Lisa Genova: What you can do to prevent Alzheimer's
Through her fiction, Lisa Genova beckons us into the lives of people with neurological disease, making their worlds real and relatable. Full bio
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to be at least 80 years old?
this hopeful expectation
Alzheimer's disease.
"Well, it won't be me."
is likely to affect us all.
stems from the sense
have no disease-modifying treatment
to live long enough,
our brain's destiny.
change these statistics,
or advancements in medicine?
what we currently understand
of two neurons connecting.
this space circled in red,
neurotransmitters are released.
where communication happens.
feel, see, hear, desire ...
is where Alzheimer's happens.
of what's going on.
of communicating information,
like glutamate into the synapse,
called amyloid beta.
metabolized by microglia,
of Alzheimer's are still debated,
that the disease begins
or not enough is cleared away,
to pile up with amyloid beta.
called amyloid plaques.
are 40 years old or older?
plaques accumulating,
would be through a PET scan,
you are blissfully unaware.
in memory, language, or cognition ...
of amyloid plaque accumulation
symptoms of the disease.
might include things like,
start freaking out again,
one of those in the last 24 hours --
to where you put your keys
language and cognition are different.
your keys in your coat pocket
accumulate to this tipping point?
become hyper-activated,
inflammation and cellular damage.
start clearing away
called "tau" becomes hyperphosphorylated
into something called "tangles,"
from the inside.
we have massive inflammation and tangles
trying to cure this disease,
want to intervene?
on the simplest solution:
from reaching that tipping point,
focused on developing a compound
amyloid plaque accumulation.
a preventative medicine.
before we reach that tipping point,
our keys in the refrigerator.
these kinds of drugs have failed
were already symptomatic.
sets fire to the forest.
to blow out the match.
before the forest catches fire.
really good news for us,
can influence the accumulation
that tipping point.
of Alzheimer's as a see-saw scale.
risk factors on one arm,
you are symptomatic
some amyloid plaques with age.
from our moms and our dads.
and some will decrease it.
that cranks out amyloid beta,
your scale arm to the ground.
will only tip the arm a bit.
that increases amyloid,
from mom and dad
whether we get Alzheimer's.
or the genes we've inherited.
our brain's destiny.
rinse cerebral spinal fluid
that accumulated in our synapses
a power cleanse for the brain.
yourself on sleep?
be a predictor of Alzheimer's.
leads to an increase in amyloid beta.
has been shown to disrupt sleep,
more amyloid to accumulate.
this positive feedback loop
the tipping of that scale.
obesity, smoking, high cholesterol,
of developing Alzheimer's.
of people with Alzheimer's
in many studies to decrease amyloid beta
Mediterranean lifestyle and diet
the tipping of this scale.
the onset of Alzheimer's.
you haven't done any of them.
so you've likely inherited a gene or two
at both ends for years;
someone's chasing you.
have reached that tipping point.
and cell death.
finding words and keys
at the beginning of this talk.
to protect yourself
the symptoms of Alzheimer's,
pathology ablaze in your brain.
and cognitive reserve.
of having Alzheimer's
over a hundred trillion synapses,
we've got a lot to work with.
called neural plasticity.
new neural connections,
when the study began,
physical checkups and cognitive tests,
were all donated for autopsy.
discovered something surprising.
and tangles and brain shrinkage --
unquestionable Alzheimer's --
to these brains showed no signs
while they were alive.
had a high level of cognitive reserve,
more functional synapses.
of formal education,
in mentally stimulating activities,
and a redundancy in neural connections.
like Alzheimer's
that anything is amiss.
about a subject.
wrote "Still Alice,"
you know about me.
and inflammation
"Hey, who wrote 'Still Alice?'"
is either failing or gone.
four things about me.
are damaged or destroyed.
to detour the wreckage.
to the presence of Alzheimer's pathology
of yet-undamaged pathways.
this cognitive reserve,
to be as rich in meaning as possible,
and associations and emotion.
doing crossword puzzles.
information you've already learned,
down old, familiar streets,
someday diagnosed with Alzheimer's,
from my grandmother
living with this disease.
you're dying tomorrow.
to understand love and joy.
what I said five minutes ago,
you can remember.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Lisa Genova - Neuroscientist, novelistThrough her fiction, Lisa Genova beckons us into the lives of people with neurological disease, making their worlds real and relatable.
Why you should listen
Lisa Genova wields her ability to tell a story and her knowledge of the human brain to talk about medical conditions like Alzheimer’s in warmly human terms. Her writing, often focusing on those who are misunderstood, explores the lives of people living with neurological diseases and disorders. A bestselling author, her work has been transformed into an Oscar-winning film, Still Alice, but the real triumph is Genova’s ability to help us empathize with a person’s journey we otherwise couldn’t even begin to understand.
Her newest book, Inside the O’Briens, is about Huntington’s disease.
Lisa Genova | Speaker | TED.com