G’day to you! Oops! Almost got tangled in your cyberchute
as you spiralled down to the virtual café. Good to see you out and about and
getting some exercise! Fill your mug with some choice Arabica coffee and latch
onto a virtual doughnut or muffin, why don’t’cha? Speaking of exercise, here’s
a new study that shows a correlation between brain activity and exercise...
Adults who are more physically active have greater mental
flexibility, new research reports.
On top of this, those who do
more exercise have larger brain volumes and more intact white matter.
The new research found that moderate or vigorous physical
activity was linked to more variable brain activity in older adults.
It’s known that variable brain activity is linked to
performing better on complex cognitive tasks.
Professor Agnieszka Burzynska, who led the research
said:
“We looked at 100 adults between the ages of 60 and 80, and we used
accelerometers to objectively measure their physical activity over a week.
We found that spontaneous brain activity showed
more moment-to-moment fluctuations in the more-active adults.
In a previous study, we showed that in some of the same regions of the
brain, those people who have higher brain variability also performed better on
complex cognitive tasks, especially on intelligence tasks and memory.”
Participants had their brains scanned and the amount of
exercise they’d done over a week recorded.
The microscopic integrity of the brain’s white-matter
fibres was also examined.
The white matter is the brain’s cabling: it transmits
signals between different areas.
Professor Art Kramer, also a study author, said:
“Our study, when viewed in the context of previous studies that have examined
behavioral variability in cognitive tasks, suggests that more-fit older adults
are more flexible, both cognitively and in terms of brain function, than their
less-fit peers.”
Not only does the study
underline the mental benefits of exercise, it also provides another way to
assess brain health in aging.
Professor Burzynska said:
“We want to know how the brain relates to the body,
and how physical health influences mental and brain health in aging.
Here, instead of a structural measure, we are
taking a functional measure of brain health.
And we are finding that tracking changes in blood-oxygenation levels over
time is useful for predicting cognitive functioning and physical health in
aging.”
One day it may be possible to tell how physically fit a
person is by imaging the brain.
So get out there and exercise...walk, swim, do Tai-Chi, whatever.
It results in increased bloodflow and this has to be beneficial for your brain.
See ya, eh!
Bob
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