What you can do to prevent Alzheimers Lisa Genova

How many people here would like to live
to be at least 80 years old?

Yeah.

I think we all have
this hopeful expectation

of living into old age.

Let’s project out into the future,

to your future “you’s,”

and let’s imagine that we’re all 85.

Now, everyone look at two people.

One of you probably has
Alzheimer’s disease.

(Laughter)

Alright, alright.

And maybe you’re thinking,
“Well, it won’t be me.”

Then, OK. You are a caregiver.

So –

(Laughter)

so in some way,

this terrifying disease
is likely to affect us all.

Part of the fear around Alzheimer’s
stems from the sense

that there’s nothing we can do about it.

Despite decades of research, we still
have no disease-modifying treatment

and no cure.

So if we’re lucky enough
to live long enough,

Alzheimer’s appears to be
our brain’s destiny.

But maybe it doesn’t have to be.

What if I told you we could
change these statistics,

literally change our brain’s destiny,

without relying on a cure
or advancements in medicine?

Let’s begin by looking at
what we currently understand

about the neuroscience of Alzheimer’s.

Here’s a picture
of two neurons connecting.

The point of connection,
this space circled in red,

is called the synapse.

The synapse is where
neurotransmitters are released.

This is where signals are transmitted,
where communication happens.

This is where we think,
feel, see, hear, desire …

and remember.

And the synapse
is where Alzheimer’s happens.

Let’s zoom in on the synapse

and look at a cartoon representation
of what’s going on.

During the business
of communicating information,

in addition to releasing neurotransmitters
like glutamate into the synapse,

neurons also release a small peptide
called amyloid beta.

Normally, amyloid beta is cleared away
metabolized by microglia,

the janitor cells of our brains.

While the molecular causes
of Alzheimer’s are still debated,

most neuroscientists believe
that the disease begins

when amyloid beta begins to accumulate.

Too much is released,
or not enough is cleared away,

and the synapse begins
to pile up with amyloid beta.

And when this happens, it binds to itself,

forming sticky aggregates
called amyloid plaques.

How many people here
are 40 years old or older?

You’re afraid to admit it now.

This initial step into the disease,

this presence of amyloid
plaques accumulating,

can already be found in your brains.

The only way we could be sure of this
would be through a PET scan,

because at this point,
you are blissfully unaware.

You’re not showing any impairments
in memory, language, or cognition …

yet.

We think it takes at least 15 to 20 years
of amyloid plaque accumulation

before it reaches a tipping point,

then triggering a molecular cascade

that causes the clinical
symptoms of the disease.

Prior to the tipping point,

your lapses in memory
might include things like,

“Why did I come in this room?”

or “Oh … what’s his name?”

or “Where did I put my keys?”

Now, before you all
start freaking out again,

because I know half of you did at least
one of those in the last 24 hours –

these are all normal kinds of forgetting.

In fact, I would argue that these examples

might not even involve your memory,

because you didn’t pay attention
to where you put your keys

in the first place.

After the tipping point,

the glitches in memory,
language and cognition are different.

Instead of eventually finding
your keys in your coat pocket

or on the table by the door,

you find them in the refrigerator,

or you find them and you think,

“What are these for?”

So what happens when amyloid plaques
accumulate to this tipping point?

Our microglia janitor cells
become hyper-activated,

releasing chemicals that cause
inflammation and cellular damage.

We think they might actually
start clearing away

the synapses themselves.

A crucial neural transport protein
called “tau” becomes hyperphosphorylated

and twists itself
into something called “tangles,”

which choke off the neurons
from the inside.

By mid-stage Alzheimer’s,
we have massive inflammation and tangles

and all-out war at the synapse

and cell death.

So if you were a scientist
trying to cure this disease,

at what point would you ideally
want to intervene?

