Brain scan measures aging rate

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Biologically speaking, some people age faster than others. Your aging rate can affect your health and disease risks. If you knew this rate, you might be able to work with your doctor to slow the aging process. A research team developed a way to measure aging based on a single brain scan.

The team drew on their earlier studies, where they devised a way to measure biological aging using blood tests. They tracked the health of more than 1,000 people from birth to age 45 and measured 19 factors related to health.

These included heart function, metabolism, disease-fighting molecules, and more. Using these, they developed a measurement called the Pace of Aging. It shows how health functions dwindle over time.

Most of the study participants also had an MRI scan at age 45. In the new study, the team combined the Pace of Aging scores with the MRI scan data. They developed a new aging measurement, called Dunedin-PACNI, based on the brain scans alone. They then tested the new tool with data collected on thousands of people from other studies.

DunedinPACNI accurately predicted how quickly a person’s ability to think and remember weakened with age. It also could predict a person’s risk of future disease and death.

“We’ve captured how fast people are aging using data collected in midlife. And it’s helping us predict diagnosis of dementia among people who are much older,” explains Dr. Ahmad Hariri of Duke University. “We really think of it as hopefully being a key new tool in forecasting and predicting risk for diseases.”

If you care about dementia, please read studies about a simple solution to fight dementia and big causes of memory loss, dementia you need to know.

For more health information, please read studies that people who take high blood pressure medications have lower dementia risk and early indicators of dementia: 5 behaviour changes to look for after age 50.

Source: NIH.