Any intervention that could help multiple sclerosis patients preserve long-term memory would likely be well-received. As suggested by a recent study from the Kessler Foundation, “Working Memory Mediates the Relationship Between Intellectual Enrichment and Long-term Memory in Multiple Sclerosis: An Exploratory Analysis of Cognitive Reserve,” one possibility could be intellectual enrichment exercises for stimulating a patient’s working memory.
Two members of the Foundation, Joshua Sandry, PhD, and James Sumowski, PhD, conducted a study with 70 multiple sclerosis patients. The two researchers used a multitude of assessment scales to determine working memory capacity, intellectual enrichment, and verbal long-term memory decline. The goal was to determine the presence of relationships among studied factors. Results were published ahead of print in Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society.
“We found that working memory capacity explained the relationship between intellectual enrichment and long-term memory in this population,” said Dr. Sandry in a press release from the company. “This suggests that interventions targeted at working memory in people with multiple sclerosis may help build cognitive reserve to protect against decline in long-term memory.”
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