Talk:Ageing brain
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[edit] Biological immortality and permanent memories
Since adult human brain and nerve cells do not regularly regenerate (as I understand it, its only recently been discovered that new brain and nerve cells can appear after 4 or 5 years of age, and then only rarely), allowing humans to store long-term memories indefinitely, excepting for brain damage, would not a biologically immortal human, whose somatic cells, including brain and nerve cells, only divide in order to replace damaged, destroyed, or aberrant cells, eventually reach his brain's limit for information storage unless he caused himself regular brain damage in order to purge himself of old memories? Has research into biological immortality sparked any neurological research on this topic? It seems that even if a euthereon were biologically immortal, the brain would still have a functional lifespan: once it's become over-fraught with information, the creation of any new long-term memories after that point would be impossible, unless by some hitherto unknown mechanism the creation of new memories would be possible either by "rewriting" existing brain cells with new memories or "deleting" older brain cells altogether and replacing them. Is enough known about the mammalian brain to guess which, if either, of these two mechanisms is possible without further genetic adaptations to deal with this side-effect of biological immortality (we'll assume for the sake of argument that overcoming the side-effect of increased cancer risk is an integral part of biological immortality, as is an inherent immunity to all but the most rapidly spreading viruses and bacteria, and that this has had no functional impact on the process of creating and storing memories) in a species like Homo sapiens which has almost entirely overcome predation, and which scenerio (rewriting or replacing) is more probable?
This may seem frivolous speculation, but with biological immortality being highly marketable and the number of cosmetic companies that seek a means of attaining it (despite the damage this will do to our planet and our species as a whole), a thorough study of the brain with regard to maturation and senescence would ideally seek to understand the difference between a brain that experiences senescence and one that is biologically immortal, for the same reason drug testers use control groups: to truly understand the effects of senescence on the brain of a given species, we must know what happens to a brain of the same animal species when it doesn't undergo senescence. This is what prompted me to make this post, as it seems there must at least be one or two competing hypotheses, if not an actual theory, concerning the age-independent lifespan of the brain. If the body could live forever, what would happen to the brain? --Þórrstejn [ˡθoɝ.staɪʲn]: Hammer of Thor talk 08:34, 22 January 2008 (UTC)

