Close Menu
Fit and Healthy Weight

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    CRN Petitions U.S. Supreme Court to Review New York Supplement Law

    April 6, 2026

    Sheet Pan Chicken Fajitas

    April 6, 2026

    Sumo Deadlift vs Conventional: Is It Cheating or a Smarter Way to Lift Heavier?

    April 6, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Fit and Healthy Weight
    Monday, April 6
    • Home
    • Diet
    • Mindset
    • Recipes
    • Reviews
    • Stories
    • Supplements
    • Tips
    • Workouts
    Fit and Healthy Weight
    Home»Diet»This Type of Brain Training May Actually Cut Your Alzheimer’s Risk
    Diet

    This Type of Brain Training May Actually Cut Your Alzheimer’s Risk

    By February 19, 2026No Comments3 Mins Read
    Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit Telegram Email
    This Type of Brain Training May Actually Cut Your Alzheimer's Risk
    Speed training exercises over an extended period may help reduce dementia risk.

    10'000 Hours / Getty Images

    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email


    Could games designed to strengthen mental skills help prevent Alzheimer’s disease as you age? According to a new 20-year study, they may.

    More than 7 million Americans have Alzheimer’s disease, and that number is expected to rise to 13 million by 2050, according to the Alzheimer’s Association. There’s no proven way to prevent or cure the disease, but delaying its onset—even modestly—can help preserve and prolong people’s independence and quality of life. “That’s why expanding the menu of evidence-based prevention tools is so critical,” said Vernon Williams, MD, a sports neurologist and founding director of the Center for Sports Neurology and Pain Medicine at Cedars-Sinai Orthopaedics in Los Angeles.

    The new research, published in the medical journal Alzheimer’s & Dementia: Translational Research & Clinical Interventions, traces back to 1998. That’s when researchers recruited 2,802 older adults—most of whom were women and white—and assigned them to one of three groups receiving different forms of cognitive training or to a control group that received no cognitive training.

    Participants in the cognitive training groups completed memory, reasoning, or speed-of-processing tasks during 10 sessions lasting 60 to 75 minutes over five to six weeks. The speed-of-processing tasks were designed to improve mental quickness and the accuracy of object identification.

    Approximately half of those in the cognitive training group completed up to four additional “booster” sessions held 11 months and 35 months after the initial training course.

    In 2016, the researchers shared their initial discoveries, finding that participants who completed the speed-of-processing brain training exercises had a 48% lower risk of developing dementia over 10 years.

    For their latest findings, the research team analyzed 20 years of Medicare data, spanning 1999 to 2019, to identify who was diagnosed with dementia. They found that those who had the speed training intervention had a substantially lower risk of developing Alzheimer’s and related dementias later in life.

    Among those who completed the speed training and additional booster sessions, 40% were eventually diagnosed with dementia compared to 49% in the control group. Speed training was the only brain game associated with significantly lower chances of developing the cognitive condition.

    As Jonathan Rasouli, MD, a neurosurgeon at Northwell Health’s Staten Island University Hospital, summarized, “older adults who engage in specific speed-based cognitive training exercises may have a substantially lower long-term risk of being diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease, especially when booster training sessions are included.”

    Prior evidence shows that brain training exercises can improve cognitive performance in both the short and long term. But the new report “suggests that how we train the brain matters,” Williams said.

    The fact that only speed training was linked to a lower risk of dementia is an important detail. Targeted, reinforced brain training may influence long-term dementia risk more than, say, isolated sessions. “Brain health requires the right stimulus, the right dose, and ongoing reinforcement with feedback,” Williams said.

    Rasouli added that cognitive exercises that improve processing speed, divided attention, and rapid visual decision-making may strengthen neural networks and resilience. This could, in turn, help “the brain better account for age-related changes and reduce the chances of a dementia diagnosis decades later,” he explained.

    That said, this doesn’t mean brain training is a magic bullet. “Cognitive training should be part of a holistic brain-healthy lifestyle, including physical exercise, sleep quality, social engagement, and diet,” Rasouli said.

    Looking ahead, experts said more research is needed to understand who benefits most from brain training and how other preventative strategies, like exercise and sleep hygiene, can impact dementia risk when combined with brain training.

    Alzheimers Brain Cut Risk Training Type
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Previous ArticleAre You Always Late? Therapists Say Your ‘Time Personality’ May Be To Blame
    Next Article How to be a great listener | Maegan Stephens, Nicole Lowenbraun

      Related Posts

      Diet

      Sheet Pan Chicken Fajitas

      April 6, 2026
      Diet

      How To Balance Nutrition • Kath Eats

      April 6, 2026
      Diet

      Homemade Fajita Seasoning

      April 3, 2026
      Add A Comment
      Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

      Top Posts

      New Research Shows Eggs Don’t Raise Your Cholesterol—But Here’s What Does

      August 1, 20256 Views

      6 Best Weightlifting Belts of 2025, According to Trainers

      July 3, 20255 Views

      Betty White’s 5-Ingredient Chicken Dinner Is Golden

      July 28, 20253 Views
      Stay In Touch
      • Facebook
      • YouTube
      • TikTok
      • WhatsApp
      • Twitter
      • Instagram
      Latest Reviews
      Tips

      When Is the Best Time to Eat Dinner for Your Health?

      adminJuly 1, 2025
      Diet

      This Intermittent Fasting Method Outperformed the Rest—But There’s a Catch

      adminJuly 1, 2025
      Workouts

      ‘Neckzilla’ Rubel Mosquera Qualifies for 2025 Mr. Olympia After Flex Weekend Italy Pro Win

      adminJuly 1, 2025

      Subscribe to Updates

      Get the latest tech news from FooBar about tech, design and biz.

      Most Popular

      When Is the Best Time to Eat Dinner for Your Health?

      July 1, 20250 Views

      This Intermittent Fasting Method Outperformed the Rest—But There’s a Catch

      July 1, 20250 Views

      Signs, Identification, Impact, and More

      July 1, 20250 Views
      Our Picks

      CRN Petitions U.S. Supreme Court to Review New York Supplement Law

      April 6, 2026

      Sheet Pan Chicken Fajitas

      April 6, 2026

      Sumo Deadlift vs Conventional: Is It Cheating or a Smarter Way to Lift Heavier?

      April 6, 2026
      Recent Posts
      • CRN Petitions U.S. Supreme Court to Review New York Supplement Law
      • Sheet Pan Chicken Fajitas
      • Sumo Deadlift vs Conventional: Is It Cheating or a Smarter Way to Lift Heavier?
      • The unlikely appeal of barefoot hiking: ‘It makes you feel quite primal’ | Australian lifestyle
      • Dumbbell Leg Exercises After 55 That Build Muscle Fast
      Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
      • About Us
      • Contact Us
      • Disclaimer
      • Privacy Policy
      • Terms and Conditions
      © 2025 Fit and Healthy Weight. Designed by Pro.

      Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.