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Physically active life good for the body and brain


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#1 doug123

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Posted 11 August 2006 - 11:46 PM


http://today.reuters...C3-healthNews-2

Physically active life good for the body and brain
Fri Aug 11, 2006 1:44 PM ET

By Megan Rauscher

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Exercise keeps the body, and mind, in tiptop shape, according to a review of published studies on the topic. Taken together, the data suggest that exercise and physical activity may slow age-related declines in cognitive function, the reviewers conclude.

Moreover, fitness training may improve some mental processes even more than moderate activity.

"Although we clearly still have much to learn about the relationship between physical activity and cognition, what we currently know suggests that physical activity can help keep us both healthy and mentally fit," Dr. Arthur F. Kramer told Reuters Health.


Kramer, from the Beckman Institute at the University of Illinois in Urbana, presented his team's work this week at the annual gathering of the American Psychological Association. The research is scheduled for publication in an upcoming issue of the Journal of Applied Physiology.

In an effort to resolve the "varied opinions" on the impact of exercise on cognitive functioning, Kramer and colleagues conducted an "up-to-date" review of the scientific literature on the subject.

They found that many of the studies suggest "significant, and sometimes substantial" links between physical activity and later cognitive function and dementia. There is evidence that this relationship can span several decades.

In one study, for example, participating twice weekly in leisure time physical activity in middle age was associated with a reduced risk of dementia later in life.

However, "given the observational nature" of most of the studies on exercise and the brain, a "cause and effect" relationship cannot be established, Kramer and colleagues point out.

"Fortunately, there have been an increasing number of randomized intervention studies which have examined the relationship between fitness training and cognition and dementia," they note.

Some of these studies have shown significant improvements in mental performance and delayed dementia with fitness training, whereas others have not.

Pooled data from 18 intervention studies suggests a "moderate" positive influence of fitness training, particularly on "executive control" functions such as planning, scheduling, working memory and multi-tasking -- many of the processes that often show substantial decline with age.

Exercise is not only beneficial for healthy people but also for those already showing signs of dementia and related cognitive impairments, the team reports.

The medical research literature also contains evidence that "even relatively short exercise interventions can begin to restore some of the losses in brain volume associated with aging," they add.




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#2 doug123

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Posted 11 August 2006 - 11:52 PM

http://www.webmd.com.../126/116290.htm

Same topic:

Exercise Keeps the Brain Fit

Physical Activity May Fight the Effects of Aging on the Brain By Jennifer Warner

WebMD Medical News Reviewed By Louise Chang, MD

on Friday, August 11, 2006

Aug. 11, 2006 -- Exercise may keep the mind healthy -- as well as the body -- and fight the effects of agingaging on brain function.

A new review of research on exercise and aging suggests that exercise has short- and long-term beneficial effects in improving brain function, slowing age-related cognitive decline, and reducing the risk of dementiadementia.

For example, one study that included men and women over age 65 showed that those who exercised for at least 15-30 minutes at a time, three times a week, were less likely to develop Alzheimer's -- even among those genetically predisposed to the disease.

Exercise Fights Aging in Brain

The results of the review were presented this week at the annual convention of the American Psychological Association in New Orleans.

In their review, researchers analyzed information from three different types of studies on exercise and aging.

The first group of studies looked at whether exercise and physical activity at certain points in a person's life can improve brain function and reduce the risk of age-related neurological diseases such as Alzheimer's diseaseAlzheimer's disease.

The results showed a significant relationship between exercise and brain function later in life and a reduced risk of dementia; these benefits appeared to last several decades.

Aerobic Training Keeps Brain Fit

The second group of studies looked at the long-term relationship between specific types of exercise or fitness training and brain function in nondemented older adults.

These studies suggested that an increased level of exercise or aerobic fitness training may improve mental processes even more than moderate activity.

In particular, one study of older adults who were randomly assigned to a walking group or a stretching and toning group for six months showed that the walkers who were aerobically active were better able to ignore distracting information during a task than those in the other group.

"Aerobically trained older adults showed increased neural activities in certain parts of the brain that involved attention and reduced activity in other parts of the brain that are sensitive to behavioral conflict," says Arthur F. Kramer, PhD, of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, in a news release.

Exercise May Slow Age-Related Changes in Brain

The third group consisted of animal studies designed to understand the molecular mechanisms behind exercise's effects on the aging brain.

These results showed that aerobic exercise and physical activity may work by moderating age-related changes in brain structure on a cellular level -- in effect, maintaining a younger-looking and younger-performing brain well into old age.

"From this review we have found that physical and aerobic exercise training can lower the risk for developing some undesirable age-related changes in cognitive and brain functions," says Kramer, "and also help the brain maintain its plasticity – [the] ability to cover one function if another starts failing later in life."


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SOURCES: 114th Annual Convention of the American Psychological Association, New Orleans, Aug. 11, 2006. News release, American Psychological Association.

#3 doug123

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Posted 11 August 2006 - 11:55 PM

More of the same:

http://www.foodconsu...ing_Brain.shtml

http://www.forbes.co...cout534277.html

http://www.rxpgnews....icle_4823.shtml

http://www.eurekaler...a-ehs080106.php

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#4 Mind

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Posted 15 July 2008 - 09:41 PM

Yet another study indicating increased brain health from exercise

The closest thing to a magic bullet to combat almost all measures of aging in the body is exercise. Just do it!!

(ok, I know you CRONies would say CR fits the bill as well).

#5 VictorBjoerk

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Posted 15 July 2008 - 10:22 PM

I think they should have gyms at all elder care units,swimming pools as well because that may be good for people who have trouble being mobile.They die even earlier by just sitting in a chair indoors all year round being fed with coffee and sugary pastries as well as antidepressants and disgusting junk food.
Being old is pure hell, mostly due to the physical suffering but also due to the fact that you don't get outdoors at all and people treat you like you are some kind of silly animal although you may be mentally sharp.I simply don't like the stereotypical middle-aged chain-smoking nurse present at most elderly care units neglecting the elderly just because she doesn't like her job and don't have the financial opportunity to quit.




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