A study of older adults found that people whose brains appeared āyoungerā on MRI showed less cognitive vulnerability to early Alzheimerās-related changes in the blood and brain. šāāļøš§©
Published In: Neurology
Date: May 2026
Authors: Sewell, et al.
Link to Study: https://www.neurology.org/doi/10.1212/WNL.0000000000214833
Summary
This study looked at whether āreserveāāthe brainās ability to stay resilient despite Alzheimerās-related changesācould help protect thinking skills in cognitively healthy older adults. Researchers studied 621 adults ages 65ā80 who were physically inactive and had no diagnosed cognitive impairment. They found that people with āyounger-lookingā brains on MRI were less affected by higher Alzheimerās-related pathology, especially in memory, processing speed, working memory, and attention/executive function. The study suggests that maintaining overall brain health may help buffer the effects of early Alzheimerās changes, although long-term studies are needed to confirm this.
Key Takeaways
ā Brain age mattered. People whose brains appeared younger than their actual age showed weaker links between Alzheimerās-related biomarkers and poorer thinking skills.
ā Protection was seen across several thinking abilities. The strongest effects were found for episodic memory, processing speed, working memory, and executive function/attention.
ā Education alone was not enough to explain resilience. Years of education did not significantly change the relationship between Alzheimerās pathology and cognition.
ā Socioeconomic status may play a role. Higher objective socioeconomic status showed some evidence of buffering memory vulnerability, but the result was not strong enough after statistical correction.
ā Lifestyle may be important. The authors note that brain age may be influenced by modifiable lifestyle factors such as physical activity and exercise, making brain health a possible target for prevention.
Why It Matters for You
This study supports the idea that keeping your brain biologically āyoungerā may help protect thinking skills, even when early Alzheimerās-related changes are present. Habits that support brain healthāespecially regular physical activity, cognitive engagement, social connection, sleep, and heart-healthy nutritionāmay help build resilience over time.
Citation
Sewell, K. R., Solis-Urra, P., Huang, H., Karikari, T. K., Grove, G., Kramer, A. F., McAuley, E., Burns, J. M., Hillman, C. H., Vidoni, E. D., Morris, J. K., Marsland, A. L., Kang, C., Sutton, B. P., Wan, L., Kamboh, M. I., Gianaros, P. J., Drake, J. A., Stern, Y., Oberlin, L. E., & Erickson, K. I. (2026). Cognitive and brain reserve as modifiers of early Alzheimer diseaseārelated cognitive vulnerability. Neurology, 106, e214833. https://doi.org/10.1212/WNL.0000000000214833
