Caffeine Has a Strange Effect on Your Memory

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You can feel the effects of sleep deprivation in so many parts of your life. Your energy, your mood, and especially in your memory. Lose out on precious hours of sleep, and you feel like you’re losing out on some precious memories that might seem hazy or out of reach or maybe not even there at all.New research suggests that caffeine might not just be jolting you back to life after a rough night, but it might be restoring some of those inaccessible memories caused by a lack of sleep.Publishing their findings in one of the busiest scientific journal titles I’ve ever come across, Neuropsychopharmacology, detailed by Science Alert, scientists at the National University of Singapore have found that caffeine can prevent and even reverse certain memory problems caused by lack of sleep, at least in mice.The study focused on the hippocampus, particularly the CA2 region, which handles social memory. Basically, the ability to recognize people you’ve met before.Mice that were sleep deprived performed worse at recognizing familiar peers, confirming what anyone running on just a few hours of sleep already suspected: a lack of sleep is a bit more than just feeling tired. It’s your brain, at a fundamental level, that is just not functioning properly.But then, a different group of mice was given a steady dose of caffeine a week before they were sleep deprived. Those mice, fortified with caffeine, didn’t show the same poor performance in social memory tests. When the caffeine was applied directly to brain tissue from sleep-deprived mice, it restored disrupted signaling in that same memory-related region.The Connection Between Caffeine and Memory FunctionAt the center of all of this is a chemical called adenosine, which builds up when you’re tired and slows brain activity. Sleep deprivation amplifies the chemical’s effects, dampening the circuits responsible for memory. Caffeine acts as a kind of blocker, essentially stepping in and telling adenosine to sit down and shut up so the circuits it’s disrupting can function normally.The researchers think the implications of their work can stretch way beyond saving you from embarrassment when you’re drawing a blank when someone you’ve introduced yourself to reminds you that you actually already met. Several times, actually. They say this same mechanism could help explain why chronic sleep loss is linked to cognitive decline and even conditions like Alzheimer’s disease. If caffeine helps preserve these vulnerable brain pathways, it might play a small but important role in protecting against long-term damage.Now all they’ve got to do is scale testing up into humans to see if they get similar results. If so, then coffee might not just be giving your brain a kick in the ass after a rough night. It might be jogging your memory.  The post Caffeine Has a Strange Effect on Your Memory appeared first on VICE.