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While there are no guaranteed methods of retaining good brain function in your later years, there are steps you can take now to increase your chances of better brain health later. In October, 2007, CBS program, 60 Minutes, featured the amazing, 86-year-old, Forrest M. Bird, who invented the respirator that would make the iron lung obsolete. As of the airing of the program, Dr. Bird remained certified to fly his airplane, which he continues to fly regularly. Without re-telling the fascinating life story of the pillar-straight, 6' 4"-tall, Bird, suffice it to say that this vibrant man's mental acuity most likely surpasses that of any number of 30-year-olds. Forrest M. Bird, MD, PhD, ScD, and founder of Bird Respiratory Care Products, is, of course, no run-of-the-mill, average, guy. That, in itself, offers one clue to ways to retain cognitive functioning in advanced age. Dr. Bird may be unique in his legendary accomplishments, but he is not unique when it comes to being elderly and remaining mentally sharp. The world is full of elderly individuals who show no, or very little, decline in mental sharpness. Most of us know more than one elderly person who is a whole lot more on top of things in life than a lot of younger people are. A well-known brain study, which was a collaboration between 678 Catholic sisters and Alzheimer's expert, David Snowdon, looked at the lifestyles of the aging nuns, who showed lower incidence of dementia. The nuns, who led quiet but social lives, were people who regularly engaged in activities that kept their minds active. A healthy diet was another factor. Probably needless to say, the nuns did not drink or smoke. In autopsies performed upon their death, some nuns, who had showed few or no signs of dementia while alive, were found to have brains that showed the presence of advanced Alzeheimer's disease. While, of course, information gained from a study like this cannot guarantee the prevention of dementia in the presence of Alzheimer's Disease, it does offer the proverbial food for thought. What are, then, recommended practices that could offer the best chance of fending off mental decline? The most sensible and potentially effective practices are as follows.