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How Exercise Makes Your Brain Grow
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Story at-a-glance
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Recent research reveals that exercise promotes a process known as
neurogenesis, i.e. your brain’s ability to adapt and grow new brain
cells, regardless of your age
-
During exercise, nerve cells release proteins that stimulate the
production of brain-derived neurotrophic factor or BDNF, which in turn
helps preserve existing brain cells and stimulates the growth of new
neurons
-
There’s compelling evidence showing that exercise produces large
cognitive gains and helps fight dementia
-
BDNF is also expressed in your neuro-muscular system where it helps
protect against age-related muscle atrophy. So BDNF is actively involved
in the preservation and rejuvenation of both your muscles and your brain
-
Workouts using nothing but your own body weight are an efficient way to
get fit. You can even fulfill the requirements for a high intensity
exercise using nothing more than your own body weight, a chair, and a
wall
By Dr. Mercola
Can exercise help boost your
cognitive faculties? Researchers increasingly say the answer is a
resounding yes. Recent research reveals that exercise
promotes a process now known as neurogenesis, i.e. your
brain’s ability to adapt and grow new brain cells, regardless of
your age.
As reported by Forbes
Magazine:1
“Not only has research
discovered that we can foster new brain cell growth through
exercise, but it may eventually be possible to ‘bottle’ that
benefit in prescription medication.
The hippocampus, a brain
area closely linked to learning and memory, is especially
receptive to new neuron growth in response to endurance
exercise. Exactly how and why this happens wasn’t well
understood until recently.
Research has discovered that
exercise stimulates the production of a protein called FNDC5...
Over time, FNDC5 stimulates the production of another protein in
the brain called Brain Derived Neurotrophic Factor (BDNF), which
in turns stimulates the growth of new nerves and synapses... and
also preserves the survival of existing brain cells.”
In essence, physical activity
produces biochemical changes that strengthen and renew not only your
body but also your brain—particularly areas associated with memory
and learning.
Researchers Aim to Bottle Exercise
Benefits...
Researchers at Harvard Medical
School now believe they may be able to recreate the benefits
of exercise by putting this protein, FNDC5, into a pill. Bruce
Spiegelman, PhD, told Forbes:
“What is exciting is that a
natural substance can be given in the bloodstream that can mimic
some of the effects of endurance exercise on the brain.”
They believe such a drug might be
useful for those experiencing cognitive decline, including those
with early-stage Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s disease. So far, the
hypothesis has only been tested on animals however.
In a recent study published in
the journal Cell,2
the researchers successfully increased BDNF in the brains of mice by
piggybacking FNDC5 molecules on a virus. According to the authors:
“Perhaps the most exciting
result overall is that peripheral delivery of FNDC5 with
adenoviral vectors (i.e. a virus) is sufficient to induce
central expression of BDNF and other genes with potential
neuroprotective functions or those involved in learning and
memory.”
Personally, I don’t believe you can
fool your body in the long term. It’s important to realize that
while a pill may be able to mimic a specific biological effect that
exercise produces, such as increasing production of a specific
protein or chemical, it will never provide you with ALL the health
effects exercise provides, which go far beyond any one specific
effect.
Exercise has countless
effects on your body -- not only on your muscle fibers and brain,
but also on your immune system, your ability to fight
cancer and much more. To “mimic” all of these benefits, you
would literally need handfuls of different pills -- and even then
they could never reproduce the synergistic benefits that
exercise has on your body and mind.
For example, besides boosting memory
and learning, regular exercise is also one of the “secret weapons”
to overcoming
depression. It does this quite effectively by normalizing
insulin resistance and boosting natural “feel good” hormones and
neurotransmitters associated with mood control in your brain.
Earlier this summer, Princeton
University researchers reported3
that physical exercise also helps you combat anxiety by making your
brain more resilient during times of stress.
You Cannot Fool Your Body in the Long
Run
While actual physical activity can
offer you dozens of health benefits, a pill might only be able to
recreate one at a time. Besides losing out on the synergistic
benefits, taking a pill versus engaging in physical activity will
also cost you financially and physically, as there might be
unforeseen adverse side effects of the drug to contend with.
All in all, you’re FAR better off
just getting physically active. To get the most out of your
workouts, I recommend a comprehensive program that includes
Peak Fitness high-intensity exercise,
strength training, stretching, and core work.
Non-exercise activity and
movement is also critical for optimal health, as explained by
Dr. Joan Vernikos. Sitting for extended periods of time is
actually an independent risk factor for poor health and premature
death. Even if you exercise regularly and are fit, uninterruptedly
sitting for a great percentage of the time increases your risk of
dying prematurely.
