Cardiovascular Exercise And The Brain
From the age of about 30, brain function, and particularly memory, starts to decline gradually. But with cardio exercise, it appears this can be slowed.
The question is, to what degree, and are there exercise regimes which can actually improve mental function?
Exercise appears to affect the dentate gyrus, one of a few parts of the brain where neurogenesis, or the creation of new brain cells, occurs. The number of new cells and the strength of the connections between them are regarded as important factors in improved brain performance. Cell production needs a supply of hormones and proteins, particularly a hormone called Insulin-like Growth Factor-1 (IGF-1), which is released into the blood stream every time there is muscle activity. IGF-1 in turn triggers an increase of brain-derived neurotrophic factor, which directly promotes the growth of new cells. For the first time, using an MRI scanner, scientists at Columbia University Medical Center in New York have been able to see neurogenesis at work in a ‘before and after’ exercise scenario.
Those most likely to benefit from current studies are those with degenerative brain disorders, such as Alzheimer’s, and the next step will be the design of an exercise program that is specifically directed towards preventing age-related memory loss.
At the University of Birmingham, a specialist in exercise metabolism, Dr Asker Jeukendrup, says you don’t need to do much exercise to get an effect, and the more you do the better. Twenty minutes of brisk walking will reduce degeneration of the brain. “If you can keep the elderly active, their quality of life improves so much.”
Other studies to be released this year are likely to confirm the simple principle that the fittest bodies have the fittest minds.
Source: www.fitnessandleisure.co.nz
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