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Mick Skolnick, MD's avatar

Thank you for this fascinating review.

Vanessa Saunders's avatar

What struck me most in this work wasn’t just the evidence that the adult brain can still produce new neurons in the hippocampus. It was the idea that in Alzheimer’s those neurons may begin forming but fail to mature properly. 

That image — a system trying to build but unable to finish — resonates with what many families see day to day. The brain still seems to be working, still attempting to adapt, but something in the process falters.

The findings about “SuperAgers” were also fascinating. The idea that some older adults may maintain twice the rate of hippocampal neurogenesis compared with their peers suggests the aging brain is far more plastic than we once believed. 

From the outside looking in, it raises a hopeful question:

If exercise, sleep, learning, and social engagement can influence hippocampal structure, are we already seeing the brain’s own repair mechanisms trying to operate — just not strongly enough?

Understanding that natural process feels incredibly important. Because while we wait for therapies, families are living in the space between diagnosis and daily life.

And anything that helps us understand what the brain is still capable of — even in the midst of disease — matters enormously.

Thank you for helping translate this science for the rest of us.

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