Cognitive Decline Expert: The Disease That Starts in Your 30s but Kills You in Your 70s
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And we have this white powder in front
of me. You got a big smile on your face.
>> I do because I don't care who you are,
you should definitely be having this.
Let's talk about creatine. Phenomenal
research shows you can creatine your way
out of sleep deprivation. It can protect
your brain against a concussion, stroke,
[music] from stress. And there was a
study done on Alzheimer's disease
patients. And they found that patients
not only preserved their cognitive
functions, but they had more energy and
they were able to exercise more. And I
know this because I'm a clinician and
over the last decade I've been
surrounded by the greatest neurosurgeons
in the world studying the brain. And so
I'm here to tackle one disease and that
is Alzheimer's because it generally
starts in our 30s and 60 million people
worldwide have Alzheimer's. [music] 70%
being women. And I get angry and I get
passionate because women have been lied
to. They've been underrepresented. They
downplay their symptoms or they're too
scared to ask their doctor for advice.
And what people don't really know is
that it is a preventable disease, but
it's like endstage cancer. Once you get
the diagnosis, there is no cure. And the
fact that so many people are at the
mercy of a disease that is preventable
is not okay with me. And I don't think
people understand these [music] things.
Like people don't really know that we're
becoming more sedentary, which is a
disease. And there was a study that was
done on this that showed that if you do
10 air squats every hour, this can
compensate for your sedentary lifestyle.
And then we have several lifestyle
factors that can lower your risk of
getting Alzheimer's disease, as well as
showing you what 5 minutes a day can do
for your brain performance. Just using a
tennis ball and an eye patch.
Guys, I've got a quick favor to ask you.
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journey. Means the world. And uh yeah,
let's do this.
[music]
Louisa,
what is it you do in simple terms? And I
guess most importantly, why is it that
you do it? And why now?
>> Over the last decade, I've been studying
the brain. I'm both a clinician and an
academic. So, I get to see the brain and
I also get to research it. And I'm
really here to tackle one disease and
that is Alzheimer's disease.
>> Why is this so important now?
>> Right now because 60 million people
worldwide have Alzheimer's disease. That
number is going to triple by the year
2050. 110 million women will have
Alzheimer's disease by the year 2050.
This is a disease that robs you of who
you are, your complete identity. So,
we're going to get really into this
straight away cuz I brought Henry with
me, right?
>> And for anyone that can't see, Henry is
a model brain that she's holding in her
hands.
>> This is around 2 lb. And if you actually
feel it and you know, if you actually
feel a real human brain, it feels like
tofu, but this is everything you are.
And the fact that so many people are at
the mercy of a disease that is
preventable is not okay with me. It
doesn't sit well with me. We used to
think that women were disproportionately
affected by Alzheimer's disease because
we lived longer because age played a
role in it. But we now have substantial
evidence to show that it's not the fact
that women live longer or people in
general because dementia and Alzheimer's
disease are not part of the natural
brain aging process. For women, and they
differ from men, and we can separate the
sexes and talk about it, for women, it
is purely because being a woman is a
risk factor for getting this disease.
Now, if we go through and we have a look
at all of the people that currently have
Alzheimer's disease, 95% of them could
have been prevented because this is not
a disease of genetics. It's a disease of
lifestyle.
>> 95% of it could have been prevented.
>> Correct? We're we're born with our with
our genetic makeup. Meaning that, for
example, if you have a genetic mutation
on chromosome 4, you will get
Huntington's disease. There is nothing
we can do about that. That's how you
were born. But when it comes to
Alzheimer's disease, there's around 20
to 30 genes involved in the disease.
Only around 3%
of the disease cases right now were
driven through those genetic mutations.
The genetic mutations that you are born
with, you get them from mom and dad are
presinelin one, presinelin 2 and the
amaloid precursor protein. So you if you
have a genetic mutation in one of these
genes, you will get some form of
dementia.
>> What is the age range where people will
start to experience Alzheimer's?
>> Let's just actually take a broad
overview of what Alzheimer's disease is.
Okay. So you've probably heard of
dementia. Yeah.
>> So dementia is the umbrella term. So
Alzheimer's disease is sits under the
umbrella. It's a form of dementia.
There's fronttotemporal dementia which
is what Bruce Willis has. There's
dementia with Louis bodies. There's
Parkinson's dementia. There's vascular
dementia. This disease dementia or
Alzheimer's disease is a disease of
midlife. And so it generally starts in
our 30s. It starts in our 30s, but the
first symptoms show up in our late 60s,
70s and beyond.
>> When you say it starts,
>> yeah, our brain fully develops at around
25 years old. 25 to 30. And after that
that's when we if we don't take care of
our brain we start getting a decline in
these functions. Now let's go back to
the brain. The brain is 87 billion
neurons around 5 to 10,000 connections
per neuron. The my favorite area of the
brain is the cerebellum. And the piking
cells inside the cerebellum have upwards
of 50,000 connections per cell. So so
tightly dense and there is so much
happening. It takes 20% of the total
calories that you consume every day to
power this thing. And it's the most
vascular richch organ in the entire
body. Over time, through things such as
sleep deprivation,
poor diet, lack of physical activity,
environmental toxins, this slowly
erodess at the functioning of the brain.
And over time, this starts to compound
because that's what biology is.
Everything is compounding. One night of
sleep deprivation raises your risk of
amaloid beta, which is one of the
hallmarks of Alzheimer's disease
pathology, by 4%. That's just one night
of sleep deprivation. Imagine a new
mother or a shift worker or a physician
in their residency getting countless
nights of sleep deprivation day in and
day out. Imagine all of that
compounding. And what happens? Well, we
end up with either neuronal loss, which
is like the complete atrophy of certain
parts of the brain. And that's what is
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