Simply standing up, a minimum of 30
times a day, is a powerful antidote to long periods of sitting and
is, surprisingly enough, more effective than walking. The
good news is that there are virtually unlimited opportunities for
movement throughout the day, from doing housework or gardening, to
cooking and even just standing up every 10 minutes.
Continued down...........
Your Brain Health Is Directly Related
to Exercise
That said, let’s look at some of the
beneficial effects exercise can have on your brain. According to
John J. Ratey, a psychiatrist who wrote the book Spark: The
Revolutionary New Science of Exercise and the Brain, there’s
overwhelming evidence that exercise produces large cognitive gains
and helps fight dementia. Besides triggering the release of
BDNF, exercise also protects your brain by:
- Increasing production of
nerve-protecting compounds
- Improving and increasing blood
flow to your brain
- Improving development and
survival of neurons
- Altering the way damaging
proteins reside inside your brain, which appears to slow the
development of
Alzheimer's disease. In animal studies, significantly fewer
damaging plaques and fewer bits of beta-amyloid peptides,
associated with Alzheimer's, were found in mice that exercised
Ideally, you’d want to make exercise
a regular part of your life from as early on as possible. But it’s
never too late to start. Even seniors who take up a fitness regimen
can improve their cognitive function.
For example, a team at the
University of Edinburgh followed more than 600 people, starting at
age 70, who kept detailed logs of their daily physical, mental and
social habits. Three years later, their brains were imaged for
age-related changes, such as brain shrinkage and damage to the white
matter, which is considered the "wiring" of your brain's
communication system. Not surprisingly, seniors who engaged in the
most physical exercise showed the least amount of brain shrinkage.4
Similarly, Kirk Erickson, PhD
of the University of Pittsburgh, found that adults aged 60 to 80
walking moderately (just 30 to 45 minutes, three days per week for
one year) increased the volume of their
hippocampus by two percent. The hippocampus is a region of your
brain important for memory. Erickson told WebMD:5
"Generally in this age
range, people are losing one to three percent per year of
hippocampal volume. The changes in the size of the hippocampus
were correlated with changes in the blood levels of the
brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF)."
Erickson also found higher fitness
levels associated with a larger prefrontal cortex. He called
exercise "one of the most promising nonpharmaceutical treatments to
improve brain health." The most important message from studies like
these is that mental decline is NOT inevitable! And exercise is as
good for your brain as it is for the rest of your body.
Fasting Can Also Trigger Brain
Rejuvenation
Growing evidence indicates that
fasting and exercise trigger similar genes and growth factors that
recycle and rejuvenate both your brain and muscle tissues. These
growth factors include BDNF, as previously mentioned, as well as
muscle regulatory factors, or MRFs. These growth factors signal
brain stem cells and muscle satellite cells to convert into new
neurons and new muscle cells respectively.
Interestingly enough, BDNF also
expresses itself in the neuro-muscular system where it protects
neuro-motors from degradation. (The neuromotor is the most critical
element in your muscle. Without the neuromotor, your muscle is like
an engine without ignition. Neuro-motor degradation is part of the
process that explains age-related muscle atrophy.)
So BDNF is actively involved in both
your muscles and your brain, and this cross-connection, if
you will, appears to be a major part of the explanation for why a
physical workout can have such a beneficial impact on your brain
tissue. It, quite literally, helps prevent, and even reverse, brain
decay as much as it prevents and reverses age-related muscle decay.
This also helps explain why
exercise while fasting can help keep your brain, neuro-motors,
and muscle fibers biologically young. For more information on how to
incorporate intermittent
fasting into your exercise routine for maximum benefits, please
see this previous
article. Sugar suppresses BDNF, which also helps
explain why a low-sugar diet in combination with regular exercise is
so effective for protecting memory and staving off depression.
Almost Anyone Can Improve Their Fitness
Without Joining a Gym
In related fitness news,
forgoing expensive exercise equipment and focusing on pushing,
pulling and lifting your own body weight is becoming a popular
alternative that is suitable for most people, regardless of age or
fitness level. According to Bret Contreras,6
author of Bodyweight Strength Training Anatomy:
"If more people knew you
could get a good physique using your body as a bar bell, they
could take matters into their own hands. Find things in the
environment: a table to get underneath, hold on to the sides of
and then pull the body upward; a rafter for a pull-up. To work
your glutes (buttocks muscles), all you need is a couch. It
doesn't have to be intimidating. You could do a 20-minute
workout three times a week and have an incredible physique, so
long as you push hard and keep challenging yourself."
