HEALTHY AT 100 (28 page)

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Authors: John Robbins

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CHOOSING LIFE
 

It’s hard not to be impressed by the marvelous health and longevity of people like martial arts expert Seikichi Uehara, golfer Tom Spear, fitness guru Jack LaLanne, and triathlete Ruth Heidrich. Their lives, like the lives of the elder Okinawans and all the rest of the world’s exceptionally healthy elders, dramatically demonstrate two things that
modern society needs desperately to remember:
Exercise is not something to avoid. And aging is not a disease.

Unfortunately, many people in modern societies today succumb to the belief that aging means becoming the helpless victim of a slow, torturous, and inevitable deterioration. They live in fear, believing that with each passing year they will only feel worse and suffer more. They do not exercise. They eat unhealthful foods. They shut down emotionally. Eventually, their fear becomes self-fulfilling, and they create the very tragedy they believed would occur.

You probably know many people like that. But you don’t have to be one of them. You can know the joy that arises when you commit to your own greatest health and healing.

The key is to do the best you can with what you’ve got. Maybe it starts with taking a walk every day, or jogging a half-mile, or taking a yoga class or a dance class. Maybe it starts with playing soccer or tennis, or learning how to lift weights correctly.

What’s important is that you challenge whatever would keep you from entering your life with passion and vitality. What matters is that you never let anything keep you from walking the path of your highest good. What’s pivotal is that you know the power of taking a stand for what gives you life.

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Keeping Your Marbles
 

Death is not the greatest loss in life. The greatest loss is what dies inside us while we live.

—Norman Cousins

A
healthy and vibrant body will serve you well as you age. But there is, of course, more to living well than physical health. Few things are more important than the healthy functioning of your mind. Remaining alert and clear-thinking is of great consequence throughout your life, and particularly as you move into your wisdom years.

Sadly, half of the people over age eighty-five in the United States suffer from dementia. Indeed, mental deterioration is so common among the elderly in the industrialized world today that many of us assume it is normal and inevitable as people age. In the cultures that exemplify healthy aging, in contrast, dementia is quite rare even among the oldest of the old. The authors of the Okinawa Centenarian Study report that Okinawan elders of both genders “have remarkable mental clarity even over the age of one hundred.”
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On the one hand, an ever-increasing number of older people in modern Western societies are suffering from Alzheimer’s disease and other forms of dementia, deteriorating inexorably to the point that they no longer remember who they are or recognize loved ones. On
the other hand, the elders in Okinawa, Abkhasia, Vilcabamba, and Hunza are happily going about their lives in their nineties and beyond, fully present both mentally and emotionally, playing a needed and important role in their families and societies. The difference could hardly be more poignant.

ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE
 

Alzheimer’s disease, the most common form of dementia, is a degenerative disorder that progressively robs its victims of memory and judgment, eventually leaving them unable to carry out even the most basic functions on their own. Named after Alois Alzheimer, the German physician who first identified the disease in 1901, the disease initially wipes out short-term memory, then layer by layer destroys connections to the past. It generally takes eight to ten years to destroy its victims’ brains. At current rates, fifteen million elderly Americans will be stricken by 2050, and tens of millions of adult children will be drained by ever-mounting medical bills and endless hours of care.

The financial costs of Alzheimer’s disease are staggering. The disease already costs the U.S. Medicare system three times as much as any other disease, and the costs are increasing dramatically. Medicare spending on Alzheimer’s was $32 billion in 2000 and is expected to reach $50 billion by 2010, with an additional $30 billion from the U.S. Medicaid program. “If left unchecked, it is no exaggeration to say that Alzheimer’s disease will destroy the health care system and bankrupt Medicare and Medicaid,” says Sheldon Goldberg, president of the Alzheimer’s Association.
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The costs of caring for people with Alzheimer’s threatens to wipe out government health programs, and yet it is not the government but individuals and families who incur the vast majority of the costs. Many Americans think that Medicare covers nursing home expenses, but in fact Medicare was never intended to pay for long-term care, and generally pays only for hospital and physician expenses. And Medicaid will cover nursing home costs only after the patient’s assets have been reduced to $2,000 or less. Meanwhile, nursing home costs for an Alzheimer’s patient run $4,000 to $5,000 per month, and patients may need such care for many years.

