Healthy body, healthy brain: Tips to optimize your brain health

(BPT) - By 2030, more than 20% of the U.S. population — about 71 million Americans — will be over the age of 65. With age, many of us may notice changes in cognition — things like misplacing our keys or forgetting a neighbor's name. While we expect our bodies to change with age and aren't alarmed when they do, many people assume the worst when their memory or cognition changes. It's important to understand that our brains age just like our bodies.

Cognitive aging or brain aging is not a disease. It's part of an ongoing process that begins at birth and continues throughout the lifespan. In early childhood, our brains grow and develop at a rapid pace. As we grow older, changes in the brain due to aging can affect things like learning and memory. Processing speed, decision-making and memory are often some of the first cognitive abilities to decline due to aging.

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