Many scientists are betting big
on the simplest solution:

keep amyloid plaques
from reaching that tipping point,

which means that drug discovery is largely
focused on developing a compound

that will prevent, eliminate, or reduce
amyloid plaque accumulation.

So the cure for Alzheimer’s will likely be
a preventative medicine.

We’re going to have to take this pill
before we reach that tipping point,

before the cascade is triggered,

before we start leaving
our keys in the refrigerator.

We think this is why, to date,
these kinds of drugs have failed

in clinical trials –

not because the science wasn’t sound,

but because the people in these trials
were already symptomatic.

It was too late.

Think of amyloid plaques as a lit match.

At the tipping point, the match
sets fire to the forest.

Once the forest is ablaze,

it doesn’t do any good
to blow out the match.

You have to blow out the match
before the forest catches fire.

Even before scientists sort this out,

this information is actually
really good news for us,

because it turns out that the way we live
can influence the accumulation

of amyloid plaques.

And so there are things we can do

to keep us from reaching
that tipping point.

Let’s picture your risk
of Alzheimer’s as a see-saw scale.

We’re going to pile
risk factors on one arm,

and when that arm hits the floor,
you are symptomatic

and diagnosed with Alzheimer’s.

Let’s imagine you’re 50 years old.

You’re not a spring chicken anymore,

so you’ve accumulated
some amyloid plaques with age.

Your scale is tipped a little bit.

Now let’s look at your DNA.

We’ve all inherited our genes
from our moms and our dads.

Some of these genes will increase our risk
and some will decrease it.

If you’re like Alice in “Still Alice,”

you’ve inherited a rare genetic mutation
that cranks out amyloid beta,

and this alone will tip
your scale arm to the ground.

But for most of us, the genes we inherit
will only tip the arm a bit.

For example, APOE4 is a gene variant
that increases amyloid,

but you can inherit a copy of APOE4
from mom and dad

and still never get Alzheimer’s,

which means that for most of us,

our DNA alone does not determine
whether we get Alzheimer’s.

So what does?

We can’t do anything about getting older
or the genes we’ve inherited.

So far, we haven’t changed
our brain’s destiny.

What about sleep?

In slow-wave deep sleep, our glial cells
rinse cerebral spinal fluid

throughout our brains,

clearing away metabolic waste
that accumulated in our synapses

while we were awake.

Deep sleep is like
a power cleanse for the brain.

But what happens if you shortchange
yourself on sleep?

Many scientists believe

that poor sleep hygiene might actually
be a predictor of Alzheimer’s.

A single night of sleep deprivation
leads to an increase in amyloid beta.

And amyloid accumulation
has been shown to disrupt sleep,

which in turn causes
more amyloid to accumulate.

And so now we have
this positive feedback loop

that’s going to accelerate
the tipping of that scale.

What else?

Cardiovascular health.

High blood pressure, diabetes,
obesity, smoking, high cholesterol,

have all been shown to increase our risk
of developing Alzheimer’s.

Some autopsy studies have shown

that as many as 80 percent
of people with Alzheimer’s

also had cardiovascular disease.

Aerobic exercise has been shown
in many studies to decrease amyloid beta

in animal models of the disease.

So a heart-healthy
Mediterranean lifestyle and diet

can help to counter
the tipping of this scale.

So there are many things we can do

to prevent or delay
the onset of Alzheimer’s.

But let’s say
you haven’t done any of them.

Let’s say you’re 65;

there’s Alzheimer’s in your family,
so you’ve likely inherited a gene or two

that tips your scale arm a bit;

you’ve been burning the candle
at both ends for years;

you love bacon;

and you don’t run unless
someone’s chasing you.

(Laughter)

Let’s imagine that your amyloid plaques
have reached that tipping point.

Your scale arm has crashed to the floor.

You’ve tripped the cascade,

setting fire to the forest,

causing inflammation, tangles,
and cell death.

You should be symptomatic for Alzheimer’s.

