Drudge Retort: Red Meat for Yellow Dogs
Thursday, July 09, 2009

People with superior language skills early in life may be less likely to develop Alzheimer's disease decades later, research suggests.

A team from Johns Hopkins University studied the brains of 38 Catholic nuns after death.

They found those with good language skills early in life were less likely to have memory problems - even if their brains showed signs of dementia damage.

The study appears online in the journal Neurology.

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I want to see this study done on hippies who later became successful.

www.huffingtonpost.com

Catholic nuns? What about normal folk? I'm not ragging on nuns but come on really.

but come on really

Exactly.

I mean, how many women with "good language skills early in life" actually became nuns?

Most of the chatty Cathy's I've known talked some doctor, lawyer or stockbroker into giving them a big diamond ring, some of them several times.

Big deal -- so nuns with good language skills have much less chance of getting Alzheimers.

I'd rather have been a bad girl and done some fun things in my life even if later on I couldn't remember what they were.

Could anyone else get past "I'd rather have been a bad girl?"

I'd rather have been a bad girl and done some fun things in my life

It's never too late Chris wink wink

The brain is a muscle, one has to work it to keep it in shape.

I got your muscle, right heah!

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