- Not Just Brushing: 10 Ways to Start Caring for Baby Teeth
- USDA Proposes New Rules to Cut Sugar, Salt in School Meals
- When Schools Ask Students About Suicide, Those At Risk Get Help Sooner
- AHA News: They Married at Hospital Chapel, Days Before Groom’s Triple Bypass Surgery
- AHA News: Genes, Neighborhoods and a Surprising Finding on Stroke Risk
- Working Gets Tough When Grieving a Lost Spouse
- Pregnant Women in Rural America Often Lack Health Insurance, Upping Risks
- Do You Need an Insulin-Resistance Diet?
- Obamacare Helped Women in Some Southern States Get Better Breast Cancer Care
- Deer Carry COVID Variants No Longer Seen in People
Lower Blood Sugar Levels May Aid Memory, Study Suggests

WEDNESDAY, Oct. 23Higher blood sugar levels may increase the risk of memory problems, even in people who have blood sugar (glucose) levels within the normal range, a new study suggests.
The study included 141 people, average age 63, who did not have diabetes or pre-diabetes — which is sometimes called impaired glucose tolerance. The study did not include people who were overweight, who drank more than three-and-a-half servings of alcohol a day, or had been diagnosed with memory and thinking problems.
The investigators tested the memory skills and checked the blood sugar levels of the participants. In addition, brain scans were used to measure the size of their hippocampus, a part of the brain that plays an important role in memory.
People with lower blood sugar levels did better on the memory tests. For example, on a test where participants were asked to recall a list of 15 words 30 minutes after hearing them, those with lower blood sugar levels remembered more of the words than those with higher blood sugar levels.
The researchers also found that hippocampus size was larger in people with lower blood sugar levels than in those with higher levels, according to the study published online Oct. 23 in the journal Neurology.
“These results suggest that even for people within the normal range of blood sugar, lowering their blood sugar levels could be a promising strategy for preventing memory problems and cognitive [thinking] decline as they age,” study author Dr. Agnes Floel, of Charite University Medicine in Berlin, Germany, said in a news release from the American Academy of Neurology. “Strategies such as lowering calorie intake and increasing physical activity should be tested.”
More information
The U.S. National Library of Medicine has more about memory.
Source: HealthDay
Copyright © 2023 HealthDay. All rights reserved.