Investigating the Culture Connection

Investigating the Culture Connection

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Scientists Study How Factors Unique to Hispanics Influence Alzheimer鈥檚 Risk

By Wynne Parry

Researchers know age and genetic variation can increase susceptibility to Alzheimer鈥檚 disease. Some, however, are wondering how a person鈥檚 life experiences 鈥 specifically culture and language 鈥 might contribute.

Idaly V茅lez-Uribe, Ph.D., a postdoctoral fellow, and her mentor M贸nica Rosselli, Ph.D., neuropsychologist, are working to understand how a unique set of factors shared by many Hispanics might affect their vulnerability, or resistance, to the devastating decline in brain function associated with Alzheimer鈥檚.

Much previous research on this disease has focused on white, non-Hispanic patients at the expense of other groups. However, representation matters in these studies because Hispanics, like African Americans, have higher rates of Alzheimer鈥檚. What鈥檚 more, Hispanics are the most rapidly growing racial or ethnic group in the country.

Rosselli, a professor of psychology in the Charles E. Schmidt College of Science, and V茅lez-Uribe suspect that experiences common among Hispanics 鈥 such as the stress of resettling in a new country, a culture of family involvement, and the ability to speak both English and Spanish 鈥 might alter their risk for abnormal cognitive decline and dementia, including that seen in Alzheimer鈥檚. For example, some research suggests that bilingualism has a protective effect on the aging brain, a controversial possibility they are currently investigating.

In spring 2021, V茅lez-Uribe was among four 麻豆精品视频researchers to receive funding from the Florida Department of Health鈥檚 Ed and Ethel Moore Alzheimer鈥檚 Disease Research Program. These grants support early-stage projects and, in V茅lez-Uribe鈥檚 case, professional training for new investigators. The two-year, $99,051 grant will aid her goal of becoming an independent researcher.

So far, decades of intense scientific effort yielded only relatively modest improvements in treatment for Alzheimer鈥檚, an irreversible brain disease that is among the most common causes of death in the U.S. Meanwhile, the stakes continue to grow.

鈥淏ecause the U.S. has an aging population, Alzheimer鈥檚 is expected to place a growing burden 鈥 both emotional and financial 鈥 on society in the decades to come,鈥 said Gregg Fields, Ph.D., executive director of the Institute for Human Health and Disease Intervention. 鈥淲e urgently need to develop more effective ways to detect and treat
this condition.鈥

Researchers at 麻豆精品视频are attacking the problem from many angles, a handful of which are represented in these grants. For their part, V茅lez-Uribe and Rosselli are working on a federally-funded project, called the 1Florida Alzheimer鈥檚 Disease & Research Center (ADRC), which recruits patients for long-term studies. ADRC includes a collaborative network of investigators from FAU, the University of Florida, University of Miami, Florida International University and Mount Sinai Medical Center. Half of the patients it enrolls are Hispanic.

In their research, Rosselli and V茅lez-Uribe look for links between features of the brain, such as the size of certain regions within it, and cognitive function. These mental processes could include, for example, the ability to recall the right word, to remember facts or events, or perform activities necessary for daily living. Rosselli and V茅lez-Uribe also investigate how these attributes may vary for older people of different ethnicities or who speak two languages.

V茅lez-Uribe began researching Alzheimer鈥檚 after first studying the neuropsychology of bilingualism in younger people, an interest motivated by her own experience as a Spanish speaker. In her native Colombia, she could not tolerate the crass humor of the cartoon South Park. But her reaction changed when she watched the show in English. 鈥淚 saw my husband watching it, and I found myself interested. I was even able to laugh at the jokes,鈥 she said.

The experience became the basis for her master鈥檚 and doctoral research, which found evidence that bilingual people experience emotions less intensely in their second language. The move to Alzheimer鈥檚 felt like a natural continuation of this work in cross-cultural neuropsychology, she said. 听听听听听