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Exercise boosts brainpower by building
new brain cells in a region linked with memory and memory loss, U.S.
researchers reported on Monday. (File Photo) Photo
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BEIJING,
March 14 -- Exercise boosts brainpower by building new brain cells in a region
linked with memory and memory loss, U.S. researchers reported on Monday.
Tests on mice showed they grew new brain cells in a
region called the dentate gyrus, a part of the hippocampus that is known to be
affected in the age-related memory decline that begins around age 30 for most
humans.
The researchers used magnetic resonance imaging scans
to help document the process in mice and then used MRIs to look at the brains of
people before and after exercise.
They found the same patterns, which suggests that
people also grow new brain cells when they exercise.
"No previous research has systematically examined the
different regions of the hippocampus and identified which region is most
affected by exercise," Scott Small, a neurologist at Columbia University Medical
Center in New York who led the study, said in a statement.
Writing in the Proceedings of the National Academy of
Sciences, the researchers said they first tested mice.
Brain expert Fred Gage, of the Salk Institute in La
Jolla, California, had shown that exercise can cause the development of new
brain cells in the mouse equivalent of the dentate gyrus.
The teams worked together to find a way to measure
this using MRI, by tracking cerebral blood volume.
"Once these findings were established in mice, we
were interested in determining how exercise affects the hippocampal cerebral
blood volume maps of humans," they wrote.
They of course could not dissect the brains of people
to see if new neurons grew, but they could use MRI to have a peek.
They recruited 11 healthy adults and made them
undergo a three-month aerobic exercise regimen.
They did MRIs of their brains before and after. They
also measured the fitness of each volunteer by measuring oxygen volume before
and after the training program.
Exercise generated blood flow to the dentate gyrus of
the people, and the more fit a person got, the more blood flow the MRI detected,
the researchers found.
"The similarities between the exercise-induced
cerebral blood volume changes in the hippocampal formation of mice and humans
suggest that the effect is mediated by similar mechanisms," they wrote.
(Source: China Daily)