Career
His research interests include antioxidants and aging, and the neuropathology of Alzheimer"s disease, especially predictive factors in early life and the role of brain infarction. This a longitudinal study of aging and Alzheimer"s disease was initiated in 1986 by Snowdon, then at the University of Minnesota. The homogeneous life style of the nuns makes them an ideal study population.
Convent archives have been made available to investigators as a resource on the history of participants.
The study including reviews of autobiograpical essays by the nuns upon joining the order, administration of memory and cognitive tests to the nuns (some over 100 years of age), and post-mortem examination of their brains. The study moved with Snowdon to the University of Kentucky.
Many of the procedures were based on work by David Wekstein and William Markesbery. They had, in 1989, started a study of age-associated changes in cognition and function in a group of older adults in Kentucky who had agreed to brain donation at death.
Their focus was to understand how changes in the brain could be linked to Alzheimer"s disease and other neurological disorders in advanced age.
The Nun Study was a natural extension of the ongoing work at the Alzheimer"s Disease Center at the Sanders-Brown Center on Aging. Their work continues with the help of over 1,000 older Kentuckians who volunteer to be part of this research effort.