Brain shrinkage ‘the price to pay for being human’

A SHRINKING brain may be the price that has to be paid for being human, a study has found.

Brain shrinkage  ‘the price to pay for being human’

Only humans have brains that progressively get smaller with increasing age, the research has shown.

Loss of neurons over time may be the result of an evolutionary trade-off — a handicap that has to be accepted in exchange for a long lifespan and big brain.

Age-related shrinkage of large-scale brain structures such as the hippocampus and frontal lobes has only been observed in humans. Scientists have confirmed they do not even occur in our closest relatives, the chimpanzee. They appear to be uniquely human.

US researchers led by Dr Chet Sherwood, from George Washington University in Washington DC, carried out magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) brain scans of 99 young and old chimpanzees aged 10 to 51.

The results were compared with MRI scans of 87 humans over an equivalent age range of 22 to 88.

The scans showed a decrease in the volume of all major brain structures over the course of human life. In contrast, ageing chimpanzees showed no significant age-related changes.

Dr Sherwood’s team wrote in the journal, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences: “Humans may be uniquely vulnerable to age-related neurodegeneration, pointing to compromises that have been struck in the evolution of an enlarged brain and an extended lifespan.”

Humans are uniquely prone to brain diseases such as Alzheimer’s in later life, as well as a general decline in memory and “thinking” skills. In addition to having bigger brains than any other animal, humans are unusually long-lived.

Physically, humans age more slowly than chimpanzees. By the age of 30, wild chimps have worn teeth, are underweight, frail, weak, and lacking in energy. Yet female chimps remain fertile almost until the end of life.

Humans stay physically fit for longer than their chimpanzee cousins, but women reach the end of their reproductive life in middle-age. The menopause roughly matches the age at which chimps and other great apes naturally die.

Living longer is said to have benefits that contribute to the development of bigger brains, including the nurturing help provided by grandmothers and other elderly helpers. But this may also result in a “unique setting in which humans undergo more progressive neurological ageing.”

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