By BENEDICT CAREY
LAGUNA WOODS, Calif. . The ladies in the card room are playing bridge, and at their age
the game is no hobby. It is a way of life, a daily comfort and challenge, the last
communal campfire before all goes dark.
.We play for blood,. says Ruth Cummins, 92, before taking a sip of Red Bull at a recent
game.
.It.s what keeps us going,. adds Georgia Scott, 99. .It.s where our closest friends are..
In recent years scientists have become intensely interested in what could be called a
super memory club . the fewer than one in 200 of us who, like Ms. Scott and Ms. Cummins,
have lived past 90 without a trace of dementia. It is a group that, for the first time, is
large enough to provide a glimpse into the lucid brain at the furthest reach of human
life, and to help researchers tease apart what, exactly, is essential in preserving mental
sharpness to the end.
.These are the most successful agers on earth, and they.re only just beginning to teach us
what.s important, in their genes, in their routines, in their lives,. said Dr. Claudia
Kawas, a neurologist at the University of California, Irvine. .We think, for example, that
it.s very important to use your brain, to keep challenging your mind, but all mental
activities may not be equal. We.re seeing some evidence that a social component may be
crucial..
Laguna Woods, a sprawling retirement community of 20,000 south of Los Angeles, is at the
center of the world.s largest decades-long study of health and mental acuity in the
elderly. Begun by University of Southern California researchers in 1981 and called the 90+
Study, it has included more than 14,000 people aged 65 and older, and more than 1,000 aged
90 or older.
Such studies can take years to bear fruit, and the results of this study are starting to
alter the way scientists understand the aging brain. The evidence suggests that people who
spend long stretches of their days, three hours and more, engrossed in some mental
activities like cards may be at reduced risk of developing dementia. Researchers are
trying to tease apart cause from effect: Are they active because they are sharp, or sharp
because they are active?
The researchers have also demonstrated that the percentage of people with dementia after
90 does not plateau or taper off, as some experts had suspected. It continues to increase,
so that for the one in 600 people who make it to 95, nearly 40 percent of the men and 60
percent of the women qualify for a diagnosis of dementia.
At the same time, findings from this and other continuing studies of the very old have
provided hints that some genes may help people remain lucid even with brains that show all
the biological ravages of Alzheimer.s disease. In the 90+ Study here, now a joint project
run by U.S.C. and the University of California, Irvine, researchers regularly run genetic
tests, test residents. memory, track their activities, take blood samples, and in some
cases do postmortem analyses of their brains. Researchers at Irvine maintain a brain bank
of more than 100 specimens.
To move into the gated village of Laguna Woods, a tidy array of bungalows and condominiums
that blends easily into southern Orange County, people must meet several requirements, one
of which is that they do not need full-time care. Their minds are sharp when they arrive,
whether they are 65 or 95.
They begin a new life here. Make new friends. Perhaps connect with new romantic partners.
Try new activities, at one of the community.s fitness centers; or new hobbies, in the more
than 400 residents. clubs. They are as busy as arriving freshmen at a new campus, with one
large difference: they are less interested in the future, or in the past.
.We live for the day,. said Dr. Leon Manheimer, a longtime resident who is in his 90s.
Yet it is precisely that ability to form new memories of the day, the present, that
usually goes first in dementia cases, studies in Laguna Woods and elsewhere have found.
The very old who live among their peers know this intimately, and have developed their own
expertise, their own laboratory. They diagnose each other, based on careful observation.
And they have learned to distinguish among different kinds of memory loss, which are
manageable and which ominous.
A Seat at the Table
Here at Laguna Woods, many residents make such delicate calculations in one place: the
bridge table.
Contract bridge requires a strong memory. It involves four players, paired off, and each
player must read his or her partner.s strategy by closely following what is played. Good
players remember every card played and its significance for the team. Forget a card, or
fall behind, and it can cost the team . and the social connection . dearly.
.When a partner starts to slip, you can.t trust them,. said Julie Davis, 89, a regular
player living in Laguna Woods. .That.s what it comes down to. It.s terrible to say it that
way, and worse to watch it happen. But other players get very annoyed. You can.t help
yourself..
At the Friday afternoon bridge game, Ms. Cummins and Ms. Scott sit with two other players,
both women in their 90s. Gossip flows freely between hands, about residents whose talk is
bigger than their game, about a 100-year-old man who collapsed and died that week in an
exercise class.
But the women are all business during play.
.What was that you played, a spade was it?. a partner asks Ms. Cummins.
.Yes, a spade,. says Ms. Cummins, with some irritation. .It was a spade..
Later, the partner stares uncertainly at the cards on the table. .Is that ...
