Improve Your Memory With Exercise
Exercise Is Good... For Your Brain
Changes Due to Aging May Be Prevented
Add another reason to get out there and start exercising...

Studies have shown that exercise can do wonders for your
body. It helps build up your bones and lowers your
cholesterol. Even a peaceful walk for 20 minutes every night
may improve your chances of avoiding diseases from cancer to
strokes and heart attacks. There are even studies that
suggest jogging is good for sales!
Now scientists have added keeping your mind in shape as you
age to all of the other benefits. Exercise helps you to have
a better memory and problem solving skills after 50. How
does it work?
Scientists, led by Arthur F. Kramer of the University of
Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, recruited 55 volunteers over
55 and found that the three key areas of the brain adversely
affected by aging show the greatest benefit when a person
stays physically fit.
Your brain contains two types of "matter"
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Gray matter is the thin layer of cells, such as neurons and support
cells, that are critically involved in learning and memory. |
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White matter is the insulating myelin sheath containing the nerve fibers
that transmit signals throughout the brain - more or less like an electrical
cord - organic wires wrapped in insulation to carry the electricity from the one
place to another. |
As people age, especially after age 30,
these tissues shrink. The study found that the fitter the
body, the less shrinkage there was in the areas that control
memory and other "thinking" tasks.
The study in the Journal of Gerontology: Medical Sciences
was the first to show anatomical differences in gray and
white matter between physically fit and less fit aging
humans.
"We found differences in three areas of the brain, the
frontal, temporal and parietal cortexes," said Kramer, a
professor of psychology and member of the Beckman Institute
for Advanced Science and Technology at Illinois. "There were
very distinct differences particularly in two types of
tissue, the gray matter and white matter."
The results did not show an effect from exercise alone.
Kramer said, "It is fitness as it interacts with age that
has the positive effects. Older adults show a real decline
in brain density in white and gray areas, but fitness
actually slows that decline."
The researchers statistically eliminated smoking, diabetes,
drinking, dieting, and other factors that might have caused
the difference between fit and "couch potato" brains.
If you think it's too late to get started with a fitness
routine, a 1999 study by Kramer and associates found that
even previously sedentary people over age 60 could improve
their mental processing abilities with exercise. People who
took part in the study walked rapidly for 45 minutes three
days a week. They significantly improved mental-processing
abilities that decline with age, and particularly tasks that
rely heavily on the frontal lobes of the brain.
Another study published in 2003 in Psychological Science
looked at data from many research groups and analyzed the
findings. This "meta-study" found some interesting facts:
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Exercise programs involving both
aerobic exercise and strength training produced better
results on cognitive abilities than either one alone.
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Older adults benefit more than
younger adults do. This may be due to the declines in
mental abilities that are related to aging. Exercise may
work to slow down these age related deficits so that
older brains benefit more from being in a physically fit
body.
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More than 30 minutes of exercise per
session produce the greatest benefit, a finding
consistent with many existing
exercise guidelines for adults.
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If you are walking for 20 minutes
now, try stretching it out to 35 or 45 minutes. You
might want to carry a set of those lightweight barbells
and ankle weights to add strength training to your
aerobic walking routine.
"These intriguing data suggest there may
be one more possible benefit from regular exercise," said
Molly V. Wagster, program director for the Neuropsychology
of Aging, Neuroscience and Neuropsychology of Aging Program
of the NIA, which supported the work.
Source: University Of Illinois At Urbana-Champagn
About the Author
Margaret Chiffriller is one of the founders of the
Chiff.com Directory, a
guide to the best pop-up free, content rich sites on the
Web... and the
Chiff
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searching for a fast, affordable way to get found online.
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