You should be having trouble
finding words and keys

and remembering what I said
at the beginning of this talk.

But you might not be.

There’s one more thing you can do
to protect yourself

from experiencing
the symptoms of Alzheimer’s,

even if you have the full-blown disease
pathology ablaze in your brain.

It has to do with neural plasticity
and cognitive reserve.

Remember, the experience
of having Alzheimer’s

is ultimately a result of losing synapses.

The average brain has
over a hundred trillion synapses,

which is fantastic;
we’ve got a lot to work with.

And this isn’t a static number.

We gain and lose synapses all the time,

through a process
called neural plasticity.

Every time we learn something new,

we are creating and strengthening
new neural connections,

new synapses.

In the Nun Study,

678 nuns, all over the age of 75
when the study began,

were followed for more than two decades.

They were regularly given
physical checkups and cognitive tests,

and when they died, their brains
were all donated for autopsy.

In some of these brains, scientists
discovered something surprising.

Despite the presence of plaques
and tangles and brain shrinkage –

what appeared to be
unquestionable Alzheimer’s –

the nuns who had belonged
to these brains showed no signs

of having the disease
while they were alive.

How can this be?

We think it’s because these nuns
had a high level of cognitive reserve,

which is a way of saying that they had
more functional synapses.

People who have more years
of formal education,

who have a high degree of literacy,

who engage regularly
in mentally stimulating activities,

all have more cognitive reserve.

They have an abundance
and a redundancy in neural connections.

So even if they have a disease
like Alzheimer’s

compromising some of their synapses,

they’ve got many extra backup connections,

and this buffers them from noticing
that anything is amiss.

Let’s imagine a simplified example.

Let’s say you only know one thing
about a subject.

Let’s say it’s about me.

You know that Lisa Genova
wrote “Still Alice,”

and that’s the only thing
you know about me.

You have that single neural connection,

that one synapse.

Now imagine you have Alzheimer’s.

You have plaques and tangles
and inflammation

and microglia devouring that synapse.

Now when someone asks you,
“Hey, who wrote ‘Still Alice?'”

you can’t remember,

because that synapse
is either failing or gone.

You’ve forgotten me forever.

But what if you had learned more about me?

Let’s say you learned
four things about me.

Now imagine you have Alzheimer’s,

and three of those synapses
are damaged or destroyed.

You still have a way
to detour the wreckage.

You can still remember my name.

So we can be resilient
to the presence of Alzheimer’s pathology

through the recruitment
of yet-undamaged pathways.

And we create these pathways,
this cognitive reserve,

by learning new things.

Ideally, we want these new things
to be as rich in meaning as possible,

recruiting sight and sound
and associations and emotion.

So this really doesn’t mean
doing crossword puzzles.

You don’t want to simply retrieve
information you’ve already learned,

because this is like traveling
down old, familiar streets,

cruising neighborhoods you already know.

You want to pave new neural roads.

Building an Alzheimer’s-resistant brain

means learning to speak Italian,

meeting new friends,

reading a book,

or listening to a great TED Talk.

And if, despite all of this, you are
someday diagnosed with Alzheimer’s,

there are three lessons I’ve learned
from my grandmother

and the dozens of people I’ve come to know
living with this disease.

Diagnosis doesn’t mean
you’re dying tomorrow.

Keep living.

You won’t lose your emotional memory.

You’ll still be able
to understand love and joy.

You might not remember
what I said five minutes ago,

but you’ll remember how I made you feel.

And you are more than what
you can remember.

Thank you.

(Applause)

这里有多少人愿意活
到至少 80 岁?

