When does forgetfulness become something more serious?
Memory
does vary, says Restak, and some people will always have been scatty.
But the real red flag is a change that seems out of character.
Photograph: iStock
Gaby Hinsliff
Fri Aug 19 2022 - 05:00
You
walk into a room, but can’t remember what you came in for. Or you bump
into an old acquaintance at work, and forget their name. Most of us have
had momentary memory lapses like this, but in middle age they can start
to feel more ominous. Do they make us look unprofessional, or past it?
Could this even be a sign of impending dementia? The good news for the
increasingly forgetful, however, is that not only can memory be improved
with practice, but that it looks increasingly as if some cases of
Alzheimer’s may be preventable too.
The
neuroscientist Dr Richard Restak is a past president of the American
Neuropsychiatric Association, who has lectured on the brain and
behaviour everywhere from the Pentagon to Nasa, and written more than 20
books on the human brain. His latest, The Complete Guide to Memory: The
Science of Strengthening Your Mind, homes in on the great unspoken fear
that every time you can’t remember where you put your reading glasses,
it’s a sign of impending doom. “In America today,” he says “anyone over
50 lives in dread of the big A.” Memory lapses are, he writes, the
single most common complaint over-55s raise with their doctors, even
though much of what they describe turns out to be nothing to worry
about.
Coming
out of a shop and not being able to remember where you left the car,
for example, is perfectly normal: it’s probable you just weren’t
concentrating when you parked, and therefore the car’s location was not
properly encoded in your brain. Forgetting what you came into a room for
is probably just a sign you’re busy and preoccupied with other things,
says Restak.
“Samuel
Johnson said that the art of memory is the art of attention,” he says,
down the line from his office in Washington DC (aged 80, Restak is still
a practising clinical professor at George Washington Hospital
University School of Medicine and Health). “Most of these sins of
‘memory loss’ are sins of not paying attention. If you’re at a party and
you’re not really listening to someone, because you are still thinking
about some work-related matter, suddenly later you find you can’t
remember their name. The first thing is you put the information in
memory — that’s consolidating it — and then you have to be able to
retrieve it. But if you’ve never consolidated it in the first place, it
doesn’t exist.”
But
what if you forget where you left your car keys, and eventually find
them inside the fridge? “That’s often the first sign of something
serious — you open up the refrigerator door, and it’s the newspaper, or
your car keys, inside. That’s a little bit beyond forgetful.”
Memory
does vary, he says, and some people will always have been scatty. But
the real red flag is a change that seems out of character. If you’re a
keen card player who prides yourself on always keeping track of which
cards have been played, and suddenly realise you can’t do that any more,
it could be worth investigating. Restak has noticed that many patients
in the early stages of dementia stop reading fiction, because it’s too
difficult to remember what the character said or did a few chapters
earlier — which is unfortunate, he says, because reading complex novels
can be a valuable mental workout in itself.
Restak
and his wife are reading Alexandre Dumas’s The Count of Monte Cristo,
which has a complex sprawling cast: “It’s an exercise in being able to
keep track of characters without going backwards from one page to
another.” If that’s already difficult for you, he says, it’s fine to
underline the first mention of a new character and then flip back to
remind yourself later if necessary. “Do whatever you have to, to keep
yourself reading.”
Like
following a recipe, keeping track of fictional plots is an exercise of
working memory — as distinct from short-term memory (temporarily storing
something like a phone number that you can safely forget the minute
you’ve dialled it) or episodic memory, which covers things like
recollections of childhood. Working memory is what we use to “work with
the information we have”, says Restak, and it’s the one we should all
prioritise. Left to its own devices, he points out, memory naturally
starts to decline from your 30s onwards, which is why he advocates
practising it daily.
Restak’s
book is full of games, tricks and ideas for honing recall, often
involving creating vivid visual images for things you want to remember.
He holds a mental map of his neighbourhood in his head, incorporating
visually familiar landmarks — his house, the local library, a restaurant
he often goes to — and for each item on a list he wants to remember, he
will create a memorable visual image and attach it somewhere specific
on the map. To remember to buy milk, bread and coffee later, for
example, he might envisage his house transformed into a carton of milk,
the library full of loaves rather than books, and a giant cup of coffee
spilling out of the restaurant.
The
book also touches on broader lifestyle advice. Recently, research from
the Lancet’s commission on dementia suggested up to 40 per cent of
Alzheimer’s cases could be prevented or delayed — much like heart
disease and many cancers — by limiting 12 risk factors, from smoking to
obesity and heavy drinking.
