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Can wiggling your pinky really stop cognitive decline?

What if protecting your brain from dementia was as simple as wiggling your little fingers a few seconds each day? That’s the promise behind “pinky time”, a viral TikTok trend that claims a simple finger exercise can lower your risk of developing Alzheimer’s.

Videos promoting this supposed brain-health hack have attracted millions of views, with some suggesting that difficulty performing the movement could be a warning sign of cognitive decline. By arranging the fingers into a specific pattern and moving the pinkies up and down, proponents argue you are giving your brain a quick workout that keeps it sharp.

It’s easy to see why the idea has gained attention. A free, effortless daily habit that protects against one of the most feared conditions of ageing is an appealing prospect. But while the trend draws loosely on real neuroscience, the conclusions being made are far more ambitious than the evidence allows.

Doing something fiddly and new with your fingers, such as learning new chords on a guitar, takes real concentration. Your brain has to plan each movement, hold back the wrong ones, and constantly adjust based on what you are seeing and what your fingers are feeling.

That’s a surprising amount of mental work for such a small physical task, and it may help explain why hands-on hobbies such as learning a musical instrument या knitting are associated with sharper memory and better brain function.

For years, scientists have used finger-tapping tasks, where people repeatedly tap a finger or follow a simple rhythm, to study how movement, attention and the ageing brain are connected. However, these tasks are used as research tools and should not be confused with scientific tests for dementia or memory loss.

There’s another idea behind this: the brain can rewire itself in response to what we ask it to do, building new connections as we learn. So when you learn a new finger movement, you’re encouraging your brain to strengthen and reorganise neural connections involved in that task.

In this sense, pinky time fits into a broader category of activities that challenge the brain through novelty and coordination. From juggling to dancing or learning a new language, these sorts of tasks may help keep the brain resilient as we age.

Performing unfamiliar movements can feel mentally demanding, but it does not mean it can diagnose cognitive decline or protect against it. Many factors influence how well someone performs a finger coordination task, including mobility, flexibility, previous injuries and practice. A healthy person may struggle with this movement task, while someone with cognitive impairment may perform it with ease.

नीचे पढ़ना जारी रखें

Looking for easy fixes

The popularity of pinky time highlights that people are increasingly looking for simple ways to monitor and protect their brain health. Unfortunately, detecting the earliest stages of cognitive decline is considerably more complex.

Doctors and researchers use carefully developed tests that measure many aspects of cognition, including memory, attention, language and “executive functioning” (the planning, organising and self-control skills we use to perform daily tasks).

There is currently no evidence that struggling with this particular finger movement predicts early memory or thinking problems, and no strong evidence that practising it can prevent cognitive decline.

Research on various hand and finger exercises has reported modest benefits in people who already have some cognitive difficulties. But there isn’t much evidence yet, and it’s not clear whether the benefits are big enough to help protect against dementia.

Another limitation is that the brain benefits most from activities that remain difficult. As a task becomes familiar, it requires less attention and cognitive effort. A movement that feels difficult today may become largely automatic after repeated practice, reducing its value as a brain workout.

Unfortunately, there’s no single trick to keeping your brain sharp as you age. What does seem to matter is much broader – staying active, looking after your heart, getting enough sleep and keeping up your social life. There’s also growing evidence that something as simple as sorting out your hearing or eyesight can help too, because it makes it easier to stay socially and mentally switched on.

A healthy diet, particularly one resembling the भूमध्यसागरीय आहार, has also been linked to better brain health. Lifelong learning, whether through education, hobbies, languages, music or other mentally stimulating activities, also seems to help.

Pinky time as a coordination challenge may be fun and harmless. But its viral promise oversimplifies a much more complex picture. When it comes to protecting our brains, the evidence still favours the less glamorous fundamentals: exercise, sleep, healthy diet, social connection, good sensory health and lifelong learning.

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Patient picks

TikTok’s ‘nonnamaxxing’ trend explained: here’s how living like an Italian grandma can benefit health and wellbeing

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TikTok’s ‘nonnamaxxing’ trend explained: here’s how living like an Italian grandma can benefit health and wellbeing

The key to better wellbeing is acting like an Italian grandmother, according to social media’s “nonnamaxxing” trend. Proponents of the trend say that adopting the lifestyle habits of an Italian nonna will help improve your health and mental wellbeing. The core principles of the trend are simple: make time for your friends and loved ones, eat foods grown from your own garden and cook hearty meals at home. This latest trend borrows from lifestyle medicine research which shows the same practices being advocated by nonnamaxxing enthusiasts can not only add years to your life, but add life to your years. So instead of jumping on the nonnamaxxing bandwagon until the next trend rolls around, here are some examples of how you can adopt these habits for life.

by Trudy Meehan

Influencers are promoting dangerous peptides on social media – and regulators are struggling to keep up

स्वास्थ्य समाचार

Influencers are promoting dangerous peptides on social media – and regulators are struggling to keep up

Once confined to niche bodybuilding forums and hardcore gyms, unproven injectable peptides are now being openly marketed online to the average gym-goer by social media influencers – and regulators struggling to keep up. Across Instagram, TikTok or YouTube, unapproved and harmful peptide products are being promoted as shortcuts to fat loss, anti-ageing, health and recovery and muscle growth. Peptides actually occur naturally in our body. They regulate a variety of important functions, including metabolism, appetite, hormone production and tissue repair. Synthetic versions of peptides are also used in some medicines, which are legitimate and have been clinically proven. These include GLP-1s (which are used for weight loss and managing diabetes) and insulin. But a booming, parallel “grey market” now exists online for unapproved peptide compounds. These products are primarily being sold by so-called wellness brands and in influencer-led storefronts. Many of these products are marketed as cutting-edge solutions for optimising health and body enhancement. The problem is that many of these substances have not undergone full clinical safety evaluation and are not approved for human use. Many have also been found to be contaminated with other harmful ingredients. Unapproved injectable peptides therefore pose serious health risks. Some of the risks they may pose00092-0/abstract) include nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, gastrointestinal issues, headaches and fatigue or weakness. Immune issues, as well as allergic reactions and infections have also been reported. Moreover, there’s a clear lack of rigorous human safety data. Yet these risks often aren’t disclosed by the people selling them.

by Luke Cox

नीचे पढ़ना जारी रखें

लेखक के बारे मेंपूरा जीवन परिचय देखें

लेखक की छवि

Monika McAtarsney-Kovacs

Research Fellow in Cognitive Neuropsychology

Monika McAtarsney-Kovacs is a researcher in cognitive ageing and memory at the Vision and Eye Research Institute, Anglia Ruskin University. She holds degrees in Psychology and International Business Economics, and completed an MSc in Cognitive Neuroscience and Neuropsychology at Birkbeck, University of London, graduating with distinction. She recently completed her PhD at Anglia Ruskin University, where her research focused on visual short-term memory and its potential as an early marker of cognitive decline. Her interests include cognitive ageing, dementia, sensory impairment, and the development of sensitive tools for the early detection of cognitive impairment.

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  • 29 Jun 2026 | मूल रूप से प्रकाशित

    द्वारा लिखित:

    Monika McAtarsney-Kovacs
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