A MIND IS A TERRIBLE THING TO LOSE
 

The writer and artist Bobbie Wilkinson tells of an experience she had while traveling:

I watched as she led him by the hand to the bathroom at the airport terminal. Travelers surrounded them, rushing past, and although he seemed a little bewildered, he seemed secure as long as his hand was in hers.

Returning to their seats at the gate, she combed his hair and zipped his jacket. He fidgeted and asked, “Where are we going, Mommy? What time is it? When will we get to ride our plane?”

I marveled at the woman’s patience and love. I watched her take him by the hand when they were finally allowed to board.

Upon finding my seat, I discovered that the three of us would be together. I squeezed past the two of them to my window seat, then told him how handsome he looked in his new coat. He smiled. She helped take off his jacket and buckle his seat belt. He said that he had to go to the bathroom again, and she assured him that he could last until the end of the flight. I hoped she was right.

As the jet engines started, he became frightened and searched for her hand. She explained what was going on and began talking to him about their trip. He was confused about the different relatives they would be seeing, but she patiently repeated herself until he seemed to understand.

He asked many more questions about the time, what day it was, how much longer until they got there—and she lovingly held his hand and gave him her full attention.

We introduced ourselves and shared the usual things all mothers like to share with one another. I learned she had four children and was on her way to visit one of them.

The hour passed quickly, and soon we were preparing to land. He became frightened again, and she stroked his arm, reassuringly. He said, “I love you, Mom,” and she smiled and hugged him. “I love you, too, Honey.”

They got off the plane before I did, the mother never realizing how deeply she had touched me. I said a quiet little prayer for this
remarkable woman and for myself—that I would have enough love and strength to meet whatever challenges came my way, as this extraordinary mother clearly had.

When I last saw them, she was still holding his hand and leading her husband of 44 years to the baggage claim area.
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I share this painful story not to be overly dramatic, but to illustrate something with which all too many of us are unfortunately familiar. There can be love and courage in the land of dementia, as Bobbie Wilkinson witnessed, but the sad reality is that Alzheimer’s exhausts the patience and endurance of even the most committed caregivers.

WHAT CAN BE DONE?
 

Unfortunately, Alzheimer’s disease is very difficult to treat. There are drugs (Cognex, Aricept, Exelon, Reminyl) that in some cases allow the patient to function for an extra few months. But these drugs are only palliatives that do nothing to slow the progressive neurodegen-eration that ultimately leads to dementia and death. In late 2003, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved a new drug, meman-tine (Namenda), for treating patients with moderate to severe Alzheimer’s. By blocking the action of the chemical glutamate, this new drug may help treat symptoms in some patients, but it does not modify the underlying pathology of the disease.

Our inability to cure or effectively treat Alzheimer’s makes prevention all the more important, and the examples of the world’s most healthy and long-lived societies all the more meaningful.

Is there anything that you can do to ensure that your mind as well as your body will remain healthy and vital? Are there practical steps you can take to help assure you of the ability to think clearly throughout the length of your days?

Absolutely.

The good news is that a tremendous amount has been learned about preventing Alzheimer’s and other forms of dementia. We now know a great deal about what you can do to maintain clear thinking well past the age of 100. And we have a good understanding of what it is about the lifestyles of the world’s most long-lived peoples that
has consistently produced such marvelous cognitive functioning even at very advanced ages.

THE ROLE OF EXERCISE
 

For one thing, the regular physical exercise that is a central part of the lifestyles of these cultures is key. You may be surprised that physical exercise could play an essential role in preventing Alzheimer’s disease. But many studies have found that it can do exactly that.