.We played that trick already,. Ms. Cummins says. .You.re a trick behind..
Most regular players at Laguna Woods know of at least one player who, embarrassed by
lapses, bowed out of the regular game. .A friend of mine, a very good player, when she
thought she couldn.t keep up, she automatically dropped out,. Ms. Cummins said. .That.s
usually what happens..
Yet it is part of the tragedy of dementia that, in many cases, the condition quickly robs
people of self-awareness. They will not voluntarily abandon the one thing that, perhaps
more than any other, defines their daily existence.
.And then it.s really tough,. Ms. Davis said. .I mean, what do you do? These are your
friends..
Staying in the Game
So far, scientists here have found little evidence that diet or exercise affects the risk
of dementia in people over 90. But some researchers argue that mental engagement . doing
crossword puzzles, reading books . may delay the arrival of symptoms. And social
connections, including interaction with friends, may be very important, some suspect. In
isolation, a healthy human mind can go blank and quickly become disoriented, psychologists
have found.
.There is quite a bit of evidence now suggesting that the more people you have contact
with, in your own home or outside, the better you do. mentally and physically, Dr. Kawas
said. .Interacting with people regularly, even strangers, uses easily as much brain power
as doing puzzles, and it wouldn.t surprise me if this is what it.s all about..
And bridge, she added, provides both kinds of stimulation.
The unstated rule at Laguna Woods is to support a friend who is slipping, to act as a kind
of memory supplement. .We.re all afraid to lose memory; we.re all at risk of that,. said
one regular player in her 90s, who asked not to be named.
Woody Bowersock, 96, a former school principal, helped a teammate on a swim team at Laguna
Woods to race even as dementia stole the man.s ability to form almost any new memory.
.You.d have to put him up on the platform just before the race, just walk him over there,.
Mr. Bowersock said. .But if the whistle didn.t blow right away, he.d wander off. I tell
you, I.d sometimes have to stand there with him until he was in the water. Then he was
fine. A very good swimmer. Freestyle..
Bridge is a different kind of challenge, but some residents here swear that the very good
players can play by instinct even when their memory is dissolving.
.I know a man who.s 95, he is starting with dementia and plays bridge, and he forgets
hands,. said Marilyn Ruekberg, who lives in Laguna Woods. .I bring him in as a partner
anyway, and by the end we do exceedingly well. I don.t know how he does it, but he has
lots of experience in the game..
Scientists suspect that some people with deep experience in a game like bridge may be able
to draw on reserves to buffer against memory lapses. But there is not enough evidence one
way or the other to know.
Ms. Ruekberg said she cared less about that than about her friend: .I just want to give
him something more during the day than his four walls..
Drawing the Line
In studies of the very old, researchers in California, New York, Boston and elsewhere have
found clues to that good fortune. For instance, Dr. Kawas.s group has found that some
people who are lucid until the end of a very long life have brains that appear riddled
with Alzheimer.s disease. In a study released last month, the researchers report that many
of them carry a gene variant called APOE2, which may help them maintain mental sharpness.
Dr. Nir Barzilai of the Albert Einstein College of Medicine has found that lucid Ashkenazi
Jewish centenarians are three times more likely to carry a gene called CETP, which appears
to increase the size and amount of so-called good cholesterol particles, than peers who
succumbed to dementia.
.We don.t know how this could be protective, but it.s very strongly correlated with good
cognitive function at this late age,. Dr. Barzilai said. .And at least it gives us a
target for future treatments..
For those in the super-memory club, that future is too far off to be meaningful. What
matters most is continued independence. And that means that, at some point, they have to
let go of close friends.
.The first thing you always want to do is run and help them,. Ms. Davis said. .But after a
while you end up asking yourself: .What is my role here? Am I now the caregiver?. You have
to decide how far you.ll go, when you have your own life to live..
In this world, as in high school, it is all but impossible to take back an invitation to
the party. Some players decide to break up their game, at least for a time, only to reform
it with another player. Or, they might suggest that a player drop down a level, from a
serious game to a more casual one. No player can stand to hear that. Every day in card
rooms around the world, some of them will.
.You don.t play with them, period,. Ms. Cummins said. .You.re not cruel. You.re just
busy..
The rhythm of bidding and taking tricks, the easy conversation between hands, the daily
game . after almost a century, even for the luckiest in the genetic lottery, it finally
ends.
.People stop playing,. said Norma Koskoff, another regular player here, .and very often
when they stop playing, they don.t live much longer..
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* Dr. James Ellingson, jellings(a)me.umn.edu *
* University of Minnesota, mobile : 651/645-0753 *
* Great Lakes Brewing News, 1569 Laurel Ave., St. Paul, MN 55104 *