If you want to keep your wits about you as you age, you need
to work those wits—but you also need to work your body.
Exercise, particularly aerobic exercise is very important to
brain function. That’s been known for some time, and the evidence keeps
building.
As far back as 2004, a Hawai`i study found that elderly
adults who walk a lot have lower rates of dementia. The report in the Journal
of the American Medical Association reviewed tests done on hundreds of elderly
men, comparing their physical activity with rates of dementia.
“Our findings suggest that physically capable elderly men
who walk more regularly are less likely to develop dementia,” wrote the authors
of the study, Walking and Dementia in
Physically Capable Elderly Men.
The Mayo Clinic Proceedings in 2011 stated the case clearly: “A rapidly growing literature strongly suggests that
exercise, specifically aerobic exercise, may attenuate cognitive impairment and
reduce dementia risk,” Mayo wrote.
Scientific American was in there, too, with the headline, “Aerobic
exercise bulks up hippocampus, improving memory in older adults.”
A 2010 study in the Proceedings of the National Academy of
Science said regular aerobic exercise increased the size of the hippocampus, a
part of the brain that tends to shrink with age.
“Exercise training increased hippocampal volume by 2%,
effectively reversing age-related loss in volume by 1 to 2” years, said this study.
A 2014 study showed that specifically in elderly women,
exercise increased the size of the hippocampus—the part of the brain associated
with verbal memory and learning.
That study, from the British Journal of Sports Medicine is here.
A Finnish study in February of this year, 2016, found
similar results: “Aerobic exercise, such as running, has positive effects on
brain structure and function, for example, the generation of neurons
(neurogenesis) in the hippocampus, a brain structure important in learning.
That study, done on rats rather than humans, in the Journal of Physiology is here.
And this article in the New York Times argues that it needs
to be aerobic exercise, not just muscle-building work.
Most of the work indicates that the effect of exercise isn’t
huge but it’s real.
Still, physical activity isn’t everything. You also need to
exercise the brain directly.
The American Psychological Association says specific kinds
of brain training can help stave off dementia. But not all brain training.
“The mistake some people make is thinking that all brain
training is the same. Lumping all brain training together is like trying to
determine the effectiveness of antibiotics by looking at the universe of all
pills, and including sugar pills and dietary supplements in that analysis.
You’ll find that some work and some do not. To then conclude that brain
training does not work — or is not yet proven—is based on flawed analysis.” So
says Jerri Edwards, PhD, of the University of South Florida, who led a study on
the subject, published by APA, above.
Another study suggests intensive learning can actually cause
chemical changes in the brain, increasing the amount of a protein that helps
protect against memory loss, and even Alzheimer’s Disease.
"You're keeping the machinery going. It makes sense
that the more time spent intensely focused on learning, the more your brain is
trained to process information and that doesn't go away. That intense kind of
learning seems to make your brain stronger," said Auriel Willette, an
assistant professor of food science and human nutrition at Iowa State
University.
© Jan TenBruggencate 2016
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