For example, the value of exercise in sustaining healthy cognitive function was demonstrated in a five-year study published in
Archives of Neurology
in March 2001. The study found that people with the highest activity levels were only half as likely as inactive people to develop Alzheimer’s disease and were also substantially less likely to suffer any other form of dementia or mental impairment. Even those who engaged in light or moderate exercise had significant reductions in their risks for Alzheimer’s and other forms of mental decline. The study concluded that the more people exercise, the healthier their brains remain as they grow older.
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Three years later, in September 2004,
The Journal of the American Medical Association
published a series of studies further confirming that regular exercise helps preserve clear thinking even at advanced ages. One study found that women aged seventy and older who had higher levels of physical activity scored better on cognitive performance tests and showed less cognitive decline than women who were less active. Even walking only two hours a week at an easy pace made a marked difference, though the most benefits were found in women who walked six hours a week.
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Another study found that older men who walked two miles a day had only half the rate of dementia found among men who walked less than a quarter-mile a day.
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What are the mechanisms behind these benefits? In the last decade, neuroscientists have been discovering that exercise produces a multitude of positive changes in the brain. They are finding that physical activity enhances memory, improves learning, and boosts attention, as well as increasing abilities like multi-tasking and decision-making. A large number of studies have found that exercise makes the brain
more adaptive, efficient, and capable of reorganizing neural pathways based on new experiences.
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Exercise, of course, increases the flow of oxygen to the brain. This in turn produces a larger number of capillaries in the brain, and possibly the production of new brain cells. It also boosts brain neuro-transmitters (including dopamine, serotonin, and norepinephrine) that play crucial roles in cognition.

PREVENTING ALZHEIMER’S BY EATING WELL
 

As well as exercise, there is diet. The Abkhasians, Vilcabambans, Hunzans, and elder Okinawans all eat whole-foods, plant-based diets high in antioxidants. This is now known to be one of the key reasons they have such extraordinarily low rates of Alzheimer’s and other forms of dementia.

Antioxidants are substances that keep you young and healthy by increasing immune function, decreasing the risk of infection and cancer, and, most important, by protecting against free-radical damage. Free radicals are cellular desperadoes that play a pivotal role in the aging process, and their damage takes a toll on virtually every organ and system in the aging human body. This in turn sets the stage for all sorts of degenerative diseases, including Alzheimer’s and other forms of dementia. Antioxidants neutralize free radicals and keep them in check.

Antioxidants are found in fresh vegetables, whole grains, fresh fruits, and legumes such as soy. Carotenoids, the substances that give fruits and vegetables their deep, rich colors, are antioxidants. Vitamin C and E are also antioxidants, as are the minerals magnesium and zinc.
If your diet is high in antioxidants, your risk of many age-associated diseases

including cancer, heart disease, macular degeneration, and cataracts

decreases.

When it comes to preventing Alzheimer’s disease and other forms of senility and cognitive decline, antioxidants are extraordinarily important. It is free-radical damage that underlies the development of cognitive dysfunction, dementia, and most of the other ravages of unhealthy aging as well. And antioxidants are your body’s best defense
against free-radical damage. Many scientists now believe that the reason people who eat plant-based diets have far less dementia is because plant foods contain far more antioxidants. Animal-based foods, on the other hand, typically tend to activate free-radical production and cell damage.

A large number of studies published in the world’s most prestigious medical journals have demonstrated the benefit of diets high in antioxidants in preventing Alzheimer’s and other forms of dementia and cognitive decline. What about supplements containing antioxi-dants? At present, the evidence is not as substantiated, but it is certainly encouraging. In January 2004, for example, a distinguished group of medical researchers from four U.S. universities published a study in the
Archives of Neurology
, finding that people taking both vitamin C and E supplements had a 78 percent lower rate of Alzheimer’s.
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Personally, I take supplementary antioxidants daily.
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