是的。

我想我们都有
这种

活到老年的充满希望的期望。

让我们投射到未来,投射

到你未来的“你”

,假设我们都是 85 岁。

现在,每个人都看两个人。

你们中的一个人可能患有
阿尔茨海默病。

(笑声)

好的,好的。

也许你在想,
“好吧,不会是我。”

然后,好的。 你是一个看护人。

所以——

(笑声)

所以在某种程度上,

这种可怕的疾病
很可能会影响到我们所有人。

对阿尔茨海默氏症的部分恐惧
源于

我们对此无能为力的感觉。

尽管进行了数十年的研究,但我们仍然
没有改善疾病的治疗方法

,也没有治愈方法。

因此,如果我们
有幸活得足够长,

阿尔茨海默氏症似乎就是
我们大脑的宿命。

但也许不必如此。

如果我告诉你我们可以
改变这些统计数据,

从字面上改变我们大脑的命运,

而不依赖于治愈
或医学的进步呢?

让我们先来
看看我们目前

对阿尔茨海默病神经科学的了解。


是两个神经元连接的图片。

连接点,
这个用红色圈起来的空间,

被称为突触。

突触
是释放神经递质的地方。

这是信号传输的
地方,通信发生的地方。

这是我们思考、
感受、看到、听到、渴望……

和记忆的地方。

突触
是阿尔茨海默氏症发生的地方。

让我们放大突触

,看看正在
发生的事情的卡通表示。

在传递信息的过程中

,除了将谷氨酸等神经递质释放
到突触中外,

神经元还会释放一种
叫做β淀粉样蛋白的小肽。

通常情况下,β淀粉样蛋白
被小胶质细胞代谢清除,小胶质

细胞是我们大脑的看门人细胞。

尽管
阿尔茨海默氏症的分子病因仍有争议,但

大多数神经科学家认为
,这种疾病

始于β淀粉样蛋白开始积累。

释放的过多,
或清除的不够

,突触
开始堆积β淀粉样蛋白。

当这种情况发生时,它会与自身结合,

形成
称为淀粉样斑块的粘性聚集体。

这里有多少人
是 40 岁或以上?

你现在害怕承认。

进入疾病的第一步,

即淀粉样
斑块积聚的存在,

已经可以在您的大脑中找到。

我们可以确定这一点的唯一
方法是通过 PET 扫描,

因为在这一点上,
您完全没有意识到这一点。

你还没有
在记忆、语言或认知方面表现出任何障碍……

还没有。

我们认为至少需要 15 到 20 年
的淀粉样斑块积累

才能达到临界点,

然后引发分子级联反应

,导致疾病的临床
症状。

在临界点之前,

您的记忆失误
可能包括诸如

“我为什么来到这个房间?”之类的事情。

或者“哦……他叫什么名字?”

或“我把钥匙放在哪里了?”

现在,在你们
再次开始吓坏之前,

因为我知道你们中有
一半人在过去 24 小时内至少做过一次——

这些都是正常的遗忘。

事实上,我认为这些例子

甚至可能不涉及你的记忆,

因为你一开始没有注意
你把钥匙放在哪里

到了临界点之后,

记忆、
语言和认知上的毛病就不同了。 你

最终不会
在你的外套口袋

或门边的桌子上找到你的钥匙,而是

在冰箱里

找到它们,或者你找到它们然后你想,

“这些是做什么用的?”

那么当淀粉样斑块
积累到这个临界点时会发生什么?

我们的小胶质细胞
被过度激活,

释放出导致
炎症和细胞损伤的化学物质。

我们认为他们实际上可能会
开始

自己清除突触。

一种
称为“tau”的关键神经转运蛋白会过度磷酸化,

并将自身扭曲
成一种称为“缠结”的东西,

从而从内部扼杀神经元

到阿尔茨海默氏症的中期,
我们在突触和细胞死亡方面出现了大规模的炎症和缠结

以及全面战争

因此,如果您是一位
试图治愈这种疾病的科学家,

您最想在什么时候
进行干预?

