Your brain might be ageing quietly—and you wouldn’t even notice until it’s a bigger problem. Dr Vassily Eliopoulos took to Instagram to warn that neurodegeneration doesn’t wait until your 70s; it starts decades earlier. Mental fatigue, forgetfulness, mood swings, and brain fog aren’t just “stress” or “tiredness”—they’re early signs your brain’s energy and wiring might be slowing down. The good news? Catch them early, and you can actually protect and regenerate your brain.
Dr Eliopoulos listed seven key signs that your brain may be ageing faster than it should.
1. Mental Fatigue
First up is mental fatigue after simple tasks—if answering emails or having a casual conversation drains you, it could point to impaired mitochondrial function in your brain, which slows energy production.
2. Word recall
Next is struggling with word recall, or that frustrating “tip of the tongue” moment, often fueled by chronic inflammation or blood sugar issues.
3. Sudden mood swings
Mood changes are another clue. Increased irritability or sudden mood swings can be triggered by neuroinflammation, sleep problems, or blood sugar crashes, affecting your brain’s emotional centre.
4. Poor sleep
Even poor sleep despite exhaustion is a red flag, indicating your brain’s internal clock, the suprachiasmatic nucleus, may be dysregulated.
5. Sensitivity to noise or light
Some signs are subtler but just as important. If you notice sensitivity to noise or light, your nervous system may be overstimulated due to inflammation or neurotransmitter imbalances.
6. Brain fog after meals
Brain fog after meals, especially after carbs or processed foods, can hint at insulin resistance in the brain—a condition sometimes called type 3 diabetes.
7. Why did you enter a room?
And that odd moment when you forget why you entered a room? Mild spatial confusion can be an early signal of hippocampal dysfunction.
Dr Eliopoulos stresses that these symptoms are early warning lights, not inevitable decline. Your brain can form new connections, strengthen memory, and restore energy—but only if you notice the signs early. Ignoring them lets problems accumulate. Prevention, he emphasises, is always more effective than treatment.
The takeaway is simple: don’t shrug off mental fatigue, mood swings, or forgetfulness as “just stress.” These are subtle alerts from your brain asking for attention. The sooner you act—through proper sleep, nutrition, mental stimulation, and lifestyle tweaks—the sharper, healthier, and younger your brain can stay. Catch it early, because neurodegeneration isn’t waiting for your golden years—it’s starting now.
Dr Eliopoulos listed seven key signs that your brain may be ageing faster than it should.
1. Mental Fatigue
First up is mental fatigue after simple tasks—if answering emails or having a casual conversation drains you, it could point to impaired mitochondrial function in your brain, which slows energy production.
2. Word recall
Next is struggling with word recall, or that frustrating “tip of the tongue” moment, often fueled by chronic inflammation or blood sugar issues.
3. Sudden mood swings
Mood changes are another clue. Increased irritability or sudden mood swings can be triggered by neuroinflammation, sleep problems, or blood sugar crashes, affecting your brain’s emotional centre.
4. Poor sleep
Even poor sleep despite exhaustion is a red flag, indicating your brain’s internal clock, the suprachiasmatic nucleus, may be dysregulated.
5. Sensitivity to noise or light
Some signs are subtler but just as important. If you notice sensitivity to noise or light, your nervous system may be overstimulated due to inflammation or neurotransmitter imbalances.
6. Brain fog after meals
Brain fog after meals, especially after carbs or processed foods, can hint at insulin resistance in the brain—a condition sometimes called type 3 diabetes.
7. Why did you enter a room?
And that odd moment when you forget why you entered a room? Mild spatial confusion can be an early signal of hippocampal dysfunction.
Dr Eliopoulos stresses that these symptoms are early warning lights, not inevitable decline. Your brain can form new connections, strengthen memory, and restore energy—but only if you notice the signs early. Ignoring them lets problems accumulate. Prevention, he emphasises, is always more effective than treatment.
The takeaway is simple: don’t shrug off mental fatigue, mood swings, or forgetfulness as “just stress.” These are subtle alerts from your brain asking for attention. The sooner you act—through proper sleep, nutrition, mental stimulation, and lifestyle tweaks—the sharper, healthier, and younger your brain can stay. Catch it early, because neurodegeneration isn’t waiting for your golden years—it’s starting now.
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