Restak
advises his patients to quit alcohol by 70 at the latest. Over 65, he
writes, you typically have fewer brain neurons than when you were
younger, so why risk them? “Alcohol is a very, very weak neurotoxin —
it’s not good for nerve cells.”
He’s
also an advocate of the short afternoon nap, since getting enough sleep
helps brain function (which may help explain why sleep-deprived new
mothers, and menopausal women suffering from night sweats and insomnia,
often complain of brain fog).
More
unexpectedly, he recommends tackling hearing or vision problems
promptly, because they make it harder to engage in conversations and
hobbies that keep the cogs turning. “You have to have a certain level of
vision to read comfortably, and if that’s missing then you are going to
read less. As a result of that, you’re going to learn less and be a
less interesting person to other people. All of these things really come
down to socialisation, which is the most important part of keeping away
Alzheimer’s and dementia, and keeping your memory.”
Is
he saying that honing your memory can stop you getting Alzheimer’s? “No
one can guarantee that anybody else is not going to get dementia. Take
somebody like Iris Murdoch (the late writer, who suffered from it) —
there’s probably not a more brilliant woman in all of Europe, so it
shows that it can happen. But I compare it to driving a car: you can’t
guarantee you won’t get in an accident but by wearing your seat belt and
checking your speed and keeping the car maintained, you can lessen your
chances.”
Not
all memories, however, are ones people want to treasure. Many have
mental images they’d rather forget, whether it’s of an embarrassing
mistake or a painful failed relationship, or intrusive flashbacks from
post-traumatic stress disorder.
The
fantasy of wiping the slate clean is a pervasive one in popular
culture, from the film Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (about a
couple who break up, and use a futuristic machine to zap memories of
each other) to the Men in Black franchise, where alien-fighting secret
agents electronically erase the memories of anyone who sees them in
action, thus protecting mere mortals from the truth about what’s out
there.
These
may be strictly fantasies but we already have the technology, Restak
suggests, to inhibit people from laying down memories that might in
future haunt them. Beta blockers, drugs sometimes used to treat high
blood pressure, have been found to dull the emotional response triggered
when something frightening is recalled, but Restak says there’s
evidence they also interfere with the consolidation of events as
memories.
“There
are actually discussions about whether these drugs should be part of
the armoury that would be used if we have got to send people into
terrible scenarios, such as after a shooting — that must be a horrible
experience, to go in there and clean these places up.” But it’s a blunt
tool — the drugs can’t distinguish between memories that might be useful
in future to emergency first responders, and ones that are simply
distressing — and raises complex questions about the ethics of tampering
with people’s minds.
Restak
also highlights concerns about what he calls “memory wars”, or attempts
to influence a nation’s collective memory by disputing what a
particular event or period means. “The way we frame it in our memory is
how we then perceive the world around us, and that’s what is encoded in
the memory,” he says, pointing to recent political arguments in the US
over whether the technical recession the country has entered — defined
as two-quarters of economic contraction — is actually a “real”
recession. “It’s important because if you think you are in a recession
you have certain beliefs and modes of action, and that’s how we are
going to remember July 2022.”
And,
he says, memory is intrinsic to who we are. It binds families and
couples together, as we reminisce about our shared past. For
individuals, meanwhile, past experience gives life meaning and texture.
“We are what we can remember. The more things you can remember, the more
clearly, the more full and enriched our personalities,” says Restak,
who argues that the personalities of dementia sufferers can become
flatter and more attenuated. “People say ‘Oh, they don’t seem to be the
same person’.” Perhaps that’s why we fear Alzheimer’s so much: memory is
so closely allied to a sense of self.
Yet
even after memory loss has set in, it’s not necessarily too late to
help people hold on to whatever’s left. One neurologist Restak knows had
two patients who “weren’t sure where they were or what day it was”, but
could still play a decent game of bridge. If someone you love has
Alzheimer’s, Restak says, don’t upset them by constantly challenging
mistakes or memory lapses; instead, meet them where they are now.
“What
are they still interested in? Talk about that, work with that, because a
lot of things stay within normal range even with a pattern of
dementia,” he says. “You don’t just look on it as a hopeless situation,
although it’s a very frustrating one and it’s very sad.” Where a flicker
of memory remains, perhaps, there’s hope. — Guardian
The Complete Guide to Memory: The Science of Strengthening Your Mind is published by Skyhorse
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