许多科学家押注
于最简单的解决方案:

防止淀粉样
斑块达到临界点,

这意味着药物发现主要
集中在开发

一种能够预防、消除或减少
淀粉样斑块积聚的化合物。

因此,治疗阿尔茨海默氏症的方法可能是
一种预防药物。

在达到临界点

之前,在触发级联之前,

在我们开始将
钥匙留在冰箱中之前,我们将不得不服用这种药丸。

我们认为这就是为什么迄今为止
这类药物

在临床试验中失败的

原因——不是因为科学不健全,

而是因为这些试验中的
人已经出现了症状。

已经太迟了。

将淀粉样斑块视为点燃的火柴。

在临界点,
火柴点燃了森林。

一旦森林着火了,

把火柴吹灭是没有任何
好处的。

你必须
在森林着火之前吹灭火柴。

甚至在科学家解决这个问题之前,

这些信息实际上
对我们来说确实是个好消息,

因为事实证明,我们的生活方式
可以影响

淀粉样蛋白斑块的积累。

所以我们可以做一些事情

来阻止我们达到
那个临界点。

让我们将您
患阿尔茨海默氏症的风险想象成一个跷跷板规模。

我们将把
风险因素堆积在一只手臂上

,当那只手臂碰到地板时,
你就会出现症状

并被诊断出患有阿尔茨海默氏症。

假设你已经 50 岁了。

你不再是一只春鸡,

所以
随着年龄的增长,你已经积累了一些淀粉样蛋白斑块。

你的天平有点倾斜。

现在让我们看看你的DNA。

我们都
从我们的妈妈和爸爸那里继承了我们的基因。

其中一些基因会增加我们的风险,
而另一些则会降低风险。

如果你像“仍然爱丽丝”中的爱丽丝一样,

你继承了一种罕见的基因突变
,它会产生β淀粉样蛋白,仅此一项就会

让你的秤臂倒地。

但对我们大多数人来说,我们继承的基因
只会让手臂稍微倾斜一点。

例如,APOE4 是
一种增加淀粉样蛋白的基因变体,

但你可以从爸爸妈妈那里继承一份 APOE4 的拷贝

,仍然永远不会得阿尔茨海默病,

这意味着对于我们大多数人来说,

我们的 DNA 本身并不能
决定我们是否会得阿尔茨海默病。

那么有什么作用呢?

对于变老
或遗传的基因,我们无能为力。

到目前为止,我们还没有改变
我们大脑的命运。

睡觉呢?

在慢波深度睡眠中,我们的神经胶质细胞会
冲洗整个大脑的脑脊液

清除清醒
时积累在突触

中的代谢废物。

深度睡眠就像
是大脑的强力清洁剂。

但是,如果
你在睡眠中改变自己会发生什么?

许多科学家认为

,糟糕的睡眠卫生实际上
可能是阿尔茨海默氏症的预测因素。

一个晚上的睡眠剥夺
会导致β淀粉样蛋白增加。

并且淀粉样蛋白的积累
已被证明会扰乱睡眠,

从而导致
更多的淀粉样蛋白积累。

所以现在我们有了
这个正反馈循环

,它将加速
这个规模的倾斜。

还有什么?

心血管健康。

高血压、糖尿病、
肥胖、吸烟、高胆固醇,

都被证明会增加我们
患阿尔茨海默氏症的风险。

一些尸检研究表明

,多达 80
% 的阿尔茨海默氏症

患者还患有心血管疾病。

许多研究表明,有氧运动可以降低

该疾病动物模型中的β淀粉样蛋白。

因此,心脏健康的
地中海生活方式和饮食

可以帮助抵消
这种规模的倾斜。

因此,我们可以做很多事情

来预防或
延缓阿尔茨海默病的发作。

但是,假设
您还没有完成任何一项。

假设你 65 岁;

你家有阿尔茨海默氏症,
所以你可能遗传了一两个基因

,使你的秤臂稍微倾斜; 多年来,

你一直在两头烧蜡烛

你喜欢培根;

除非有人追你,否则你不会跑

(笑声)

