While the
human brain tends to shrink with age, men’s brains diminish faster than women’s
which may explain why the fairer sex are more likely to stay mentally sharp in
their later years, finds a study led by a researcher of Indian-origin.
The study
noted that the brain’s metabolism slows as people grow older, but it may differ
between men and women.
The findings,
led by researchers from the Washington University School of Medicine in St
Louis, showed that women’s brains appear to be about three years younger than
men of the same chronological age, metabolically speaking.
“It’s not that
men’s brains age faster, they start adulthood about three years older than
women, and that persists throughout life,” said Manu Goyal, Assistant Professor
of radiology at the university’s Mallinckrodt Institute of Radiology.
“What we don’t
know is what it means. I think this could mean that the reason women don’t
experience as much cognitive decline in later years is because their brains are
effectively younger, and we’re currently working on a study to confirm that,”
he explained.
Older women
tend to score better than men of the same age on tests of reason, memory and
problem solving. The results were published in the proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences.
The brain runs
on sugar, but how the brain uses sugar changes as people age. To figure out how brains use sugar
differently between men and women, the team analysed 121 women and 84 men,
ranging in age from 20 to 82 years.
The
researchers trained a machine-learning algorithm on men’s age and their brain
metabolism, taken from PET scans by measuring the flow of oxygen and glucose in
their brains, and applied it to women’s.
The algorithm
yielded brain ages an average of 3.8 years younger than the women’s
chronological ages.
The
researchers also performed the analysis in reverse. This time, the algorithm
reported that men’s brains were 2.4 years older than their true ages. The
relative youthfulness of women’s brains was detectable even among the youngest
participants, who were in their 20s, the researchers said. – IANS


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