Adaptability is a major benefit of
body weight exercises: It's adjustable to almost anyone, from
the least fit to the professional athlete. Just learn the basics and
try different approaches until you find what works best for you. In
the video below, Jill Rodriguez, one of the personal trainers at
Mercola.com, demonstrates some basic body weight exercises, and how
to add levels of difficulty as you go along.
You can do these exercises just
about anywhere... at home, outdoors, or in a gym. You can even
fulfill the requirements for a high intensity exercise
using nothing more than your own body weight, a chair, and a wall!
This program is described in my previous article, "The
Scientific 7-Minute Workout." As the title implies, this
science-backed routine only requires a seven minute investment, as
the program calls for as little as 10- to 15-seconds of rest between
each 30-second exercise, which should be performed in rapid
succession.
Need a Portable Fitness Routine?
There’s an App for That...
In today's world, you have plenty of
technological allies in fitness. With prices ranging from free to
$3.99, a previous article brings you information about six
bodyweight apps for your iPad or phone. One helps you work out
your own customized workout for your skill and fitness level.
Another can keep you body challenged. Other non-bodyweight training
apps help you track your progress in jogging or running, keep track
of your workouts, or calculate heart rate with a range of tools to
keep you on track. These apps let you bring your own personal
trainer along on every workout, no matter where you are.
For Total Body-Mind Health, Adopt a
Well-Rounded Fitness Program
Ideally, you’ll want to strive for a
varied and well-rounded fitness program that incorporates a wide
variety of exercises. As a general rule, as soon as an exercise
becomes easy to complete, you need to increase the intensity and/or
try another exercise to keep challenging your body.
Additionally, as I mentioned
earlier, more recent research has really turned the spotlight on the
importance of non-exercise movement. Truly, the key to
health is to remain as active as you can, all day long, but that
doesn’t mean you train like an athlete for hours a day. It simply
means, whenever you have a chance to move and stretch your body in
the course of going about your day—do it!
And the more frequently, the better.
Everything from standing up, to reaching for an item on a tall
shelf, to weeding in your garden and walking from one room to
another, and even doing dishes count. In short, it’s physical
movement, period, that promotes health benefits by the
interaction your body gets with gravity. To learn more about this
important aspect of health, please see this previous
article. That said, I recommend incorporating the following
types of exercise into your program:
- Interval (Anaerobic)
Training: This is when you alternate short bursts of
high-intensity exercise with gentle recovery periods.
- Strength Training:
Rounding out your exercise program with a 1-set strength
training routine will ensure that you're really optimizing the
possible health benefits of a regular exercise program. You can
also "up" the intensity by slowing it down. For more information
about using
super slow weight training as a form of high intensity
interval exercise, please see my interview with Dr.
Doug McGuff.
- Stand Up Every 10
Minutes. This is not intuitively obvious but emerging
evidence clearly shows that even highly fit people who exceed
the expert exercise recommendations are headed for premature
death if they sit for long periods of time. My interview with
NASA scientist
Dr. Joan Vernikos goes into great detail why this is so, and
what you can do about it. Personally, I usually set my timer for
10 minutes while sitting, and then stand up and do one legged
squats, jump squats or lunges when the timer goes off. The
key is that you need to be moving all day long, even in
non-exercise activities.
- Core Exercises:
Your body has 29 core muscles located mostly in your back,
abdomen and pelvis. This group of muscles provides the
foundation for movement throughout your entire body, and
strengthening them can help protect and support your back, make
your spine and body less prone to injury and help you gain
greater balance and stability.
Foundation Training, created by Dr. Eric Goodman, is an
integral first step of a larger program he calls “Modern
Moveology,” which consists of a catalog of exercises. Postural
exercises such as those taught in Foundation Training are
critical not just for properly supporting your frame during
daily activities, they also retrain your body so you can safely
perform high-intensity exercises without risking injury.
Exercise programs like Pilates
and yoga are also great for strengthening your core muscles, as
are specific exercises you can learn from a personal trainer.
- Stretching: My
favorite type of stretching is active isolated stretches
developed by Aaron Mattes. With Active Isolated Stretching, you
hold each stretch for only two seconds, which works with your
body's natural physiological makeup to improve circulation and
increase the elasticity of muscle joints. This technique also
allows your body to repair itself and prepare for daily
activity. You can also use devices like the
Power Plate to help you stretch.
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