让我们想象一下,你的淀粉样斑块
已经达到了临界点。

你的秤臂撞到了地板上。

你已经绊倒了级联,

放火烧毁了森林,

导致炎症、缠结
和细胞死亡。

你应该有阿尔茨海默氏症的症状。

你应该很难
找到单词和钥匙

,也很难记住我
在演讲开始时所说的话。

但你可能不是。

您还可以做一件事
来保护自己

免受
阿尔茨海默氏症的症状,

即使您的大脑中已经出现了全面的疾病
病理学。

它与神经可塑性
和认知储备有关。

请记住,
患有阿尔茨海默氏症的经历

最终是失去突触的结果。

平均大脑有
超过一百万亿个突触,

这太棒了;
我们有很多工作要做。

这不是一个静态数字。

我们一直在

通过一个
称为神经可塑性的过程获得和失去突触。

每次我们学习新事物时,

我们都在创造和加强
新的神经连接、

新的突触。

在修女研究中,

678 名修女,研究开始时年龄都在 75 岁以上

被跟踪了 20 多年。

他们定期接受
身体检查和认知测试

,当他们去世时,他们的大脑
都被捐赠用于尸检。

在其中一些大脑中,科学家们
发现了一些令人惊讶的东西。

尽管存在斑块
、缠结和大脑萎缩——

这似乎是
毫无疑问的阿尔茨海默氏症——

但属于这些大脑的修女在活着的时候
没有表现

出患有这种疾病的迹象

怎么会这样?

我们认为这是因为这些
修女的认知储备水平很高

,也就是说他们有
更多的功能性突触。

受过多年正规教育、

文化程度高、

经常
从事精神刺激活动的人,

都有更多的认知储备。

它们在神经连接方面具有丰富性
和冗余性。

因此,即使他们患有阿尔茨海默氏症这样的疾病会

损害他们的一些突触,

他们也有许多额外的备用连接

,这可以让他们避免
注意到任何问题。

让我们想象一个简化的例子。

假设您
对某个主题只了解一件事。

假设它是关于我的。

你知道丽莎热那亚
写了“仍然爱丽丝”

,这是
你唯一知道的关于我的事情。

你有那个单一的神经连接,

那个突触。

现在想象你患有阿尔茨海默氏症。

你有斑块、缠结
、炎症

和吞噬突触的小胶质细胞。

现在当有人问你,
“嘿,谁写了‘还是爱丽丝’?”

你不记得了,

因为那个
突触要么失效要么消失了。

你已经永远忘记了我。

但是,如果你对我有更多的了解呢?

假设你从
我身上学到了四件事。

现在想象你患有阿尔茨海默氏症

,其中三个
突触受损或被破坏。

你仍然有
办法绕过残骸。

你还记得我的名字。

因此,我们可以

通过
招募尚未受损的通路来抵御阿尔茨海默病的存在。

我们通过学习新事物来创造这些途径
,这种认知储备

理想情况下,我们希望这些新
事物具有尽可能丰富的意义,

吸收视觉和声音
、联想和情感。

所以这并不意味着
做填字游戏。

您不想简单地检索
您已经了解的信息,

因为这就像
在古老的、熟悉的街道上旅行,在

您已经知道的社区中巡游。

你想开辟新的神经道路。

建立抗阿尔茨海默病的大脑

意味着学习说意大利语、

结识新朋友、

读书

或聆听精彩的 TED 演讲。

而且,尽管如此,如果有一天你被
诊断出患有阿尔茨海默氏症,

那么我
从我的祖母

和我认识的数十名
患有这种疾病的人那里学到了三个教训。

诊断并不意味着
你明天就要死了。

继续生活。

你不会失去你的情感记忆。

你仍然
能够理解爱和快乐。

你可能不记得
我五分钟前说的话,

但你会记得我给你的感觉。

你比
你能记住的要多。

谢谢你。

(掌声)