WEDNESDAY, June 8 (HealthDay News) -- A commitment to high-intensity exercise
may keep more than just your body in good shape. New research reveals
that long-term aerobic activity may also boost a person's brain
function.
In the study, Benjamin Tseng, a researcher in the
Institute for Exercise and Environmental Medicine's (IEEM)
Cerebrovascular Lab at the Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital Dallas,
and colleagues compared brain structure and function in 10 athletes and
10 sedentary people.
The types of brain function they looked at
included muscle control, executive function (a type of cognition that
includes working memory, self-monitoring and the ability to suppress
distractions) as well as other neurological functions.
"We know
that brain structure and some aspects of cognitive function deteriorate
with aging, but we haven't been able to find exactly what the
contributing factors and mechanisms are," Tseng said in a hospital news
release. "Our preliminary results shed light on this important topic,
and we hope the findings lead to better prevention and treatment of Alzheimer's disease and other forms of dementia."
The
study participants included 10 Masters athletes, average age 73 years,
who had at least 15 years of competitive aerobic training, and 10
sedentary people of a similar age and education level. The investigators
found that the brain's white matter fiber was better preserved among the athletes than the inactive people.
In
the human brain, white matter plays the critical role of transmitting
messages between different regions of gray matter -- areas where
functions such as seeing, hearing, speaking, memory and emotions take
place. So, without sufficient white matter, gray matter can't do its
job, as is the case for many people with various forms of dementia, the
study authors explained in the news release.
"Without properly
functioning white matter, people can begin to show signs of neurological
problems," Dr. Benjamin Levine, director of the IEEM and a professor of
medicine and cardiology and a distinguished professor in exercise
science at UT Southwestern Medical Center, explained in the news
release. "They can lose the ability to do simple daily tasks that we
take for granted."
The researchers concluded that their study
sheds some light on the mysteries of the aging brain, such as how brain
blood flow is related to its structure and function.
"It also tells us that long-term aerobic exercise
has definitive, measurable impact on brain health," said Levine. "Most
importantly, it lets us know that we have tools that can help fight off
dementia and some of the other classic signs of aging with a purposeful,
consistent exercise regimen."
The findings were scheduled for
presentation this week at the annual meeting of the American College of
Sports Medicine, held in conjunction with the World Congress on Exercise
Is Medicine, in Denver. Because this study was presented at a medical
meeting, the data and conclusions should be viewed as preliminary until
published in a peer-reviewed journal.
-- Mary Elizabeth Dallas
http://www.medicinenet.com/script/main/art.asp?articlekey=145353
Monday, April 23, 2012
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