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Showing posts with label Sedentary. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sedentary. Show all posts

Tuesday, 20 February 2018

How running preserves the memory


Exercise has long been known to combats stress, but a study by Brigham Young University suggests that it can also combat forgetfulness. The researchers found that running protects against the negative effects of stress on the hippocampus-the part of the brain responsible for learning and memory.

Within the hippocampus, memory formation and recall work best when the connections between neurons-synapses, are strengthened over time, a process called long-term potentiation (LTP). Chronic or prolonged stress, however, weakens the synapses and with them the LTP, negatively impacting memory.

The ideal situation for improving learning and memory would be to experience no stress and to exercise. To study the link between memory, stress and exercise, researchers divided mice into four groups: sedentary no stress, exercise no stress, exercise with stress, and sedentary with stress. The mice were then exposed to stress inducing situations, such as walking on an elevated platform or swimming in cold water, or put on a running wheel depending on their grouping.

To determine how the variables affected each group's memory, the researchers used electrophysiology to measure the LTP in the animals' brains. They found that the stressed mice who exercised had considerable higher LTP rates than those who had not exercised. The researchers also used a maze-running experiment to test the mice's memories. The stressed mice who exercised performed just as well as non-stressed mice who exercised.

Additionally, the exercising mice made significantly fewer memory errors in the maze than the sedentary mice. The findings suggest exercise is an effective way to protect learning and memory mechanisms from the negative cognitive impacts of chronic stress on the brain.
          haleplushearty.blogspot.com

Tuesday, 9 January 2018

Exercise prevents heart aging


Exercise can reverse damage to sedentary, aging hearts and prevent risk of future heart failure. To reap the most benefit, the exercise regimen should begin by late middle age (before age 65), when the heart apparently retains some plasticity and ability to remodel itself, according to the findings by researchers at the Institute for Exercise and Environmental Medicine (IEEM), which is a collaboration between UT Southwestern Medical Center and Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital Dallas.

The exercise needs to be performed four to five times a week. Two to three times a week was not enough, the researchers found in an earlier study. Based on a series of studies performed the team over the past 5 years.Sedentary aging can lead to a stiffening of the muscle in the heart's left ventricle, the chamber that pumps oxygen-rich blood back out to the body. When the muscle stiffens, you get high pressure and the heart chamber doesn't fill as well with blood. In its most severe form, blood can back up into the lungs. That's when heart failure develops.

Earlier research by UT Southwestern cardiologists showed that left ventricular stiffening often shows up in middle age in people who don't exercise and aren't fit, leaving them with small, stiff chambers that can't pump blood as well. However, the researchers also found that the heart chamber in competitive masters-level athletes remains large and elastic, and that even four to five days of committed exercise over decades is enough for noncompetitive athletes to reap most of the benefit.
          haleplushearty.blogspot.com

Wednesday, 12 April 2017

Exercise linked with improved heart attack survival


The chance of surviving heart attack is high if you are engaged in regular exercise.

According to professor of cardiovascular prevention and rehabilitation, University of Copenhagen, myocardial infarctions are less fatal in animal that exercise.

The study want to see if exercise prevent myocardial infarction in human, 14,223 participants who had never had a heart attack or stroke were examined.

Their level of physical activity was assessed in 1976-1978 and classified as sedentary, light, moderate or high.

The participants were monitored until 2013, A total of 1,664 had myocardial infarction and 425 died immediately.

Researchers discovered that patients who exercised may not die from myocardial infarction, while sedentary patients were more likely to die.

Regular exercise improves blood flow and reduce heart injury, it can also leads to development of collateral blood vessels in the heart which supplies blood to the heart after a blockage.




Thursday, 30 March 2017

Types 2 diabetes is a sedentary lifestyle not a disease

Latest research shows that type 2 diabetes is a lifestyle condition not a real diseases, sedentary lifestyle contribute to type 2 diabetes.

Common symptoms of type 2 diabetes are: frequent urination, headache, fatigue, weight loss, increased thirst and hunger

The chances of developing type 2 diabetes increased with sedentary lifestyle, excess body fat, regular eating of processed food, consumption of alcohol, smoking  and little or no exercise.

Regular physical activities and eating of balanced diet can reduce your risk of developing type 2 diabetes.

Friday, 24 March 2017

Prevention of colon cancer



Colon is the lowest part of the digestive system, colon cancer is the growth of cancer from the colon or rectum. Common symptoms of colon cancer are: fatigue, weight loss, blood in the stool and change in bowel movement.

Colonoscopy is one of the best way to treat colon cancer if it is discovered early. This type of cancer can develop without symptoms it is good to go for regular screening for early detection.

This cancer is common in people with sedentary lifestyle and tobacco smokers. Eating food low in fibre, high in fat, calories and preservatives may increase the risk of colon cancer.

It can be prevented by:
• regular screening
• regular exercise
• maintaining healthy weight
• eating balanced diet
• drinking enough water
• avoiding  alcohol and tobacco products