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https://www.psychologytoday.com/gb/blog/the-athletes-way/202003/4-daily-habits-could-stop-your-brain-shrinking

6th March 2020

 

Walking, dancing, swimming, or gardening on a regular basis may offset brain shrinkage in older adults, according to a soon-to-be-published preliminary study from Columbia University.

The cohort for this study included 1,557 people with an average age of 75. This research is scheduled to be presented at the American Academy of Neurology's 72nd Annual Meeting in Toronto next month.

 

As we age, our brains tend to shrink. After age 40, previous research has shown that human brain weight typically decreases by about 5 percent each decade. After age 70, brain shrinkage typically occurs at an even faster rate (Scahill et al., 2003).

This recent (2020) "brain shrinkage" study used MRI neuroimaging scans to measure the brain volume of older people with varying levels of weekly physical activity. The scans revealed that less active older adults tend to have smaller brain volumes. Conversely, the most active participants in the study tended to have bigger brain volumes and showed less brain shrinkage.

 

"Older people who regularly walk, garden, swim, or dance have bigger brains than their inactive peers," according to a recent press release from the AAN about this research.

In addition to walkingdancingswimming, or gardening, the recent findings from Columbia suggest that any type of physical activity (done consistently throughout the week) may significantly slow brain-volume loss by the time someone is in his or her mid-seventies. (See "This Is Why Aerobic Exercise Is 'Miracle-Gro' for Your Brain")

 

According to current physical activity guidelines, adults should aim for at least 150 minutes of moderate-intensity physical activity per week or 75 minutes of vigorous-intensity exercise per week. 

Each person in Columbia University's recent MRI study self-reported the amount of time and energy he or she spent being physically active every week. Then, the researchers divided study participants into three groups based on how many minutes of physical activity each person did at varying degrees of intensity.

 

Here are the three groups: 

  1. Those who were inactive
  2. Those who were somewhat active, meaning that each week they did at least 150 minutes of low-intensity physical activity, 90 minutes of moderate physical activity, or 60 minutes of vigorous-intensity physical activity
  3. Those who were most active, meaning that each week they did at least seven hours of low-intensity physical activity, four hours of moderate-intensity physical activity, or two hours of vigorous-intensity physical activity

MRI brain scans of the 1,557 study participants showed that, in general, those in the most active group had larger brain volumes.

More specifically, the brain scans showed that "the average brain size for those who were inactive was 871 cubic centimeters compared to 883 cubic centimeters for those who were most active." According to the researchers, this 1.4 percent difference in brain volume is equivalent to nearly four years of brain aging.

 

"These results are exciting, as they suggest that people may potentially prevent brain shrinking and the effects of aging on the brain simply by becoming more active," Yian Gu of the Columbia University Department of Neurology, who led this research, said in the news release.

"Recent studies have shown that as people age, physical activity may reduce the risk of cognitive decline and dementia," she added. "Our study used brain scans to measure the brain volumes of a diverse group of people and found that those who engaged in the top third-highest level of physical activity had a brain volume the equivalent of four years younger in brain aging than people who were at the bottom third activity level."

 

One noteworthy limitation of this study is that self-reported surveys on physical activity levels rely on each participant giving accurate information, which is not always the case. Also, this research is correlative; it identifies a correlation (not a causal link) between higher amounts of exercise and less brain shrinkage as people age.

 

"Our results add to the evidence that more physical activity is linked to larger brain volume in older people," Gu concluded. "It also builds on evidence that moving your body more often throughout one's life may protect against loss of brain volume."

DISCLAIMER: Please use common sense and consult with your doctor before engaging in any new type of high-intensity physical activity—especially if you haven't done any moderate-to-vigorous physical activity recently.

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